Wednesday, February 15, 2023

Wednesday Whatnot

On a sunny and mild Wednesday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, it's time to "cool the climate alarmism".

From FrontpageMag, after President Biden sent $1 billion to the PLO, Israeli deaths rose by 900 percent.

From Townhall, as former South Carolina Governor and U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley (R) announces her campaign for the presidency, she "calls for some interesting policies".

From The Washington Free Beacon, pre-school teachers drill students as young as four years old about transgenderism and BLM.

From The Federalist, if the Biden administration and the Pentagon release any information about the recently encountered UFOs, will Americans believe any of it?

From American Thinker, the acquittal of pro-life activist Mark Houck is celebrated, it does not fully serve justice.

From CNS News, Americans bought more imports from a country ruled by a genocidal communist government that from any other.

From NewsBusters, GLAAD complains that Super Bowl ads weren't gay enough.

From Canada Free Press, the masses always win against those who suppress truth.

From TeleSUR, Salvadorian congresscritters extend El Salvador's "state of exception" for the 11th time.

From TCW Defending Freedom, the U.K. government admits nothing about the risks of 5G.

From Free West Media, according to Romanian parliamentcritter Diana Şoşoacă, the earthquake that struck Turkey and Syria was an attack by the U.S. using HAARP technology.  (If so, this could mean that Vice President Harris has figured out how to operate the earthquake machine allegedly created by her predecessor Dick Cheney.)

From EuroNews, Ukraine asks Western countries for fighter jets and more ammunition.

From Euractiv, according to opposition leader Nikolai Ribakov, Russia is very close close to becoming a dictatorship.  (If you read Spanish, read the story at EFE.  His last name appears to mean "son of a fisherman", due to its resemblance to the Polish word rybak, which means "fisherman", and the Russian suffix -ov, which means "son of".)

From ReMix, Nicola Sturgeon unexpectedly resigns as Scotland's first minister.

From the Greek Reporter, the Daphni Monastery on the outskirts of Athens, Greece is an excellent example of Byzantine architecture.

From Ekathimerini, Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis announces more measures after a one-off pension bonus.

From the Greek City Times, Greek Foreign Minister Nikos Dendias speaks with Antioch Patriarch Ioannis on the "needs" in areas affected by the earthquake in Turkey and Syria.

From Balkan Insight, two websites run by the Greek media group Documento are hit by cyber-attacks.

From Total Croatia News, the Croatian labor market is strong as unemployment falls.  (If you read Croatian, read the story at Poslovni Dnevnik.)

From The Slovenia Times, two thirds of employers in Slovenia plan to raise wages.

From The Malta Independent, 8,468 migrants have died trying while to reach Europe by crossing the Mediterranean since 2019.

From Malta Today, the E.U. issues a new warning to Cyprus over its spring hunting season.

From ANSA, two Italian cabinet ministers blasts the E.U. ban on new gasoline-powered cars that would take effect in 2035.

From SwissInfo, Swiss museums have reportedly displayed art that was looted from from the Kingdom of Benin by British soldiers in 1897.  (The Kingdom of Benin was located in what is now Nigeria, and was colonized by the U.K.  The modern Republic of Benin, which is west of Nigeria, was colonized by France and called Dahomey.)

From France24, a live blog of French President Emmanuel Macron discussing "means to ensure Russia's defeat" at a security summit in Munich, Germany.

From RFI, what to expect on the fifth day of strikes against the French government's proposed pension reforms.

From El País, at least 39 migrants are killed when their bus crashes in western Panama.

From The Portugal News, imported used passenger cars accounted for 67.1 percent of all vehicle registrations in Portugal in 2022.

From The North Africa Post, Moroccan King Mohammed VI meets with Gabonese President Ali Bongo Ondimba and announces a donation of 2,000 tons of fertilizer for Gabonese farmers.

From The New Arab, Syrian government representatives are accused of stealing earthquake aid.

From RAIR Foundation USA, the Swedish politician who burned a Koran claims to have proven that not all people in the world are the same.

From WSTPost, Muslim students at Macalester College in St. Paul, Minnesota force the school to close an exhibit of art made by Iranian-American artists.

From Gatestone Institute, the Biden administration's cover-up of genocide in Nigeria.

From The Stream, were the flying objects that were recently shot down benign, and who's talking with the boss and his wife?

From The Daily Signal, the House Judicial Committee subpoenas Big Tech bosses.

From The American Conservative, the House Committee on Oversight holds its first meeting on Twitter's campaign to censor conservatives.

From The Western Journal, Senator John Kennedy (R-LA) warns to "lock your doors tonight".

From BizPac Review, former Governor (R-AK) and vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin thinks that Governor Ron DeSantis (R-FL) should stay out of the 2024 presidential race.

From The Daily Wire, the show South Park plans to (figuratively) skewer Prince Harry and Meghan Markle.

From the Daily Caller, the Chief Twit warns the World Government Summit of a "world government".

From the New York Post, a personal trainer gets something that I wouldn't wish on my worst enemy.

From Breitbart, six whales have recently washed up dead on New Jersey shores.

From Newsmax, after a court spectator rushes at him, the white supremacist who killed 10 people at a supermarket in Buffalo, New York is given a life sentence.

And from Page Six, retired (for real this time?) quarterback Tom Brady faces a backlash for calling Janet Jackson's Super Bowl halftime show wardrobe malfunction "good" for the NFL.

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