Sunday, March 5, 2023

A Few Things For Sunday

On a sunny and mild Sunday, here are a few things going on:

From National Review, my most recent former governor decides against running for president.

From Townhall, an illegal alien violently assaults a female Border Patrol agent.

From The Washington Free Beacon, a review of a book about a future without humans.

From the Washington Examiner, five takeaways from this year's gathering of right-wingnuts.  (I say that as a right-wingnut myself.)

From American Thinker, why is President Biden not attending the coronation of the U.K.'s new King Charles III?  (While typing "coronation", I almost misspelled it as "coronavirus", a word that I've been typing all too often during the last three years.)

From NewsBusters, Republican strategist Scott Jennings points out that Democrats will smear whoever the Republicans nominate for president like they smeared former President Trump.

From Canada Free Press, when leftists speak, their true point might not be what they say.

From TCW Defending Freedom, some wriggle room for earthworms out in the sticks.

From Free West Media, over 2,500 farmers from the Belgian commune of Flanders block roads in Brussels to protest the regional government's plan to limit nitrogen emissions.  (I find the idea of limiting "nitrogen emissions" curious because almost four fifth's of the atmosphere is elemental nitrogen.  It seems that the substances targeted for limits are compounds such as ammonia and nitrogen oxides.  I also remember this being a big issue in the Netherlands.)

From EuroNews, ministers from five Mediterranean E.U. countries push for more solidarity on migration.

From The North Africa Post, Morocco and the U.S. review their military partnership at meetings in the former's capital city of Rabat.  (Morocco was the first country to recognize the newly independent United States, which means that this partnership has some very deep roots.)

From The New Arab, the leader of the Tunisian National Salvation Front promises weekly protests in Tunis until the Tunisian government releases detained opposition figures.

From RAIR Foundation USA, a Danish politician burns a Koran outside the U.K. embassy in Copenhagen to protest the enforcement of sharia against four British schoolchildren.

From Gatestone Institute, "the West, the rest and the great everywhere".

From The Stream, the CEO of a pro-life pregnancy center which was targeted by pro-abortion terrorists asks if Attorney General Merrick Garland committed perjury.

From The American Conservative, Trump wants to be our "retribution".

From BizPac Review, podcaster Joe Rogan sets his sights on CNN and MSNBC for their "sheer audacity to just out and out lie to people".

From the New York Post, New York Jets offensive lineman Duane Brown wants to return for a 17th season in the NFL after undergoing shoulder surgery.  (I saw Brown play for Virginia Tech during the mid-2000s.)

From Breitbart, Canadian opposition parties demand an inquiry into alleged Chinese interference in Canada's elections.

From Newsmax, according to former National Security Council chief of staff Fred Fleitz, Biden will not go along with a resolution that allows him to use the U.S. military against Mexican drug cartels.

And from the HuffPost, Autobots leader Optimus Prime accepts an unusual honor at the Nickelodeon Kid's Choice Awards.

No comments:

Post a Comment