Friday, March 10, 2023

Friday Fuss

On a cool rainy Friday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, the House unanimously passes a bill to declassify intelligence on the origins of the coronavirus.

From FrontpageMag, what the new revelations about the Capitol riot confirm about the left's agenda.

From Townhall, there's a strange twist to the story of the four Americans who were kidnapped by cartel members in Mexico.

From The Washington Free Beacon, Senator Jon Tester (D-MT) enjoys fine dining.

From the Washington Examiner, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis (R) knocks President Biden for laughing at a woman whose two sons died from overdoses of fentanyl.

From The Federalist, neither Biden nor Governor Tony Evers (D-Wis) are doing anything about the hostage situation imposed by the Lac du Flambeau band of Lake Superior Chippewa.

From American Thinker, this week we've seen more evidence that the Democrats have disdain for true democracy.

From CNS News, a record 160,315,000 Americans were employed in February, with 46,000 being hired by government.

From NewsBusters, left-wingers celebrate "Abortion Provider Appreciation Day".

From Canada Free Press, it's an amazing experience to chat with an AI.

From American Free News Network, another fake meme from the Democrats gets dissolved.  (via Canada Free Press)

From TeleSUR, about 10,000 Mexican woman protest in the city of Juarez against gender-based violence.

From TCW Defending Freedom, under a regime led by U.K. Labour Party leader Keir Starmer, the regime of Prime Minister Boris "the Spider" Johnson will seem like a golden age.

From Snouts in the Trough, a look back at predictions that "our children will not know what snow is".  (The article appears to have been published late yesterday, but is called a "Friday/weekend blog", and thus appears to be intended for today.)

From EuroNews, a gunman kills eight people at a Jehovah's Witness hall in Hamburg, Germany.

From ReMix, the youth wing of the German governing party SPD calls for men to be banned from upcoming Easter events in the city of Bremen due to sexual assaults against women.

From the Greek Reporter, three more Greek rail officials are charged in connection to a train wreck that killed 57 people.

From Ekathimerini, Greece's Anti-Money Laundering Authority starts auditing railroad company.

From the Greek City Times, the Greek airline SKY Express offers free transportation between Athens and Thessaloniki for students during the rest of March.

From Euractiv, according to President Aleksandar Vučić, Serbia will not recognize Kosovo or support its accession to NATO.

From Balkan Insight, ethnic Serb villagers in northern Kosovo stage camp protests against land expropriation.

From Total Croatia News, Croatian bus companies continue to face numerous significant issues.  (If you read Croatian, read the story at Poslovni Dnevnik.)

From The Slovenia Times, the Slovenian government proposes simplifying rules for hiring foreign workers.

From The Malta Independent, details emerge on the wreckage of a World War II-era plane found in the garden of a residential home for the elderly.

From Malta Today, 171 people in Malta are stateless, almost half of them being under 10 years old.

From ANSA, about 10,000 businesses in Italy folded last year, 6,000 led by women.

From Allah's Willing Executioners, a suspected ISIS terrorist is arrested while trying to enter Austria from Germany.  (If you read German, read the story at Exxpress.)

From France24, the challenge of putting abortion rights into the French constitution.

From RFI, French 17-year-olds continue to use less alcohol, tobacco and cannabis.

From El País, the first Nazi German bomber shot down at night, during the Spanish Civil War, is found in the municipality of Santa María de la Alameda.

From The Portugal News, Portugal announces its Car of the Year.

From The North Africa Post, in letters to the U.N.'s Security Council and Secretary General, Morocco denounces complicity from South Africa with Algeria and Polisario.

From The New Arab, the U.N. buys a ship that is intended to remove oil from a decaying tanker off the coast of Yemen.

From RAIR Foundation USA, an Imam refuses to shake hands with Princess Kate while she was visiting the Hayes Muslim Centre in London.

From Gatestone Institute, a date with an AI named "Sydney".

From The Stream, three mistaken arguments about guns and violence.

From The Daily Signal, the House Freedom Caucus introduces its plan to "Shrink Washington" and "Grow America".

From The American Conservative, about a property tax bill in Texas.

From The Western Journal, according to right-wing commentator Laura Ingraham, "we have a hologram for a president".

From BizPac Review, "the insurrection that wasn't".

From The Daily Wire, critics complain about the "bold glamour" filter on TikTok.

From the Daily Caller, the Palm Beach, Florida home of the late right-wing commentator Rush Limbaugh sells for a record amount.

From the New York Post, to decide a divorce case, a Virginia judge uses a 19th-century law about the treatment of slaves to rule that the couple's frozen embryos are property.

From Breitbart, according to Italian parliamentcritter Alessandro Cattaneo, parts of Milan are "out of control" after a Moroccan migrant stabs six people.  (If you read Italian, read the story at Il Giornale.)

From Newsmax, according to former Vice President Pence, it would have been "un-American" for him to overturn the 2020 presidential election.

And from HuffPost, if you like the current movie about an animal on she-don't-lie, you might also like the next one.

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