Friday, March 17, 2023

Links For St. Patrick's Day

Top o' the afternoon to everyone.  Today, we're all honorary Irishmen and Irishwomen.  If you want to learn that St. Patrick's real name wasn't Patrick or how he was not Irish, there are links on posts I've made on today's date in previous years.  So feel free to delve into the archives.  Meanwhile, on a rainy Friday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, if former congresscritter Barney Frank (D-MA) had been a Republican, he would be the face of the current banking crisis.

From FrontpageMag, how Dr. Fauci shaped the coronavirus narrative.

From Townhall, as a reminder, please note that the banking crisis is another consequence from President Biden's inflation.

From The Washington Free Beacon, the Biden administration is told to stay out of our kitchens.

From the Washington Examiner, former Silicon Valley Bank employees weigh in on its collapse.

From The Federalist, wokeism is intentionally ambiguous, which is why describing it is offensive to its perveyors.

From American Thinker, why aren't most of the media trusted?

From CNS News, more illegal aliens were encountered crossing the border in fiscal 2022 than during all of President Trump's entire time in office.

From Fox News, a Utah mother promises to take action after her 6th-grade daughter encouraged to eat insects for a climate change project.  (The story comes via LifeZette, which is now apparently again publishing complete articles, but which are reprints from other sources.  As for eating insects, let's leave that to John the Baptist.)

From NewsBusters, the platform YouTube reinstates Trump's account after two years.

From Canada Free Press, the ravages of the coronavirus, even after it's allegedly over.

From TeleSUR, El Salvador lifts its ban on electoral reform a year ahead of its upcoming elections.

From TCW Defending Freedom, the strange case of banned coronavirus treatments.

From Snouts in the Trough, the platform Google really knows everything.

Form Polskie Radio, Poland needs soldiers.

From Radio Prague, a U.K. musicologist recalls his trip to Czechoslovakia, his parents thinking that he might have been a spy.

From The Slovak Spectator, Slovakia will no longer require people who test positive for the coronavirus to self-isolate.

From Daily News Hungary, the proportion of people in Hungary with "Roma ties" is increasing.

From Hungary Today, the Hungarian party Fidesz rejects the European Commission's Certificate of Parenthood.

From About Hungary, Hungary sends 105 more tons of medical supplies to Turkey.

From Russia Today, the Russian government dismisses an "outrageous" claim by the ICC.

From Sputnik International, how can U.S. Reaper drones be detected, identified and brought down?

From The Moscow Times, the ICC issues an arrest warrant for Russian President Putin.

From Romania-Insider, Romania's financial regulator ASF withdraws the license of the insurance firm Euroins Romania, and files a request for its to start bankruptcy proceedings.

From Novinite, 10 percent of Bulgarians between 18 and 24 years old have dropped out of school early.

From The Sofia Globe, the treatment of Jews in Bulgaria during World War II.

From Radio Bulgaria, the "Trabant Fest", a gathering of owners and admirers of the East German-made car, takes place in Veliko Tarnovo, Bulgaria.

From Balkan Insight, ethnic Serbs in the Kosovo city of Mitrovica and the town of Gracanica commemorate the deadly unrest of 2004.

From EuroNews, the election in Montenegro highlights the clash between pro-Europe and pro-Russia politicians.

From Euractiv, according to Portuguese Education Minister João Costa, Europe must not teach history from a "one sided" perspective.

From ReMix, according to the leader of a Spanish lawyers association, Spain's new "trans law" means that it is no longer a free country.

From The North Africa Post, the NGO Doctors Without Borders denounces Algeria for abandoning thousands of migrants in the desert.

From The New Arab, dive into the lost harbor of the Egyptian pyramid builders.

From Gatestone Institute, is China trying to create a new world order?

From The Stream, a new political litmus test for election fraud, coronavirus policy, and the Capitol riot.

From The Daily Signal, abortion advocates claim that unborn children who might face challenges in life are better off dead.  (In other words, let's just give up on them and remove any chance that they have of leading a productive life.)

From The American Conservative, housing policies should prefer "opportunity over regulation".

From The Western Journal, a photo of President Biden, which has people wondering if it's real, goes viral on social media.

From BizPac Review, a reporter for the Daily Beast who claimed that Florida Governor Ron DeSantis (R) once at pudding with his fingers beclowns himself and gets roasted on Twitter.

From The Daily Wire, the legacy media go Sergeant Schultz on the report that Biden family members received money from an energy company linked to the Chinese Communist Party.

From the Daily Caller, Mexican authorities arrest a 14-year-old hit man who has allegedly killed eight people.

From the New York Post, according to a report, the coronavirus may have originated in Chinese raccoon dogs.  (If so, you bats better move over.)

From Breitbart, according to a survey, more Democrats view Senator Mitch McConnell (R-KY) favorably than his fellow Republicans do.

From Newsmax, Biden wants harsh penalties for executives of failed banks.

And from SFGate, a family in New Orleans, Louisiana will not be allowed to keep their pet nutria.

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