Thursday, March 9, 2023

Thursday Tidbits

On a sunny but cool Thursday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, the people arguing that the origin of the coronavirus doesn't matter are fools.

From FrontpageMag, Senator Socialism (I-VT) can't explain the fundamental tenet of socialism.

From Townhall, an update about Senator Mitch McConnell's (R-KY) hospitalization.

From The Washington Free Beacon, congresscritter Cori Bush's (D-MO) bodyguard claims that Jews control the world and that he is a Jewish "high priest".  (If he's a "high priest" who is Jewish, and Jews control the world, wouldn't it mean that he is involved in the control of the world?)

From the Washington Examiner, Prince Harry and Meghan Markle show off their hypocrisy.

From The Federalist, if the January 6th Inquisition Committee hadn't put on a partisan show trial, footage shown by Fox News host Tucker Carlson wouldn't be necessary.

From American Thinker, of people and lizards, and the wrong kind of lizard.

From CNS News, according to the Census Bureau, China was a source of the largest amount of imports into the U.S.

From NewsBusters, has Tucker Carlson uncovered a different narrative on the Capitol riot?

From Canada Free Press, a U.S. law actually mandates election fraud.

From TeleSUR, a court in Buenos Aires, Argentina releases a report explaining the reasons for the sentencing of Vice President Cristina Fernandez-Kirchner.

From TCW Defending Freedom, murky record-keeping at the U.K.'s HNS helped it fiddle with its coronavirus numbers.

From the Daily Mail, an Iraqi man who had arrived in the U.K. on a migrant boat allegedly stabs a British man in Southampton, England in hopes of getting deported.

From ReMix, German police reportedly arrest three ProFa members allegedly involved in brutal attacks in Budapest, Hungary.  (As we have recently seen in Atlanta, Georgia, U.S., ProFa thugs sometimes conduct their attacks in places other than where they live.)

From Euractiv, Denmark inaugurates the world's first cross-border site for capturing and storing carbon dioxide.

From Polskie Radio, according to Defense Minister Mariusz Błaszczak, Poland has given Ukraine 10 Leopard 2A4 tanks.  (Unfortunately, the pun "tanks a lot" doesn't translate well into Polish.)

From Radio Prague, Petr Pavel is sworn in as the Czech Republic's new president.

From The Slovak Spectator, Slovakia needs onions.

From Daily News Hungary, foreign guest workers flock to Hungary.  (If you read Hungarian, read the story at 24HU.)

From Hungary Today, the Hungarian airline Wizz Air will soon have female pilots.

From About Hungary, according to Hungarian official Gergely Gulyás, Hungary might be over the peak of inflation.

From EuroNews, when in Latvia, don't drink and drive, or your car might get confiscated and sent to Ukraine.

From Russia Today, according to Russian emergency services, hackers broadcasted a fake air raid alert in Moscow.

From Sputnik International, according to Russian U.N. envoy Dmitry Polyansky, the world would be a dangerous place without accountability for the attack on the Nord Stream pipeline.

From The Moscow Times, Russia pounds Ukraine with more missiles.

From Romania-Insider, you can now rent Tesla electric cars in Romania from the company Autonom.

From Novinite, Sofia, Bulgaria will remove its last remaining monument to the Soviet Army.

From The Sofia Globe, E.U. interior ministers agree to allow visa-free travel for people having Kosovo passports.

From Radio Bulgaria, UNESCO Assistant Director-General for Culture Ernesto Ottone is impressed with Bulgaria's cultural heritage.

From Balkan Insight, according to a report by the Council of Europe, political blockages are stopping reforms in Bosnia and Herzegovina.

From The North Africa Post, Moroccan authorities arrest three ISIS terrorists for allegedly planning attacks in that country.

From The New Arab, five Arab female sports stars to celebrate during International Women's Month.

From RAIR Foundation USA, Adidas and other companies launch a campaign to normalize sharia in Sweden.  (If you read Swedish, read the story at Resumé.)

From Reuters, Islamist terrorists kill at least 35 people in Mukondi, Democratic Republic of Congo.

From Gatestone Institute, China is winning the technological war because the Biden administration is allowing them to.

From The Stream, left-wing lies from the college industrial complex.

From The Daily Signal, Senator Josh Hawley (R-MO) proposes a ban on stock trading by senior government officials.

From The American Conservative, a new report from the Department of Homeland Security shows why you should stay angry.

From The Western Journal, the Biden administration gives an "International Women of Courage Award" to someone who is a woman in the Caitlyn Jenner sense of the word.

From BizPac Review, the Chief Twit's response to a Tweet by Senator Chuck Schumer (D-NY) about the aforementioned footage shown by Tucker Carlson is an "epic mike drop".)

From The Daily Wire, at a launch party for the book Stolen Youth, protesters call the authors and attendees "fascist [bleep]s".

From the Daily Caller, Arkansas Governor Sarah Huckabee Sanders (R) endorses a bill that would require social media companies to verify that their new users are at least 18 years old.

From the New York Post, the IRS's requirement to report income from crimes gives rise to comedy on Twitter.

From Breitbart, President Biden submits a budget that would include more taxation, more spending, and more debt.

From Newsmax, Visa and Mastercard pause their plans to separately categorize sales at gun stores.

And from SFGate, a vegan in Maine keeps losing his appeals to keep his personalized license plate, which refers to bean curd.

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