On a sunny but cool Tuesday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, according to polls, Americans don't want President Biden to run for reelection.
From FrontpageMag, the racist double standard under which some shootings matter but others don't.
From Townhall, Biden's new "green" rule for power plants that produce carbon dioxide is probably illegal. (I wonder if these power plants will have to obey any such rule.)
From The Washington Free Beacon, Biden will be endorsed by his former boss, who once warned about his ability to [bleep] things up.
From the Washington Examiner, why did scientific journals help China censor the truth about the coronavirus.
From The Federalist, trans activists interrupt a session of the Montana House of Representatives.
From American Thinker, another reason for the coronavirus lockdown craze.
From LifeZette, according to congresscritter Andy Biggs (R-AZ), police agencies are buying data about Americans in a circumvention of the 4th Amendment. (This article appears to be original to LifeZette, and would thus be the first one in quite a while.)
From NewsBusters, late night shows make 16 times as many jokes about Tucker Carlson's parting ways with Fox News as they do about Don Lemon's firing from CNN.
From Canada Free Press, there is something that could be worse than Biden being reelected.
From TeleSUR, in the Canape-Vert neighborhood of the capital city of Port-au-Prince, Haitians take the law into their own hands.
From TCW Defending Freedom, on coronation day, one writer will toast the crown, but not the man wearing it.
From Snouts in the Trough, the German people get their lederhosen in a twist.
From Euractiv, several German energy company join up for a plan to bring hydrogen from the seashore to inland industrial centers.
From the Greek Reporter, ancient Greek history is showcased at three museums on the island of Crete.
From Ekathimerini, a Greek Air Force C-27 transport plane flies out of Aswan, Egypt to Djibouti to pick up Greek citizens evacuated from Sudan.
From the Greek City Times, a man in Volos, Greece is sentenced to three years in prison for beating his daughter after she converted to Islam. (If you read Greek, read the story at Gegonota.)
From Balkan Insight, over 1,000 Albanians have been returned from the U.K. since the two countries signed an agreement to combat illegal immigration.
From Total Croatia News, Zagreb, Croatia pays homage to the British musician John Lennon in the form of an opera written by a former Croatian prime minister.
From The Slovenia Times, several thousand farmers stage a second tractor rally in Ljubljana, Slovenia.
From The Malta Independent, according to Foreign Affairs Minister Ian Borg, no Maltese citizens in Sudan have requested evacuation.
From Malta Today, domestic violence cases in Malta rose almost 13 percent from 2020 to 2021.
From ANSA, Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni writes an open letter on the occasion of Liberation Day. (Liberation Day commemorates the Italian resistance movement's victory over Nazi Germany and Italy's fascist regime.)
From SwissInfo, Swiss embassy staff and their families are evacuated from Sudan and arrive in Switzerland.
From Free West Media, instead of sending its weapons to Ukraine, Switzerland destroys them. (This is the first story published in FWM in three weeks.)
From France24, French President Emmanuel Macron avoids crowds while visiting eastern France.
From RFI, Comoros refuses to accept migrants from the French department of Mayotte in the Indian Ocean.
From El PaĆs, the Spanish NGO Open Arms saves 47 migrants from drowning in the Mediterranean Sea.
From The Portugal News, Portuguese naval ships monitor and accompany a group of Russian ships along the Portuguese coast.
From EuroNews, the E.U. launches a platform to pool natural gas in an attempt to lower its prices.
From The North Africa Post, Moroccan Ambassador to the U.K. Hakim Hajoui wins the "MENA Diplomat of the Year 2023" award.
From The New Arab, as a 72-hour ceasefire largely holds in Khartoum, Sudan, evacuations of foreigners are stepped up.
From BBC News, Iran formed a secret committee to punish celebrities who support the current anti-government protests.
From Gatestone Institute, the real human rights violations against the Palestinians.
From The Stream, who should apologize, the police in Seattle or their critics?
From The Daily Signal, a Christian college becomes a bastion of censorship led by students.
From The American Conservative, the parting of ways between right-wing journalist Tucker Carlson and Fox News sends shockwaves from Washington, D.C. to Hungary.
From The Western Journal, Carlson has his own theory as to why he and Fox News parted ways.
From BizPac Review, Don Lemon, recently fired from CNN, plots his next move.
From The Daily Wire, the platform Twitter is flooded with stories about Carlson's kindness as he leaves Fox News.
From the Daily Caller, Villanova University decides against having "two-spirit" and "gender fluid" options for its student housing.
From the New York Post, a mass grave of deceased mercenaries from Russia's Wagner mercenary group is discovered in Siberia. (If you read Russian, read the story at Sibir Realii.)
From Breitbart, another reason to oppose President Biden's reelection is his use of the IRS against you.
From Newsmax, Biden once ran a senatorial campaign attacking his opponent's age.
And from Fox News, award-winning actor and singer Harry Belafonte dies of congestive heart failure at age 96.
No comments:
Post a Comment