Friday, May 12, 2023

Friday Fuss

On a warm sunny Friday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, the predictable disastrous results of halfhearted enforcement of immigration laws.

From FrontpageMag, President Biden has made it easier to immigrate to the U.S. illegally than legally.

From Townhall, Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) shows Biden what's really going on at the border.

From The Washington Free Beacon, the Republican primary has become invisible.

From the Washington Examiner, former congresscritter Tulsi Gabbard (D-HI) has no plans to run for Senator.

From The Federalist, Title 42 was never going to solve the problem of illegal immigration.

From American Thinker, three important questions for climate change zealots.

From MRCTV, someone leaves a beheaded chicken and a mutilated lamb outside a pro-life pregnancy center in Orlando, Florida.

From NewsBusters, how CNN just boosted former President Trump.

From Canada Free Press, everyone should vote with their eyes, ears, mouths and wallets.

From CBC News, there's no end in sight for evacuation orders due to wild fires in the Canadian province of Alberta.

From Global News, a woman in the Canadian province of New Brunswick is being forced out of her apartment because her son moved out.

From CTV News, what is known about the shooting death of a police officer in Bourget, Ontario, Canada.

From TeleSUR, Bolivian authorities investigate allegations of sexual misconduct by priest.

From TCW Defending Freedom, British parliamentcritters toe the party line on 10 big questions.

From the Express, according to U.K. podcast host Ann Gripper, King Charles III looked "terror-struck" and "frail" at his coronation.  (Her podcast is named Pod Save The King.)

From the Evening Standard, long-term exposure to noise from the London Underground, a.k.a. the Tube, can be hazardous to your health.

From the (U.K.) Independent, the High Court in London is told that there is no evidence that the Mirror Group Newspapers hacked any phones.

From the Irish Examiner, a court in the Irish county of Cork is told that a drug dealer ran over a female police officer and dragger her with his car.

From VRT NWS, prosecutors in Leuven, Belgium ask that two men who switched water for beer in hundreds of barrels be given two-year prison sentences.

From The Brussels Times, the Belgian government approves €92 million more in military aid to Ukraine.

From the NL Times, the U.N.'s refugee boss wants the Netherlands to take in more asylum seekers.

From Dutch News, equipment intended to reduce the emission of nitrogen compounds by farm animals is reportedly not working as well as expected.  (If you read Dutch, read the report at NRC.)

From Deutsche Welle, a trade union announces a strike against Germany's national rail network, which is intended to last for 50 hours.

From the CPH Post, the 48 Timer Festival in the Nørrebro district of Copenhagen, Denmark is "back with a vengeance".

From EuroNews, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy will not be given the chance to give an address at the Eurovision Song Contest.

From ReMix, according to Danish europarliamentcritter Anders Vistisen, Denmark must favor skilled immigrants from Asia and the Americans over Arabs who don't want to integrate.  (He will receive accusations of islamophobia in three.....two.....one.....)

From Balkan Insight, high school students in Mostar, Bosnia and Hercegovina are taken on a march "for the unborn".  (If you read Serbo-Croatian, at least where it uses the Latin alphabet, you can read the story at FENA, but it appears to require registration.  However, to my pleasant surprise, it also publishes some stories in English, so it looks like I might soon have a new source.)

From The North Africa Post, Gabon revokes the business licenses of several insurance companies.

From The New Arab, Jewish and Muslim communities in Djerba, Tunisia deal with the aftermath of the mass shooting at a synagogue.

From The Indian Express, the High Court in Delhi, India directs media sites to block reports and videos alleging that a Muslim forced a woman to convert to Islam.

From News(dot)com(dot)au, a movie about the terror attacks in Paris in 2015 is due out this coming November.

From Gatestone Institute, the Chinese government embraces Brazil as a "global strategic partner" as Brazilian President Lula da Silva visits China.

From The Stream, how gaslighting happens in abuse.

From The Daily Signal, how the migrant crisis affects Wisconsin, Alabama, and Virginia, and turns all states into border states.

From The American Conservative, a new form of birth control would force female bodies to attack themselves.

From The Western Journal, Chicago residents blast their city leaders after learning how many illegal migrants are coming in.

From BizPac Review, here's why illegal aliens are reportedly being given smartphones at taxpayer expense.  (If you liked Obamaphones, you'll probably like Bidenphones, too.)

From The Daily Wire, here they come.

From the Daily Caller, comedian Chrissie Mayr takes on hecklers after telling a joke about fake female Dylan Mulvaney.

From the New York Post, the school board of Brevard County, Florida moves to ban students from bringing "furry" items to school so they won't bark, grunt or meow.

From Breitbart, in a deposition before Congress, former Manhattan prosecutor Mark Pomerantz refuses to answer any questions about former President Trump's indictment.

From Newsmax, according to Governor Gavin Newsom (D), California's deficit has grown to $32 billion.

And from Sky News, the brewery Moon Gazer Ale changes the name of its White Face golden IPA because it sounded "a bit racist".

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