Tuesday, May 2, 2023

Tuesday Things

On a cool cloudy Tuesday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, President Biden orders 1,500 Army soldiers to the southern border to assist the Border Patrol.

From FrontpageMag, Biden has a new plan to help criminals.

From Townhall, hypocritical Democrats think that you won't notice something about the left-leaning Supreme Court justices.

From The Washington Free Beacon, the green energy industry admits that it needs inexpensive products from China in order to survive.

From the Washington Examiner, in March, job openings fell to their lowest level in about two years.

From The Federalist, Democrats should learn ethics from Supreme Court justices instead of smearing them.

From American Thinker, debunking the bigoted Democrat lie that Republicans planned to ban the book To Kill a Mockingbird.

From MRCTV, after raking in millions, First Son Hunter Biden claims that he can no longer afford child support for his 4-year-old daughter.

From Fox News, Biden offers a half-million-dollar grant for English teachers in Pakistan who focus on transgender youth.  (via LifeZette)

From NewsBusters, CNN can't decide whether a recession is on the way.

From CBC News, remembering the recently departed Canadian singer Gordon Lightfoot.

From Global News, now that the Public Service Alliance of Canada's strike is over, Canadians should expect "longer lineups" when applying for passports.

From CTV News, pastor Artur Pawlowski of Calgary, Alberta, Canada will learn today whether he is found guilty of involvement in a truck convoy that blocked a border crossing with the U.S.

From TeleSURVenezuelan President Nicolas Maduro signs a decree to increase bonuses for government employees, retirees and pensioners.

From TCW Defending Freedom, Christianity must be the one faith at the heart of the coronation of the U.K.'s King Charles III.

From the Express, fire from a nearby building engulfs the London Underground's Highgate Station.

From the Evening Standard, police investigate an incident in which a car allegedly runs over the foot of a Just Stop Oil activist.

From the (U.K.) Independent, food prices in the U.K. soared to record highs in April.

From the (Irish) Independent, according to an investigation, the pilot and the one passenger escaped unscathed after their ultralight private plane crashed due to their wearing seatbelts.

From the Irish Examiner, according to an engineer, climate change and underfunding are to blame for the "crumbling" roads in the Irish county of Cork.

From VRT NWS, according to the Belgian Met Office, there were no spring days in April, which was cold, wet, and gloomy.

From The Brussels Times, nine people are arrested after a rave party in Belgium.

From the NL Times, police in the Dutch cities of Amsterdam and Rotterdam arrest two people for causing explosions.

From Dutch News, an explosion destroys the front door of a house in Rotterdam.  (This might be one of the explosions recorded in the NLT article, since the DN article notes that two teenagers have been arrested.  If you read Dutch, read the story at Rijnmond.)

From Deutsche Welle, members of the climate group Last Generation have a "productive" meeting with German Transport Minister Volker Wissing.  (How much carbon dioxide does Germany produce relative to the really big emitters?)

From the CPH Post, fossil fuels have almost completely disappeared from Denmark's electricity and district heating sectors.  (How much carbon dioxide does Denmark produce relative to the really big emitters?)

From EuroNews, the Russian government orders increased munition production as its troops invading Ukraine are "running out of ammo".

From Euractiv, as some E.U. countries end their ban on agricultural products from Ukraine, its deputy agricultural minister asserts that its agricultural goods are safe.

From ReMix, over 400 police officers are injured as May Day protests in France devolve into chaos.

From Balkan Insight, North Macedonia needs workers.

From The North Africa Post, Marrakech, Morocco is chosen as the Islamic World's capital of culture for the Arab region in 2024.  (I'm sure that Graham Nash approves.)

From The New Arab, who was Palestinian hunger striker Khader Adnan?

From Gatestone Institute, how Palestinians are trying to destroy the country north of Palestine.

From The Stream, it's time for the church to stand up against censorship.

From The Daily Signal, everything you need to know about the case of the young airman accused of leaking classified documents.

From The American Conservative, why are so many young people trying to commit suicide.

From The Western Journal, things get weird when an ABC reporter asks a voter what she likes about Biden.

From Axios, Prospect Park, New Jersey Mayor Mohamed Khairullah is "shocked" that the U.S. Secret Service denied him entry to the White House celebration of Eid al-Fitr.  (via The Western Journal)

From BizPac Review, is former President Trump's decision to participate in a town hall hosted by CNN an attempt to "stick it" to Fox News?

From The Daily Wire, Biden finally ends the coronavirus vaccine requirement to enter the U.S., thus allowing Serbian tennis player Novak Djovokic to again play here.

From the Daily Caller, former Speaker Pelosi (D-Cal) asks for a $10 million earmark for a green conservancy in her district.

From the New York Post, a woman testifying in Trump's civil rape trial claims that he had "40 zillion hands" on her when groping her on a plane during the late 1970s.

From Breitbart, an emergency application filed with Justice Amy Coney Barrett asks the Supreme Court issue emergency injunctions against two assault weapons bans in Illinois.

From Newsmax, journalist Megyn Kelly warns former Fox News host Tucker Carlson that the network is trying to destroy him.

And from BBC News, a Chinese man staying at a hotel in Lhasa, Tibet detects a smell, which he blamed on the hotel's bakery and then on his own feet, but which turns out to be something more ominous.  (via the New York Post)

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