Tuesday, May 30, 2023

Tuesday Tidings

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

From National Review, why are Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s voters backing him?

From FrontpageMag, three cheers for British anti-grooming activist Tommy Robinson.

From Townhall, Senator Rand Paul (R-KY) releases a "conservative alternative" to the debt ceiling deal reached by President Biden and Speaker McCarthy (R-Cal).

From The Washington Free Beacon, the debt ceiling emerges as a possible battle ground between former President Trump and Florida Governor Ron DeSantis (R).

From the Washington Examiner, Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson (D) fails his first big test in office.

From The Federalist, a review of a book about how Christians have promoted liberty and equality in America.

From American Thinker, when it comes to the Biden family, "it's all about the money".

From MRCTV, Jane Fonda gonna Jane Fonda.

From NewsBusters, according to a study, TV news blames Republicans for the debt drama, not the big-spending Democrats.

From Canada Free Press, the report from Special Counsel John Durham is an "unexploded bombshell".

From TeleSUR, presidents of South American countries arrive in Brasilia for a summit meeting.

From TCW Defending Freedom, death and denial in the coronavirus cult.

From Free West Media, the publisher Arktos gets blocked by its international distributor.  (This is the first new article published by FWM in over a month.)

From EuroNews, NATO sends 700 more troops to Kosovo in an effort to quell the violence there.

From ReMix, Hungary shows that families rather than immigrants are the solution to Europe's demographic crisis.

From Balkan Insight, protesters in Bulgaria accuse President Rumen Radev of working for Russian interests instead of Bulgarian ones.  (Is this Bulgaria's "Russian collusion" hoax?)

From The North Africa Post, the Moroccan state-owned phosphate company OCP reports $1.7 billion in earnings for the first quarter of 2023.

From The New Arab, what does Turkish President Erdoğan's reelection mean for Syrian refugees and Syrian President Assad?

From RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty, Iran clashes with Afghanistan's Taliban in a dispute over water.

From IranWire, two managers of a historic site including the tomb of the 14th-century poet Hafez in Shiraz, Iran are arrested after video shows a marriage proposal taking place near the tomb.

From Iran International, Iranian hardliners dismiss the government's hijab bill and want an even harsher one.

From Khaama Press, Afghani customs authorities stop an attempt to smuggle more than a ton of "human hair" into Pakistan.

From Hasht e Subh, Taliban personnel prevent girls from attending school in the district of Jaghori in the Afghan province of Ghazni.

From the Afghanistan Times, U.N. envoy Katharina Merkel reiterates the organization's support for education in Afghanistan.  (The article does not mention, nor have I found out any information, about whether U.N. envoy Merkel is any relation to the former German chancellor.)

From Dawn, according to Pakistani Interior Minister Rana Sanaullah, former Prime Minister Imran Khan will be tried in a military court for allegedly "planning" and "executing" the violent attacks on May 9th.  (May 9th looks like Pakistan's version of America's January 6th.)

From The Express Tribune, Pakistani scientists develop a process by which AI is used to determine the sweetness of citrus fruits.

From Pakistan Today, a no-confidence motion is filed against Assembly Speaker Syed Amjad Zaidi in the Pakistani territory of Gilgit-Baltistan.

From Geo News, a court in Karachi Pakistan acquits a man who allegedly honor killed his daughter.

From The Hans India, six people are arrested in Hyderabad, India for allegedly exhibiting exotic animals in a pub.

From the Hindustan Times, what is the Foucault's Pendulum that has been installed in India's parliament building?

From ANI, Nigeria releases Indian sailors who were detained in August 2022.

From India Today, opposition parties in India have found a formula to defeat Prime Minister Narendra Modi, but will it work?

From the Dhaka Tribune, according to U.N. official Olivier De Schutter, the Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh could become "the new Palestinians".  (Have the Rohingya attempted any suicide bombings or launched any rockets at Bangladeshi civilians?  Asking for a friend.)

From New Age, Bangladesh Railway is set to sell all of its advance intercity train tickets ahead of the Islamic festival of Eid-ul-Azha.

From Gatestone Institute, "motor voter" has allowed non-citizens to be put onto U.S. voter rolls.

From The Stream, a moral outcry defies Target's selling of products that encourage people to hate their own bodies.

From The Daily Signal, two elderly pro-life advocates are "viciously" assaulted near a Planned Avoidance Of Parenthood clinic in Baltimore, Maryland.

From The American Conservative, has the Chief Twit ruined Twitter?

From The Western Journal, polls show Senator Joe Manchin (D-WV) losing his seat to his Republican rival in 2024.

From BizPac Review, an illegal migrant woman from Mexico who allegedly threw her newborn baby into the trash claims that she didn't know that it was a baby.

From The Daily Wire, according to a report, Target's vice president for brand management also serves as the treasurer for an LGBTQ group that promotes secret child gender transitions.

From the Daily Caller, the Chinese app TikTok has reportedly stored thousands of American social security numbers.

From Breitbart, according to a poll, former President Trump is dominating in the West Virginia presidential primary.

From Newsmax, Speaker McCarthy (R-Cal) tells FBI Director Christopher Wray that he faces contempt charges if the bureau does not turn over a document relating to President Biden's alleged involvement in a bribery scheme.

And from the New York Post, according to a fan theory, Disney's animated 1989 version of Little Mermaid has a dark connection to the 1953 animated film Peter Pan.

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