Monday, June 26, 2023

Monday Links

Now that I've taken a day off to drive back from my undisclosed location and unpack, here on a warm and cloudy Monday are some things going on:

From National Review, Fox News finds a successor for right-wing commentator Tucker Carlson.

From FrontpageMag, we were warned about the elites 55 years ago.

From Townhall, six ways in which the Biden presidency is exposing the myth of former President Obama.

From The Washington Free Beacon, how schools spent coronavirus stimulus money.

From the Washington Examiner, the alleged actions for which First Son Hunter Biden did not get indicted.

From The Federalist, the pride flag represents a regime change.

From American Thinker, the selective curiosity of the media.

From MRCTV, in Toronto, Bud Light digs to a new low.  (Reader discretion is advised.)

From NewsBusters, a CBS host presses congresscritter Veronica Escobar (D-TX) on abortion - from the left.

From Canada Free Press, a review of a book by former FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe.

From CBC News, some Petro-Canada gas stations are only able to accept cash payments due to a "cybersecurity incident".

From Global News, is Canada "embarrassingly behind" on semiconductors?

From CTV News, Sikhs rally at the Indian consulate in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada to allege that the killing of the president of the Metro Vancouver Sikh temple was foreign interference.

From TeleSUR, the Venezuelan capital city of Caracas hosts a meeting of CELAC science and technology ministers.

From TCW Defending Freedom, should there be a "Climate Awareness Month"?

From the Express, according to an official report, U.K. taxpayers will save up to £165,000 for every illegal migrant prevented from crossing the English Channel.

From the Evening Standard, Prince William launches an initiative intended to end homelessness in the U.K.  (The more migrants are prevented from illegally entering the U.K., as in the previous story, the more money will be available to help the U.K.'s homeless population, and thus the better the chance of ending homelessness.)

From the (U.K.) Independent, not being cautious when driving into sunlight in the U.K. during the summer can cost ya, pilgrim.

From the Irish Examiner, according to Irish Taoiseach Leo Varadkar, Ireland's flag is being weaponized "by a small minority".

From VRT NWS, a jeweler in Oostakker, Belgium is given a suspended 10-month prison sentence for killing an armed man trying to rob his store.

From The Brussels Times, sex workers in Belgium will be able to sign employment contracts.

From the NL Times, Dutch customs officials seize 3,587 kilos of she-don't-lie worth €269 million at the Port of Rotterdam, while the Dutch navy find 2,000 kilos more in the Caribbean.

From Dutch News, some Dutch people are still in Russia as the Wagner Group rebellion is defused.

From Deutsche Welle, Germany plans to station 4,000 military personnel in Lithuania.

From the CPH Post, why women camp on the Danish island of Femø every year.

From EuroNews, Wagner Group leader Yevgeny Progozhin claims that its march to Moscow was a protest, not a coup.

From ReMix, Germany's Free Democratic Party takes out advertisements on rickshaws in India for people to migrate to Germany.

From Balkan Insight, Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis is sworn in for his second consecutive term.

From The North Africa Post, as the Polisario movement falls apart, its crumbling is called a serious "concern".

From The New Arab, due to its increasing population, Egypt is set to become the world's largest importer of wheat.  (This is a historical irony because Egypt was once the "bread basket" of the Roman and Byzantine Empires.)

From Gatestone Institute, if President Biden runs for reelection in 2024, who will his supporters really be voting for?

From The Stream, two Republican candidates for U.S. Senator from Virginia pledge to investigate the ties between the SPLC and the federal government.

From The Daily Signal, how a crime novel became reality for eight American cities with "rogue prosecutors".

From The American Conservative, Senator (and former NCAA football coach) Tommy Tuberville's (R-AL) hold on military promotions is working as designed.

From The Western Journal, one major roadblock stands in Biden's way.

From BizPac Review, more on Fox News's choice to succeed the aforementioned Tucker Carlson.

From The Daily Wire, the woke CEO of BlackRock admits that Florida Governor Ron DeSantis hurt the company when he pulled $2 billion in assets out of it.

From the Daily Caller, DeSantis promises to support the Keystone XL pipeline.

From the New York Post, a trans activist convicted of murdering a lesbian couple and their adopted on will serve "her" life sentence in a women's prison.

From Breitbart, Admiral Rachel Levine wants a whole "Summer of Pride".

From Newsmax, the Colorado Springs mass shooter pleads guilty.

From The Hill, despite a negative recommendation from Speaker McCarthy (R-Cal), congresscritter George Santos (R-NY) intends to run for reelection in 2024.  (via Newsmax)

And from The Babylon Bee, a pedophile jailed for flashing kids at a local playground kicks himself for not doing it at a "pride" parade instead.

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