Wednesday, June 28, 2023

Wednesday Whatnot

On a warm cloudy Wednesday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, according to an IRS whistleblower, the Department of Justice blocked the execution of a warrant to search Biden properties before the 2020 election.

From FrontpageMag, what is the definition of leftism?

From Townhall, President Biden had an amazing exchange with reporters on the White House lawn today.

From The Washington Free Beacon, the Biden administration's anti-Semitism strategy does not mention Israel.

From the Washington Examiner, Biden misleads on jobs created on his watch.

From The Federalist, Reuters digs up the slaveholding ancestors of today's politicians and demand that you give a rat's rear end.

From American Thinker, the world's oldest anti-Semitic word.

From MRCTV, a gymnast tells us her pronouns.

From NewsBusters, ABC hides a whistleblower speaking out on the investigation of First Son Hunter Biden.

From Canada Free Press, Attorney General Merrick Garland is the tovarisch of our modern Potemkin village.

From TeleSUR, a group of Brazilians urge President Lula da Silva to offer asylum to journalist Julian Assange.

From TCW Defending Freedom, a review of a book by bassist Noel Redding about his time with the Jimi Hendrix experience.

From ReMix, Poland extends its policy of zero VAT on food through the current year.

From EuroNews, Finnish Economic Minister survives a confidence vote after making a "Nazi joke".

From the Greek Reporter, the Greek tradition of siesta, which at one time was sacred.  (I experienced the siesta in Greece when I visited the country in 1999.)

From Ekathimerini, recently reelected Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis unveils his government's roadmap for the next four years.

From the Greek City Times, strange lights seen above Athens were not put there by aliens, but by the Chief Twit.

From Balkan Insight, mobile phone users in the Balkans may roam freely, except in Kosovo.

From Total Croatia News, sounds of the Croatian island of Obonjan.

From The Slovenia Times, all primary schoolchildren in Slovenia will be given taxpayer-funded lunches starting in 2027.

From The Malta Independent, the Maltese parliament votes unanimously to allow exceptions into Malta's abortion law.

From Malta Today, six more beaches in Malta will become dog-friendly this summer.

From ANSA, police dismantle an international migrant smuggling network in Trieste, Italy.

From SwissInfo, the Swiss government rejects a proposal to resell old tanks to Ukraine.

From France24, France braces for protests as President Emmanuel Macron slams the police shooting of a teenage driver.

From RFI, at least 31 people are arrested in a night of violence caused by outrage over the police shooting of a teenage driver.

From El PaĆ­s, the identity of the "anarchist Madonna" shown in the picture from the Spanish Civil War is finally revealed.

From The Portugal News, the Portuguese government removes the requirement for cars to have insurance stickers on their windshields.

From The North Africa Post, the Chinese company Tinci plans to invest $280 million in a new electric vehicle battery plant in Morocco.

From The New Arab, Muslims aged 65 and over perform the Hajj pilgrimage in Mecca for the first time in several years due to the lifting of coronavirus-related restrictions.

From OpIndia, an accused terrorist is given a hero's welcome in the Indian state of Kerala.

From Gatestone Institute, a conference held in Sweden has a connection to Hamas.

From The Stream, the truth about transgenderism, from someone who lived it.

From The Daily Signal, a former abortionist has plans to change hearts about the unborn.

From The American Conservative, "Biden's border disaster".

From The Western Journal, more Americans are turning right, which Biden regards as a threat.

From BizPac Review, late-night host Jimmy Kimmel runs face-first into a fact check when he tries to mock presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (D).

From The Daily Wire, the CEO of Anheuser-Busch refuses to say whether he would again send a can of Bud Light to fake female Dylan Mulvaney.

From the Daily Caller, the U.S. attorney who allegedly covered for the aforementioned Hunter Biden also worked for a liberal law firm.

From the New York Post, a woman who threw a Molotov cocktail after getting tired of waiting in line at a bank is given a two-year prison sentence.

From Breitbart, eco-nutjobs from Just Stop Oil try to protest at Lord's Cricket Ground in London, but the players don't let them.

From Newsmax, according to a survey, two thirds of Americans say that the economy is getting worse.

And from SFGate, a chef opens a restaurant "dedicated to affordable pasta" in San Francisco.

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