Monday, July 17, 2023

Monday Mania

On a warm and hazy Monday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, former President Trump's Republican challengers are oddly cautious.

From FrontpageMag, 10 reasons for the inevitable death of affirmative action.

From Townhall, President Biden gets busted after taking credit for a law signed by then-President Trump.

From The Washington Free Beacon, on-campus shootings and sex crimes does not dissuade the University of Michigan working toward eliminating on-campus police.

From the Washington Examiner, debunking congresscritters Pramila Jayapal (D-WA) and Ilhan Omar (D-MN) about Israel.

From The Federalist, the FTC punished Twitter for leaving the government censorship complex.

From American Thinker, what TWA flight 800 and First Son Hunter Biden's laptop had in common.

From MRCTV, then-Department of Energy official Sam Brinton was on a taxpayer-funded flight when he stole a woman's luggage.

From NewsBusters, congresscritter Byron Donalds (R-FL) rips the left-wing assault against Twitter Files journalists.

From Canada Free Press, the gangster government goes on parade.

From CBC News, the Canadian military prepares to fight forest fires in the province of British Columbia.

From Global News, an Arctic cruise ship coming from Greenland docks in Churchill, Manitoba, Canada, the first such arrival in over 10 years.

From CTV News, more than a dozen new wildfires appear in British Columbia.

From TeleSUR, according to Brazilian President Lula da Silva, sanctions only result in penalizing the most vulnerable.  (I'd have to agree with him.  I can't recall a single instance in which sanctions produced the results intended by those who imposed them.)

From TCW Defending Freedom, a review of a book about cobalt mining in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

From Snouts in the Trough, climate grifter and private jet passenger John Kerry gets defenestrated.

From the Express, U.K. Prime Minister Rishi Sunak removes five Tory parliamentcritters from a crucial committee, thus causing chaos.

From the Evening Standard, an "intuitive" cat who owns a deaf human is named Cat of the Year by the organization Cats Protections.  (The article wrongly calls the human the cat's "owner".  As I learned from Papa Bigfoot, humans do not own cats; cats own humans.)

From the (U.K.) Independent, U.K. Labour Party leader Keir Starmer faces a backlash from several parliamentcritters over his plan to uphold a child benefit limit.

From the (Irish) Independent, riding on the Bus Éireann Expressway service is soon gonna cost ya a little bit more, pilgrim.

From the Irish Examiner, according to Ireland's Department of Housing, there have been 143 prosecutions for wildlife crime in the country since January 2020.

From VRT NWS, the Belgian commune of Flanders bans animal markets and the killing of animals at home.

From The Brussels Times, according to Brussels Airlines CEO Dorothea von Boxberg, banning night airplane flights is "unacceptable".

From the NL Times, the Dutch parties Labor, PvdA, and GroenLinks agree to team up for the parliamentary elections scheduled for this coming November.

From Dutch News, denying the Holocaust will become a specific crime in the Netherlands.

From Voice Of Europe, climate activists set fire to two SUVs in Munich, Germany.  (Don't these [bleep]s realize that burning a vehicle produces carbon dioxide?)

From ReMixfour men from Georgia allegedly sexually harass children at a pool in Bytom, Poland and almost get lynched.

From Balkan Insight, the Bulgarian pro-Russia party Revival is investigated over an allegedly anti-Semitic image.

From EuroNews, fans of the Tour de France are warned to keep themselves and the selfies away from the riders.

From The North Africa Post, Israel officially recognizes Morocco's sovereignty over the region of Western Sahara.

From The New Arab, the Moroccan soccer team Atlas Lionesses will be the first team from the MENA region to play in the Women's FIFA World Cup.

From The Wire, Afghan singer Hasiba Noori is killed by unidentified gunmen in the Pakistani province of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa.

From Gatestone Institute, Palestinians are victims of apartheid - in Lebanon.

From The Stream, "you don't have to be Colombo" to solve the case of the she-don't-lie in the White House.

From The Daily Signal, term limits for Supreme Court justices are a "solution" in search of a problem.

From The American Conservative, should efforts to replace President Biden at the top of the Democratic ticket be taken seriously?

From The Western Journal, according to former Secret Service agent Dan Bongino, some former colleagues of his know exactly who brought the she-don't-lie into the White House.

From BizPac Review, former NBA player Charles Barkley tells everyone to drink "[bleep]ing" Bud Light.

From The Daily Wire, a train carrying hazardous materials derails in Pennsylvania near Philadelphia, but so far, none have reportedly leaked.

From the Daily Caller, Senator Josh Hawley (R-MO) unloads on the beer company Anheuser-Busch, which like him is based in Missouri.

From the New York Post, Wall Street eyes Atlantic Beach, Long Island, New York as the "new Hamptons".

From Breitbart, China admits that a recent visit by the aforementioned John Kerry was useless.

From Newsmax, the border app CPB One is credited for a decrease in migrant arrivals in June.

And from The Babylon Bee, Biden blames the she-don't-lie in the White House on a black man who used to live there.

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