Thursday, July 20, 2023

Stories For Moon Landing Day

On the anniversary of Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin walking on the moon, here are some things going on:

From National Review, a hotel in Rotterdam, New York reportedly kicks out guests to make room for migrants bused in from New York City.

From FrontpageMag, did a jihadist terror attack just occur in Fargo, North Dakota?

From Townhall, congresscritter Dan Goldman (D-NY), a protégé and former staffer of congresscritter Adam Schiff (D-Cal), admits a key fact about President Biden and his son Hunter.

From The Washington Free Beacon, an FBI task force knew that Hunter Biden's laptop was real, but hid this fact from social media companies.

From the Washington Examiner, Mayor Brandon Johnson (D) pushes his liberal agenda through Chicago's city council.  (You might say, "let's go, Brandon".)

From The Federalist, at a hearing about censorship, Democrats try to censor their fellow Democrat presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

From American Thinker, recalling then-President Trump's "Farewell" speech at the end of his time in office.

From MRCTV, a gay male couple reportedly have their baby aborted when the surrogate mother is diagnosed with breast cancer.

From LifeZette, the first moon landing "still amazes the world today", over 50 years later.

From NewsBusters, congresscritter Jim Jordan (R-OH) slams the censorship collusion between the FBI and Big Tech.

From Canada Free Press, does the Biden policy of "diversity" really encourage "perversity"?

From TeleSUR, Colombians mobilize in the capital city of Bogota in support of President Gustavo Petro.

From TCW Defending Freedom, send the boat people packing.

From EuroNews, according to the Belarusian government, fighters from Russia's Wagner group are training in Belarus near the Polish border, and other stories.

From Voice Of Europe, the German right-wing anti-globalist party AfD reaches all-time highs in the states of Rhineland-Palatinate and Baden-Württemberg.

From ReMix, Lithuania speeds up its deportations of Russian citizens.

From Balkan Insight, the Bosnian Serb Assembly criminalizes defamation despite concerns about free speech.

From France24, French President Emmanuel Macron reshuffles his cabinet.

From RFI, the riots in Frances banlieues are over, but the anger which launched them is not.

From The Portugal News, Portugal's SEF is taking two years to process requests to obtain residency.

From Morocco World News, Morocco should use its growing ties with Israel to acquire F-35 fighter jets.

From The North Africa Post, the African Development Bank lends Tunisia $87.1 million to finance its cereal sector.

From Hürriyet Daily News, the main Turkish opposition Republican People's Party is jolted by a leaked video of an online meeting of members seeking ways to unseat its leader Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu.

From Turkish Minute, jailed Turkish parliamentcritter Can Atalay petitions Turkey's Constitutional Court over alleged civil rights violations.

From Rûdaw, Iraq starts severing its ties with Sweden after the Swedish government allows the burning of a Koran and the Iraqi flag outside the Iraqi embassy in Stockholm.

From Armenpress, the government of the Azerbaijani region of Nagorno Karabakh signs an agreement with Armenian Zangi to launch a messenger that can be used without the internet.

From Public Radio Of Armenia, a Friendship City arrangement is established between Troy, New York, U.S. and Martakert, Artsakh, Azerbaijan.  ("Artsakh" is another name for Nagorno Karabakh, which is part of Azerbaijan but has an Armenian-majority population.)

From Azərbaycan24, the Azerbaijani army holds "Khazri Wave" exercises in the Caspian Sea.  (My spellchecker objects to "Khazri", but has no problem with "Azərbaycan24", even with the "ə".)

From AzerNews, economic diversification is important to successfully implementing Azerbaijan's "Great Return" program.

From In-Cyprus, the company Hermes Airports inaugurates a photovoltaic park at Cyprus's Larnaca International Airport.

From The Syrian Observer, activists in Manbij, Syria launch a strike due to enforced conscription and other alleged rights violations by the Syrian Democrat Forces.

From North Press Agency, the Syrian government sends vehicles and troops toward the city of Abu Kamal.

From The961, seven ways to keep cool during Lebanon's hot summer.

From The New Arab, more on Iraq cutting its ties with Sweden.

From Gatestone Institute, Palestinians run summer camps where children are taught to kill Jews.

From The Stream, the biggest problem with American Christianity is not what you think.

From The Daily Signal, is Biden's new scheme to forgive student loans any more legal the one which the Supreme Court decided against?

From The American Conservative, left-wingers don't like facts to get in the way of their war on men.

From The Western Journal, Senators Kyrsten Sinema (I-AZ) and Josh Hawley (R-MO) introduce a bill that former Speaker Pelosi (D-Cal) is bound to hate.

From BizPac Review, the journalist who broke the Hunter Biden laptop story testifies on the House floor, and concludes with an ominous warning.

From The Daily Wire, more on the aforementioned attempts by Democrats to censor Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

From the Daily Caller, millions of taxpayer dollars continue to go to the NGO that funded the virology lab in Wuhan, China.

From the New York Post, former South Carolina Governor (R) and Ambassador to the U.N. Nikki Haley asks congresscritter AOC (D-NY) why Israel gets under her skin.

From Breitbart, according to a document released by Senator Chuck Grassley (R-IA), the FBI knew about then-private citizen Joe Biden's dealings in Ukraine before the Hunter Biden laptop story broke.

From Newsmax, congresscritter Matt Gaetz's (R-FL) wife Ginger calls for a boycott of the movie Barbie.

And from SFGate, how Bruce Lee, who died 50 years ago today, and James Lee (no relation) launched a martial arts collaboration that laid the groundwork for today's MMA.

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