Thursday, July 6, 2023

Thursday Things

On a warm but rainy Thursday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, when to say you're sorry, and other matters.

From FrontpageMag, according to left-wingers, preventing the government from censoring speech amounts to censorship.

From Townhall, the list of government agencies ordered by a court to stop censoring speech.

From The Washington Free Beacon, the Supreme Court's ruling on affirmative action is already having an impact, in a surprising place.

From the Washington Examiner, 25 states blast President Biden's electric vehicle goals.

From The Federalist, the case Missouri v. Biden proves that the corporate media lied about Big Tech censorship against conservatives.

From American Thinker, eight reasons to believe that there's a cover-up on the she-don't-lie found at the White House.

From MRCTV, Boston University suggests therapy for students upset by Supreme Court rulings.

From NewsBusters, North Dakota Governor Doug Burgum (R) educates MSNBC host Andrea Mitchell on the Supreme Court and religious freedom.

From Canada Free Press, does the Chief Twit want to disenfranchise people who don't have children?

From TeleSUR, due to a long drought, the Uruguayan parliament approves a water emergency fund.

From TCW Defending Freedom, the cause of inflation is (drum roll, please) the government, stupid!

From ReMix, the German party AfD reaches another record high in polling.

From Allah's Willing Executioners, German police conduct raids against a Tajik-based terror group calling itself "Soko Buran".  (If you read German, read the story at Exxpress.)

From the CPH Post, the Danish Confederation of Professional Associations warns that Denmark needs to recruit more international talent.  (Does this mean that there's really something "rotten in Denmark"?)

From Polskie Radio, a Russian missile strikes an apartment building in Lviv, Ukraine, killing four people.  (Yours truly descends from a woman who emigrated from Lviv, then known as Lemberg, Austria-Hungary, to Pennsylvania around 1890.  Since she was Polish, she would have called the city Lwów, as Papa Bigfoot later did.  Naturally, I'm angry that Russia has killed civilians in my ancestral city.)

From Radio PragueUkrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky arrives in Prague for talks with Czech officials.  (Since the source spells his last name with just one "y", so will I in this case.)

From The Slovak Spectator, three things to do for free in Bratislava, Slovakia during the next seven days.

From Daily News Hungary, despite declining interest, real estate near Hungary's Lake Balaton is gonna cost ya, pilgrim.  (If you read Hungarian, read the story at Napi.)

From About Hungary, exports from Hungary hit an all-time high in the first quarter of this year.

From EuroNews, Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg is charged with disobeying a police order, which allegedly occurred during a protest in the city of Malmö.

From Russia Today, police in Russia publish pictures from a search of the house of Wagner Group leader Evgeny Prigozhin.

From Sputnik International, Russia uses precision weapons against deployment sites of Ukrainian troops and mercenaries.

From The Moscow Times, according to Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko, the aforementioned Evgeny Prigozhin is not in Belarus.

From Novinite, according to Bulgarian Socialist Party leader Kornelia Ninova, Bulgaria's national interest was sold three times in one day.

From The Sofia Globe, in Sofia, Bulgaria, President Zelensky (Ukraine) gives President Radev (Bulgaria) a lesson in reality.

From Radio Bulgaria, the Bulgarian parliament adopts a declaration supporting NATO membership for Ukraine.

From Voice Of Europe, according to French Interior Minister Gérard Darmanin, less than 10 percent of the people arrested in the riots in France are foreigners.  (To my pleasant shock, Voice Of Europe has returned to the Interwebs.)

From Balkan Insight, Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić states that he will probably sign a decision banning the export of arms from Serbia.

From The North Africa Post, speaking before the Non-Aligned Movement in Baku, Azerbaijan, Morocco's representative to the U.N. points out contradictions in a statement by Algeria's foreign minister.

From The New Arab, where are the important energy disputes in the Middle East and North Africa?

From Gatestone Institute, the "darkest secret" in America.

From The Stream, the Supreme Court rules that all racism is evil.

From The Daily Signal, the real reason why Republicans love America more than Democrats do.

From The American Conservative, the end of affirmative action in colleges from a historical perspective.

From The Western Journal, New Hampshire appears set to give Biden a statewide defeat.

From BizPac Review, Senator John Kennedy (R-LA) drops one of his best lines ever on the cover-up for First Son Hunter Biden.

From The Daily Wire, swimmer-turned-activist Riley Gaines denounces a man claiming to "breastfeed" his baby.

From the Daily Caller, congresscritter Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) gets booted from the Freedom Caucus.

From the New York Post, the she-don't-lie at the White House was found near the Situation Room.

From Breitbart, Border Patrol agents find 13 deceased migrants in one week.

From Newsmax, presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (D) rakes in $3 million in campaign contributions in three days.

And from SFGate, on July 4th, beaches at Lake Tahoe get trashed more than ever.

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