Tuesday, July 25, 2023

Tuesday Tidbits

On a warm sunny Tuesday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, Florida's new history curriculum is better than the lies being told about it.

From FrontpageMag, what Americans should know about China.

From Townhall, another migrant dies because of President Biden's open-border policy.

From The Washington Free Beacon, First Son Hunter Biden's art patron visited the White House at least 13 times.

From the Washington Examiner, after Speaker McCarthy (R-Cal) threatens an impeachment inquiry against Biden, the DNC calls former President Trump the "real speaker".

From The Federalist, only an impeachment inquiry can unravel the alleged corruption in the Biden family.

From American Thinker, the deceptive advertising about "gender-affirming" surgery.

From MRCTV, a woman in Alabama admits that her "abduction" wasn't.

From LifeZette, a Haitian man attending Texas State University is trying to raise money so he can adopt a baby whom he found in a pile of trash.

From NewsBusters, Charlie Daniels Jr. points out that songs against violent crime and liberal judges are not racist.

From Canada Free Press, as radio talk show host Tom Bauerle points out, Tafari Campbell, who drowned near former President's home on Martha's Vineyard, was not the only former White House chef who suffered that fate.  (To read about the other one, go to the Daily Mail.)

From TeleSUR, Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro announces a plan to decontaminate Lake Maracaibo.

From TCW Defending Freedom, lying about British politician Nigel Farage is "par for the course" at the BBC.

From EuroNews, six men are found guilty murder and terror-related offenses for the 2016 bombings of the main airport and a subway station in Brussels, Belgium.

From Voice Of Europe, a Romanian and a Greek are arrested for allegedly attempting to smuggle 29 migrants into Hungary.

From ReMix, Romania and Slovakia lodge diplomatic protests against a speech made by Hungarian Prime Minister Orban, in which he referred to "territories torn from Hungary".  (In point of historical fact, Slovakia and the Romanian region of Transylvania were parts of Hungary before World War I.)

From Balkan Insight, Serbia's "social card" is not improving its welfare system but instead is making it worse.

From The North Africa Post, 34 people in Algeria die in wildfires as the government drags its feet on buying water-bombing planes.

From The New Arab, Algerian authorities free and pardon prisoners who pass their high school exams.

From BBC News, the children of the forgotten war in Yemen.

From the Colombo Page, in a pilot project, 50 electric buses will be added to Sri Lanka's public transportation system.

From the Daily Mirror, a 13-year-old Sri Lankan boy from the New Zealand region of South Otago becomes the youngest person to win the Mountbatten Award, for saving his 11-year-old brother from heavy surf.

From Raajje, the Maldive Islands and India reaffirm their counter-terrorism operation.

From the Bangkok Post, over 9,000 civilians take refuge at five shelters in the Thai province of Mae Hong Son due to renewed fighting in Myanmar.

From The Straits Times, the Singaporean Parliament has five vacant seats.

From Tempo(dot)Co, Indonesia's trade ministry destroys illegally imported products worth 12 billion rupiah.

From Free Malaysia Today, according to Malaysian police Inspector-General Ayob Khan Mydin Pitchay, the U.K. band The1975 left Malaysia hours before any police reports were made against them.  (Sounds like a case of gettin' out while the gettin's good.)

From the Borneo Post, according to Malaysian politician Mohamed Azmin Ali, the party Perikatan Nasional is using a "green wave" phenomenon to scare ethnic Chinese from voting.

From Vietnam Plus, Vietnamese President Vo Van Thuong, his wife, and a high-level delegation concludes their visit to Austria, and head for Italy and the Vatican.

From the Taipei Times, Typhoon Doksuri heads for Taiwan and mainland China.

From The Korea Herald, the South Korean military analyzes North Korean missile launches at odd hours.

From The Mainichi, after a doctor and his daughter are arrested in connection with the discovery of a decapitated body at a hotel in Sapporo, Japan, police find a human head in their home.

From Gatestone Institute, the E.U. funds education for jihad and martyrdom.

From The Stream, a detransitioner sues the doctors who operated on her for alleged botched surgery.

From The Daily Signal, according to Pew Research, Democrats value free speech less than Republicans.

From The American Conservative, a review of a book written by Senator Marco Rubio (R-FL).

From The Western Journal, White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre gives an absurd response when asked about the Biden administration going after home appliances.

From BizPac Review, suspicion surrounds the aforementioned drowning death of chef Tafari Campbell.

From The Daily Wire, the aforementioned Speaker McCarthy indicates that Republican congresscritters are moving toward the aforementioned impeachment inquiry against President Biden.

From the Daily Caller, clips from the cartoon South Park perfectly predict left-wing insanity.

From TMZ, USC basketball player Bronny James, son of NBA player LeBron James, is rushed to a hospital after suffering cardiac arrest during a basketball workout.  (via the Daily Caller)

From the New York Post, at a showing of the movie Barbie, a hockey game breaks out.

From Breitbart, according to a survey, Trump has pulled ahead of Biden.

From Newsmax, according to a poll, 57 percent of Americans disapprove of "Bidenomics".

And from SFGate, the Roxie Theater in San Francisco sells out for an unauthorized film about BART.

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