Friday, August 25, 2023

Friday Fuss

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

From National Review, former President Trump returns to the platform formerly known as Twitter with his mugshot from Georgia.

From FrontpageMag, the left is usually opposed to publishing mugshots, but not with Trump's.

From Townhall, the Biden administration now wants the [bleep] to hit the literal fan.

From The Washington Free Beacon, some prominent Democrats support abortion until birth.

From the Washington Examiner, the Republican presidential field has already been whittled down.

From The Federalist, a new bill would prevent the Veterans Administration from meddling with the 2nd Amendment rights of veterans.

From American Thinker, eight truths revealed by Trump's mugshot.

From MRCTV, "transitioning" kids is "absurd", says Alice Cooper.  ("Welcome to my nightmare" indeed.)

From NewsBusters, MSNBC attacks the Republican presidential candidates at their debate for talking about policy instead of about Trump.

From Canada Free Press, "Democrat see, Democrat do".

From TeleSUR, Canada seeks to overturn Mexico's ban on the importation of GMO corn.

From Snouts in the Trough, is it time for the U.K. to scrap its woke NHS and start again?

From EuroNews, according to Belarsian President Alexander Lukashenko, the Russian mercenary group Wagner will remain in Belarus.

From Voice Of Europe, Poland's Internal Security Agency investigates an outbreak of legionnaire's disease in the city of Rzeszów.

From ReMix, according to former Polish Prime Minister Beata Szydło, Germans don't like Polish success.  (The Polish word szydło means "awl", which is a tool for punching holes.)

From Balkan Insight, fugitive Bulgarian tycoon Vassil Boykov returns home and gets arrested.

From The North Africa Post, Niger gives neighboring countries Mali and Burkina Faso permission to intervene if it is attacked by the Economic Community of West African States.

From The New Arab, according to their relatives, videos show young Iraqis being tortured in Iran after being kidnapped in Erbil, Iraq.

From Reuters, Mozambique's armed forces send the leader of an ISIS-linked terror group to his virgins.

From the Colombo Page, Sri Lankan President Ranil Wickremesinghe announces plans to turn the Arugam Bay tourist zone into a high-income destination.

From the Daily Mirror, an underwater explosion is suspected after about 20 turtle carcasses are found on a stretch of beach in Sri Lanka.

From Raajje, Maldivian presidential candidates will sign the list of eligible voters.

From the Bangkok Post, exports from Thailand decline for the 10th straight month.

From The Straits Times, a car wash employee in Singapore is arrested after driving a customer's Lamborghini and crashing it, damaging four other cars, and injuring a 75-year-old man.

From Free Malaysia Today, the Malaysian federal government plans to create a special economic zone in the city of Iskandar Puteri.

From the Borneo Post, the Malaysian Home Ministry is told to put the brakes on any changes to the country's citizenship laws.

From Tempo(dot)Co, the Indonesian oil company Pertamina signs deals with four African countries.

From Vietnam Plus, Vietnamese Communist Party General Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong visits the Huu Nghi border gate, on the border with China.

From the Taipei Times, Taiwanese agencies thank the U.S. for the sale of F-16 tracking systems.

From The Korea Herald, according to South Korean Defense Minister Lee Jong-sup, North Korea's second-stage rocket flight was unsuccessful, despite North Korean claims to the contrary.

From The Mainichi, tritium is not detected in seawater near the wrecked nuclear power plant in Fukushima, Japan.  (Tritium is a radioactive form of hydrogen, which includes a proton and two neutrons in each atom's nucleus.)

From Gatestone Institute, Chinese influence activity in the U.S. is greater than ever.

From The Stream, some unwanted advice for all (yes, all) of the Republican presidential candidates.

From The Daily Signal, what experience from preventing wildfires in Colorado teaches about climate change and what happened on Maui.

From The Western Journal, did you notice the lines written by Trump under his mugshot?

From BizPac Review, CNN's big fear comes true after Trump is arrested in Fulton County, Georgia.

From The Daily Wire, the DOJ is reportedly considering bringing criminal charges against Senator Bob Melendez (D-NJ).

From the Daily Caller, outside a meeting of the Federal Reserve in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, the score is security guard - 2, climate protesters - 0.

From the New York Post, the Ukrainian prosecutor whom then-Vice President Biden got fired believes that both the then-VP and his son Hunter received bribes.

From Breitbart, the fashion magazine Vogue is blasted for including in its "powerhouse women" list a transgender cyclist as its only athlete.

From Newsmax, according to LIV golf executives, its merger with the PGA "turbocharged" its business.

And from Only In Your State, Minnesota's 20 best rated hiking trails.

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