Friday, September 8, 2023

Friday Phenomena

Now that I've returned home on a warm and mostly sunny Friday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, Democratic officials finally realize that unrestrained illegal immigration has consequences.

From FrontpageMag, Canada puts out a travel guide for transgenders.

From Townhall, President Biden is losing support from certain groups.

From The Washington Free Beacon, is the administration of Texas Governor Greg Abbott (R) trying to close libraries as part of a plan to revamp Houston public schools?

From the Washington Examiner, former Speaker Pelosi (D-Cal) announces that she will run for congresscritter again in 2024.

From The Federalist, the successful surgery on Kourtney Kardashian Barker's pre-born child a cruel double standard from abortion activists.

From American Thinker, for Democrats such as New York City Mayor Eric Adams (D), the illegal alien chickens are coming home to roost.

From MRCTV, the "back to school" tip from the magazine Teen Vogue is how to "come out" as transgender.

From NewsBusters, Canada's Holocaust that wasn't.

From TeleSUR, Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro visits one of the few countries whose government might be to the left of his own.

From TCW Defending Freedom, the thought crimes of an anti-woke English vicar.

From EuroNews, the CEO of a defunct Turkish cryptocurrency exchange is sentenced to 11,196 years in prison.  (He'd really better hope that no one ever proves the existence of reincarnation.)

From Voice Of Europe, according to Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki, Poland will extend its ban on agricultural imports from Ukraine, whether the European Commission likes it or not.  (If you read Polish better than I do, read the story at Do Rzeczy.)

From ReMix, Danish director Nikolaj Arcel dismisses concerns that his film The Promised Land, set in 18th century Denmark, has an all-Nordic cast.

From Balkan Insight, an E.U. delegation and 25 countries affirm their support for the Belgrade Pride march in Belgrade, Serbia.

From The North Africa Post, ousted Gabonese President Ali Bongo had given China authorization to build a military base

From The New Arab, according to activists, at least 32 civilians have been killed by the Sudanese army and the Rapid Support Forces.

From Gatestone Institute, the 21st century will not belong to China.

From The Stream, the abuse of the 14th Amendment against former President Trump, and other matters.

From The Daily Signal, why it's important to discover how the U.K.'s Prince Harry entered the U.S.

From The Western Journal, some fans at the NFL game between the Kansas City Chiefs and Detroit Lions didn't appreciate an extra song before the national anthem.

From BizPac Review, the White House holds money for wildfire-stricken Lahaina, Hawaii and hurricane-stricken Florida hostage to sending more money to Ukraine.

From The Daily Wire, Highland Park, Illinois, which is "heavily Democratic", is slammed after planning a "poverty simulation event".

From the Daily Caller, Atlanta, Georgia forces "inclusive language" on its city employees.

From the New York Post, a women's athletics coach at Oberlin College explains why men don't belong in women's sports.

From Breitbart, according to a document disclosed by Congress, a banker at Morgan Stanley filed a complaint with the SEC against an investment company linked to Hunter Biden in 2016.

From Newsmax, a federal appeals court gives two California gun owners a new chance to challenge their state's gun restrictions.

And from the Genesius Times, just in time for a new coronavirus push, Dr. Seuss releases the new book Green Germs in Spam.

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