Wednesday, November 1, 2023

Wednesday Wanderings To Start November

On a cool and mostly cloudy Wednesday that begins November, here are some things going on:

From National Review, who is the Cornell University student who allegedly threatened to massacre Jewish students?

From FrontpageMag, a Berkeley professor claims that Hamas and Hezbollah are part of the "global left".

From Townhall, a Hamas official does a great job shredding arguments to have a ceasefire.

From The Washington Free Beacon, a public school teacher in Minneapolis calls for the eradication of Israel.

From the Washington Examiner, according to President Biden, Americans in Gaza can soon expect to get out of there.

From The Federalist, a perfect example of "10 percent for the big guy".

From American Thinker, a video shows an Israeli man surviving a Hamas attack and defending his family due to his being armed.  (This also shows how Israel's restrictions on gun ownership has not prevented Hamas from getting weapons.)

From MRCTV, British police arrest a man for posting a video on social media, in which he criticize Hamas and the Palestinian flags in his neighborhood.  (What is this "freedom of speech" you speak of?)

From NewsBusters, Senator Rand Paul (R-KY) grills FBI Director Christopher Wray about alleged collusion between government and Big Tech.

From TeleSUR, the Venezuelan Supreme Justice Court approves questions for a referendum over the region of Guayana Esequiba.

From TCW Defending Freedom, when studying black history, it's best to get the facts right.

From Snouts in the Trough, a video from someone "much wiser" than the author of SitT , by his own admission, will ever be.

From EuroNews, former U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson calls the coronavirus "nature's way of dealing with old people".

From Voice Of Europe, Europe has plenty of natural gas in its storage facilities, yet its price keeps increasing.  (What is this "law of supply and demand" you speak of?)

From ReMix, Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić dissolves his country's parliament and orders snap elections.

From Balkan Insight, after some Albanian parliamentcritters have physical altercations, all of them are told to work online.

From the Daily Mail, police are filmed tearing down posters of Israeli hostages in Berlin, whose officials are blasted for their excuse.

From The North Africa Post, Morocco and the U.S. discuss economic cooperation and regional stability and security.

From The New Arab, scores of injured Palestinians are allowed to enter Egypt for medical treatment.

From Arutz Sheva, IDF spokesman Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari gives a report on IDF operations in Gaza and the deaths of IDF soldiers.

From The Times Of Israel, a Hamas official claims that there will be more attacks like the one on October 7th.

From The Jerusalem Post, Israel releases audio proving that Hamas is stealing gas from Gazan hospitals.

From YNetNews, the commander of Hamas's anti-tank missile units is sent to his virgins.

From the Egypt Independent, up to 300 trucks carry Egyptian and foreign aid into the Gaza Strip.

From Egypt Today, the first batch of wounded Palestinians arrives in Egypt.

From the Sudan Tribune, North Darfur provincial Governor Nimr Abdel Rahman calls for the Sudanese army and Rapid Support Forces to allow civilians to leave places where the two sides might clash.

From the Ethiopian Monitor, two Ethiopian athletes are banned for violating the World Integrity Unit's anti-doping rules.

From the Saudi Gazette, the Saudi Public Health Authority identifies four infectious diseases which require the isolation of students and staffers from school.

From DohaNews, Jordanian King Abdullah II plans to visit Qatar in hopes of reaching a ceasefire in Gaza.

From Reuters, Qatar reportedly brokers and agreement that allows foreign passport holders and critically injured people to move from Gaza into Egypt.  (via DohaNews)

From Gatestone Institute, France and the E.U. are not friends of Israel.

From The Stream, pro-abortionists in Ohio launch a deceptive campaign for a pro-abortion anti-parent amendment to the state's constitution.

From The Daily Signal, Speaker Johnson (R-LA) slams the FBI over its targeting of religious Americans.

From The American Conservative, do these things indicate that the U.S. is in decline?  (TAC still puts most of their articles behind a requirement to subscribe to their newsletter, but this one was not.)

From BizPac Review, left-wing billionaire George Soros is linked to an effort to keep former President Trump off the ballot in Minnesota.  (Whether Trump, or any other Republican, has a chance to carry Minnesota in 2024 is another matter.)

From The Daily Wire, the aforementioned Speaker Johnson champions aid to Israel.

From the Daily Caller, the American Ornithological Society will rename bird species that have "exclusionary and harmful" names.

From the New York Post, for a cool $1.2 million, you can own Britney Spears's childhood home, complete with her furniture, drawings, and buried dog.

From Fox News, according to a group of cold case crime investigators, the body of Teamsters President Jimmy Hoffa is buried under a demolished baseball stadium in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.  (If true, this would dispel the idea that he's under the Meadowlands where the New York Giants football team used to play, and the idea, held by a Teamster employee whom I once knew, that he's in the Atlantic Ocean.  The story comes via the New York Post.)

From Breitbart, more on $40,000 received in 2017 by then-private citizen Biden.

From Newsmax, five Democrat mayors want to discuss with President Biden about getting federal help with managing all the migrants arriving in their cities.

And to conclude, mapping Hamas's massacres in Israel.

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