Monday, January 29, 2024

Monday Links

On a cold cloudy Monday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, "Iran must pay" for being involved in a drone strike on U.S. troops in Jordan.

From FrontpageMag, congresscritter Ilhan Omar (D-Min) puts Somalian interests first.  (Perhaps I should refer to her as "(D-Somalia)".

From Townhall, President Biden can stop the flow of illegal aliens right now, but is refusing to do so.

From The Washington Free Beacon, the former IRS contractor who leaked former President Trump's taxes gets five years in prison.

From the Washington Examiner, presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (I) claims that Trump's team reached out to him about being his vice presidential running mate.

From The Federalist, why Christians loving their neighbors will not attend gay or trans weddings.

From American Thinker, the effort to "denationize" the United States.

From MRCTV, the EPA is ready to ban a very useful chemical.

From NewsBusters, a left-wing government-funded "disinformation" tracker is flagged for a lack of transparency.

From Canada Free Press, we will have to call the deep state's bluff.

From TeleSUR, Venezuela announces an attempt to uphold agreements from Barbados.

From TCW Defending Freedom, during an interview, U.K. parliamentcritter Andrew Bridgen claims that the coronavirus "vaccine cover-up is rapidly unravelling".

From Snouts in the Trough, how the U.K.'s favorite religion is taking it over.

From EuroNews, a slow-moving landslide of contaminated soil threatens a water source in the Danish town of Randers.  (Now that's what I call "rotten in Denmark".)

From Voice Of Europe, French farmers protesting government policies block roads around Paris.

From ReMix, two migrants from Georgia allegedly beat a Polish man to death in Wrocław, Poland.  (This is the Georgia of Joseph Stalin, not the Georgia of Jimmy Carter and Newt Gingrich.)

From Balkan Insight, Albania's Constitutional Court approves an agreement with Italy about processing migrants.

From The North Africa Post, the withdrawal of Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger from the Economic Community of West African States kills a project to build a pipeline from Algeria to Nigeria.

From The New Arab, according to the group BDS Maroc, the International Justice Court's ruling on Israel's "genocide" is reason to revoke Morocco's normalization with Israel.

From Arutz Sheva, Israel's accusations against UNRWA employees.

From Jewish News Syndicate, support for Hamas grows among Jordanians.

From MEMRI TV, a new Egyptian film depicts the respective fictional grandsons of Hajj Amin Al-Husseini and Adolf Hitler uniting to fulfill Hitler's alleged promise to free Palestine from the Jews.  (In reality, Hitler had no known children, never mind grandchildren, although there has been an unconfirmed allegation that he fathered an illegitimate son in France during World War I.  As for any promise to free Palestine from Jews, the migration of European Jews to Palestine was largely the result of Hitler's attempt to kill them in the Holocaust.  Thus, Hitler's actions helped to increase the Jewish presence in Palestine and eventually led to the creation of the state of Israel, which would be the opposite of this alleged promise.)

From The Times Of Israel, ISIS claims responsibility for the attack on a Roman Catholic church in İstanbul, Turkey.

From Gatestone Institute, it's time to end the jihad against Israel - by UNRWA.  (The last five stories come via The Religion Of Peace.)

From The Straits Times, a baby born in Singapore at 22 weeks gestation is now a health five-year-old.

From Tempo(dot)Co, police are still investigating the death of a Sumatran elephant, which is suspected to have been poisoned.

From Free Malaysia Today, the Maharani Energy Gateway project secures funding from the China Energy Engineering Corp to promote green energy initiatives in the Malaysian state of Johor.  (I'm pretty sure that maharani means "great queen" in Sanskrit, just like maharaja means "great king".)

From the Borneo Post, the High Court in Kuching, Malaysia is told that allocated coronavirus-related food aid never materialized.

From Vietnam Plus, overseas Vietnamese in the U.K. and eastern African countries celebrate Tet.

From the Taipei Times, China reportedly keeps four ships near Taiwan.

From The Korea Herald, an SUV rams into a guard post at the Russian embassy in Seoul, South Korea.

From The Mainichi, Japan's lunar explorer starts functioning again and resumes its mission.

From The Stream, Biden plots a reelection strategy involving singer Taylor Swift, and other items.

From The Daily Signal, Christian and Jewish leaders condemn the "persecution" of Finnish parliamentcritter Päivi Räsänen for upholding his traditional beliefs.

From The American Conservative, "Trump will win" back the presidency.

From The Western Journal, Trump's accuser expresses an interest in campaigning for Biden.

From BizPac Review, right-wing commentator Tucker Carlson calls two Republican Senators "[bleep]ing lunatics" for calling for an attack on Iran in response to the drone strike in Jordan.

From The Daily Wire, according to a former agent, the FBI tied the January 6th pipe bomber to the Metro card of a former government official, but blocked interviews of him.

From the Daily Caller, Georgia Lieutenant Governor Burt Jones (R) will announce the members of a committee that will investigate Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis.

From the New York Post, for a cool $8.95 million, you can own the late Suzanne Somers's multi-building compound in Palm Springs, California.

From Breitbart, the platform formerly known as Twitter blocks searches for the aforementioned Taylor Swift due to the proliferation of explicit AI-generated pictures of her.

From Newsmax, Pope Francis calls for an end to wars and for respect for civilians in conflict areas.

And from The Babylon Bee, Trump promises that if he is again elected president, he will ban the twice-aforementioned Taylor Swift from football games.

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