On a cloudy and mild Friday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, left-wingers are furious at President Biden for using a correct term to describe the person who allegedly killed nursing student Laken Riley during his State of the Union address. (In other words, they're angry at him for telling the truth.)
From FrontpageMag, Biden's remark shows that he's aware that illegal aliens are a threat, but keeps the border open anyway.
From Townhall, a debunking of Biden's biggest lies in his SOTU address.
From The Washington Free Beacon, an AI image generator from Microsoft creates a map of "Palestine" without Israel.
From the Washington Examiner, Arizona Governor Katie Hobbs (D) turns off the groundwater for a farm owned by a Saudi Arabian company.
From The Federalist, Biden's 30 lies from his SOTU address.
From American Thinker, Biden is like the villain Davros in the science-fiction show Doctor Who.
From MRCTV, happy International Women's Day including from some women who really aren't.
From NewsBusters, in her response to Biden's SOTU, Senator Katie Britt (R-AL) points out his hypocrisy.
From Canada Free Press, "cosmoclimatology" might explain what really drives climate change.
From TeleSUR, Panama blocks Doctors Without Borders from aiding people in the Darien gap.
From TCW Defending Freedom, contrary to some fearmongers, polar bear populations are thriving.
From EuroNews, Ukrainians families are forced to evacuate from the city of Kharkiv and the surrounding area.
From Voice Of Europe, a criminal network in Greece is expose from producing high-quality fake passports.
From ReMix, four alleged Islamic terrorists are arrested in a raid on a mosque in Tyresö, Sweden.
From Balkan Insight, Serbia and Republika Srpska, the latter being a division of Bosnia and Herzegovina, promise to continue with their dam project.
From Morocco World News, according to Moroccan National Human Rights Council President Amina Bouayach, women's rights are an integral part of Moroccan identity.
From The North Africa Post, over 100 school students are reportedly abducted in Kuriga, Nigeria.
From Hürriyet Daily News, President Zelensky (Ukraine) visits President Erdoğan (Türkiye).
From Turkish Minute, Türkiye seeks the extradition of a writer and her son over a fatal car accident.
From Rûdaw, Rafidain University College in Iraq suspends a student for wearing a picture of the late dictator Saddam Hussein.
From Armenpress, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan gives a congratulatory message for International Women's Day.
From Public Radio Of Armenia, Armenia's ambassador to New Zealand meets with a Kiwi customs and trade official. (New Zealanders often call themselves "Kiwi", which term is derived from the name of a native flightless bird.)
From Azərbaycan24, Azerbaijan and Türkiye consular meetings.
From AzerNews, Azerbaijan and the UAE discuss preparations for COP29, to be hosted by the former.
From In-Cyprus, U.K. Ministers meet with a U.N. envoy who wants to restart negotiations between the Greek and Turkish Cypriot communities.
From The Syrian Observer, Syria accuses the West of politicizing the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons.
From the North Press Agency, Turkish-backed Syrian National Army militants kill five people in the Syrian region of Azaz.
From The New Arab, what do women in the Maghreb region of Africa want?
From BBC News, according to counter-extremism commissioner Robin Simcox, London has become a "no-go zone for Jews every weekend".
From Allah's Willing Executioners, German politician Helge Lindh declares the fast-breaking at the end of Ramadan to be a German tradition. (If you read German, read the story at Freilich.)
From Gatestone Institute, Ramadan does not stop Hamas from attacking Jews.
From The Stream, more on the aforementioned Senator Britt's response to Biden's State of the Union address, while former President Trump "delivers punch lines".
From The Daily Signal, a song to inoculate your children against gender ideology.
From The American Conservative, NATO should be honest with the Ukrainian government.
From The Western Journal, the NBA champion Denver Nuggets reportedly canceled a previously planned trip to the White House.
From BizPac Review, at the SOTU, former congresscritter George Santos (R-NY) announces his intended comeback.
From The Daily Wire, the illegal alien accused of murdering the aforementioned Laken Riley is reportedly and "active" gang member.
From the Daily Caller, the House Education Committee demands documents from MIT related to its handling of antisemitism on campus.
From the New York Post, former Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernández is convicted conspiring with drug traffickers and using his country's military to enable the shipment of she-don't-lie into the U.S.
From Breitbart, new RNC chairman Michael Whatley and co-chairwoman (and former First Daughter-In-Law) Lara Trump announce a "new dawn".
From Newsmax, the party No Labels announces that it will nominate a 2024 presidential ticket, but has not yet named them.
And from Fox News, lead singer Dave Draiman of the heavy metal group Disturbed receives a gift from a young fan and then rebukes Hamas.
No comments:
Post a Comment