Monday, March 4, 2024

Monday Links

On a mild and mostly cloudy Monday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, people on both sides of the aisle think that President Biden is too old for his job.

From FrontpageMag, the truth about crime committed by illegal aliens.

From Townhall, the website tracking "Bidenomics" that the White House doesn't want you to see.

From The Washington Free Beacon, former congresscritter and current senatorial candidate Debbie Mucarsel-Powell (D-FL) changes her tune about ICE agents.

From the Washington Examiner, the Supreme Court rules 9-0 that former President Trump can remain on the ballot for this year's presidential election.

From The Federalist, left-wing operative Marc Elias admits that Trump can't get an impartial jury if he is put on trial in D.C.  (Since so many people appear to either love Trump to pieces or hate his guts, where can he find an impartial jury?)

From American Thinker, left-wingers melt down after the Supreme Court keeps Trump on the ballot.

From MRCTV, the Biden administration releases its latest diktats, on washers and dryers.

From NewsBusters, MSNBC host Michael Beschloss predicts that Presidents Putin (Russia) and Xi (China) will start an October crisis to help Trump's efforts to regain the (U.S.) presidency.

From Canada Free Press, Senator Mitch McConnell (R-KY) should not let the door hit him in the dupa on his way out.  (The article does not use the word dupa, which is Polish for "rear end".  That's my way of referring to that particular body part.)

From CBC News, Canada's federal government will bypass immigration caps imposed by the province of Quebec.

From Global News, Canadian Health Minister Mark Holland is "deeply concerned" about the increase in cases of measles in Canada.

From CTV News, a man in Toronto, Ontario, Canada finds package of live cockroaches in his mailbox.

From TeleSUR, the New Ideas Party wins 28 out of El Salvador's 44 mayoralties.

From TCW Defending Freedom, will people in the U.K. be found "guilty of driving while white"?

From Snouts in the Trough, "the illusion of freedom".

From the Express, when former parliamentcritter George Galloway (Labour) wins a by-election in the English town of Rochdale, U.K. Prime Minister Rishi Sunak realizes that "extremism is out of control".

From the Evening Standard, trains going into London's Waterloo station are disrupted after one of them hits an object on the tracks.

From the (U.K.) Independent, Widemouth Beach in the English county of Cornwall is evacuated after a metal cylinder thought to possibly be an unexploded bomb washes ashore there.

From the (Irish) Independent, according to Irish Taoiseach Leo Varadkar, two constitutional referenda hang "in the balance".

From the Irish Examiner, Irish gardaĆ­ arrest three young men for allegedly importing military-style weapons.

From EuroNews, hundreds of climate activists storm a chemical plant in Lyon, France.

From Voice Of Europe, according to President Emmanuel Macron, France will not be sending its troops into Ukraine.  (If you read Czech, read the story at Novinky.)

From ReMix, Belgian authorities arrest four men, each in a different city, over allegedly being connected to an Islamist organization and plotting a terror attack.

From Balkan Insight, North Macedonia inflicts a bureaucratic snafu on its traveling citizens.

From The North Africa Post, the Algerian government and Polisario suffer a "humiliating" setback.

From The New Arab, Egyptian authorities arrest a policeman in the port city of Alexandria for shouting anti-government and pro-Palestinian slogans.  (What is this "freedom of speech" you speak of?)

From The Jerusalem Post, the IDF drops leaflets urging Gazans to leave aid trucks alone, citing the Koran.

From GBN, the Houthis make demands of the U.K. and taunt the aforementioned Rishi Sunak over the aforementioned election of George Galloway.

From Gatestone Institute, as Europe appears to welcome sharia law, the Indian state of Uttarakhand doesn't.

From The Stream, ask a Biden voter, and this is serious, about where he stands on fascism.

From The Daily Signal, an exception to California's requirement for a $20/hour minimum wage for fast food workers goes to a business run by a friend of Governor Gavin Newsom (D).

From The American Conservative, former congresscritter Tulsi Gabbard (D-HI) should not become vice president, but secretary of state.

From The Western Journal, in its opening sketch, Saturday Night Live skewers Biden and his inner circle.

From BizPac Review, Vice President Harris demands a ceasefire in Gaza.

From The Daily Wire, the mother of recently murdered nursing student Laken Riley speaks out.

From the Daily Caller, retired Border Patrol Chief Raul Ortiz claims that neither Biden nor Harris have ever spoken to him about the border crisis.

From the New York Post, Josh Donaldson of the New York Yankees says "enough for one lifetime".

From Breitbart, NBA player Enes Kanter Freedom faults NBA player LeBron James for profiting from what he regards as Chinese child slave labor.

From Newsmax, JetBlue Airways and Spirit Airlines cancel their plans to merge.

And from The Babylon Bee, to protect the southern border, the Texas National Guard deploys giant sandworms, as announced by Major General Stephen Muad-Dib.

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