Tuesday, March 5, 2024

Stories For Super Tuesday

On a cool and cloudy Tuesday, in which numerous states have their presidential primaries, here are some things going on:

From National Review, LGBTQ students at Texas A&M seek an emergency injunction from the Supreme Court allowing them to host a "charity drag show".

From FrontpageMag, a migrant surge brings killers and members of criminal gangs on the U.S.

From Townhall, President Biden is again attacking Supreme Court justice Clarence Thomas.

From The Washington Free Beacon, Biden's pause on the exportation of American natural gas benefits Qatar, which also houses fugitive leaders of Hamas.

From the Washington Examiner, former First Lady Michelle Obama says that she won't run for president.

From The Federalist, neither former President Trump nor his supporters are the real extremists.

From American Thinker, how Trump has made our political choice clear.

From MRCTV, journalist Dan Rather's bias keeps shining on through.

From NewsBusters, hosts on The View claim that "everybody" wears drag.

From Canada Free Press, Arabs believe that their time has come.

From TeleSUR, a former president is disqualified from running for his old position - in Panama.

From TCW Defending Freedom, the so-called "far right" really aren't.

From the NL Times, the Dutch parliament allows a pilot program for growing cannabis to continue, except for in Amsterdam.

From Dutch News, a public transport company based in Amsterdam went after Germany for the cost of taking Jews to railroad stations before their train rides to concentration camps.  (If you read Dutch, read the story NOS.)

From VRT NWS, three minors suspected of terror offenses are sent to a secure center for young offenders.

From The Brussels Times, a house and several cars are damaged in an attack near the Sportpaleis in Antwerp, Belgium.  (Go to this blog's archives for May 2017 to see my visit to Antwerp.)

From Deutsche Welle, a far-left group claims responsibility for an act of sabotage against the Tesla Gigafactory near Berlin, Germany.

From EuroNews, more on the attack against the Tesla factory.

From the CPH Postcuts occurring due to Denmark's student finance reform will affect current students.

From Polskie Radio, Presidents Andrzej Duda (Poland) and Gitanas Nauseda (Lithuania) observe military exercises in northern Poland.

From Sovereignty, Russia has no alternative to President Putin.  (I recently came across this source, which does not publish every day.)

From Radio Prague, the European Commission promises to act on Germany's transit fees for Czech natural gas.

From The Slovak Spectator, Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico calls upon Constitutional Court Chief Justice Ivan Fiačan to resign.

From Daily News Hungary, Hungary rejects all attempts by the European Union to ban the punishment of groups who help migrants.

From Hungary Today, the historic Citadel atop Gellért Hill in Budapest, Hungary is undergoing renovation.  (If you read Hungarian, read the story at Demokrata.)

From About Hungary, according to Hungarian Prime Minister Orbán, conditions are favorable for enacting a stable economic policy in the next two years.

From Voice Of Europe, despite Western sanctions, Russia earns record profits from the production of oil and gas, mainly due to higher crude oil prices.

From ReMix, 17 underaged migrants are arrested after complaints from a 12-year-old girl whom they allegedly sexually abused, and are released after one day of detention, except for one of them.

From Balkan Insight, the ethic Greek mayor-elect of Himara, Albania is convicted of vote-buying.

From The North Africa Post, an NGO based in Geneva, Switzerland warns of legal anarchy in the Tindouof camps in southwestern Algeria.

From The New Arab, the organization Human Rights Watch criticizes the power which the Egyptian military has over civilians.

From Iran International, officials in Esfahan, Iran cancel a concert because female musicians would have been onstage.

From Allah's Willing Executioners, 163 schoolmasters demonstrate in Paris against death threats by Muslim parents and false accusations of Islamophobia.  (If you read French, read the story at BMFTV and FDeSouche.)

From Gatestone Institute, the illusion of a "demilitarized" Palestinian state.

From The Stream, notes on Super Tuesday, and the Supreme Courts tell states to "stay in your lane".

From The Daily Signal, according to a new video, ranked choice voting causes thousands of votes to be "trashed".

From The American Conservative, State Department official Victoria Nuland, who just announced her retirement, should have been gone earlier.

From The Western Journal, Speaker Johnson (R-LA) throws some cold water on plans by Democrat congresscritters to remove Trump from the presidential ballot.

From BizPac Review, left-wingers "fume" over a study showing that electric vehicles produce more toxic emissions and are worse for the environment than gas-powered cars.

From The Daily Wire, Canadian psychologist Jordan Peterson will testify to the House about alleged government collusion with banks surveille Americans.

From the Daily Caller, more on the aforementioned retirement of diplomat Victoria Nuland.

From Breitbart, Senator Kyrsten Sinema (I-AZ) decides to not run for reelection.

From Newsmax, Senator Bob Menendez (D-NJ) and his wife Nadine get some more charges.

And from the New York Post, checking your bags onto a Delta flight is gonna cost ya more, pilgrim.

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