Wednesday, March 13, 2024

Wednesday Wanderings

On a warm and mostly sunny Wednesday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, the House passes a bill to force the Chinese company that owns the platform TikTok to sell it or face it being banned in the U.S.

From FrontpageMag, congresscritter Adam Schiff (D-Cal) co-sponsors a resolution alleging that Israel sexually harasses Muslim women.

From Townhall, President Biden's team lies shamelessly about former Special Counsel Robert Hur's findings.  (He recently resigned as special counsel.)

From The Washington Free Beacon, Senator Marsha Blackburn (R-TN) wants Iran banned from the 2024 Olympics.

From the Washington Examiner, congresscritter Lauren Boebert (R-Col) will not run in the special election to replace soon-to-be-former congresscritter Ken Buck (R-Col).

From The Federalist, yes, the transgender movement is coming for your kids, and are not trying to hide it.

From American Thinker, those who support former President Trump or oppose him, explained in terms of social superiority or inferiority.

From MRCTV, the website Deadspin is sold because its race-baiting finally caught up with it.

From NewsBusters, according to a study, the suicide rate for transwomen after receiving vaginoplasty is twice that of transwomen before the operation.

From Canada Free Press, finally, the globalists are under attack.

From TeleSUR, the Panamanian Supreme Court admits a lawsuit against presidential candidate Jose Mulino.

From TCW Defending Freedom, the Renters Reform Bill currently considered by the U.K. Parliament would demonize landlords and bankrupt local councils.

From Snouts in the Trough, the real cancer killing the U.K.'s people is the uselessness of their failing National Health Service.

From EuroNews, E.U. countries agree to send €5 billion more of military aid to Ukraine.

From Voice Of Europe, Dutch Freedom Party leader Geert Wilders is open to forgoing the role of Prime Minister if a new governing coalition is formed.

From ReMix, E.U. climate regulations, including bans on gas and coal fires in home, will be very costly to home owners.  (Meanwhile, coal-fired power plants keep proliferating, but not in Europe.)

From Balkan Insight, Kosovo will implement a court ruling that awards 24 hectares of land to a Serbian monastery.  (Since a hectare is about 2.47 acres, this would amount to about 59.30 acres.)

From The North Africa Post, Moroccan King Mohammed VI becomes the first world leader to send humanitarian aid to Gaza by a land route.

From The New Arab, Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas is expected to name Mohammad Mustafa as the organization's next prime minister.

From Allah's Willing Executioners, an Iranian man on trial for allegedly shooting into a gay bar in Oslo, Norway demands special treatment because of Ramadan.  (If you read German, read the story at Exxpress.)

From RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty, inflation in Iran is making Persian new year meals more expensive.

From IranWire, what do the Arolsen Archives, housed in Arolsen, Germany, tell us about Iranians and the Holocaust?

From Iran International, abortion rates in Iran defy the government's population policy.

From Khaama Press, about 100 acres of poppy fields have been destroyed in the Afghani province of Balkh.

From Hasht e Subh, religious government and the violation of citizen's freedoms, in Afghanistan and Iran.

From the Afghanistan Times, women and children are disproportionately harmed by the hunger crisis in Afghanistan.

From Dawn, the new cabinet for the Pakistani province of Sindh includes only one woman.

From The Express Tribune, the Islamabad High Court dismisses a plea to deny former Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan the right to appeal his conviction in his diplomatic cypher case.

From Pakistan Today, the Pakistani province of Punjab will implement safe city projects in 18 cities.

From Gatestone Institute, China plans to annex cis-lunar space.

From The Stream, the Islamic practice of taqiyya.

From The Daily Signal, what Georgia's "criminal alien" bill would and wouldn't do.

From The American Conservativethe hearing with testimony from the aforementioned Robert Hur was dominated by polarization.

From The Western Journal, congresscritter AOC (D-NY) gets a primary challenger.  (AOC herself got into Congress by ousting an incumbent Democrat in a primary.)

From BizPac Review, the House Judiciary Committee will investigate the arrest and alleged "selective prosecution" of journalist Steve Baker and "disfavored" January 6th defendants.

From The Daily Wire, the State Department is forced to disclose the cost of the Biden administration's diversity agenda.

From the Daily Caller, former Director of National Intelligence John Ratcliffe blames "inexperienced" prosecutor Nathan Wade for the dismissal of six charges in the Fulton County, Georgia case against Trump and his co-defendants.

From the New York Post, eating out costs ya, pilgrim.

From Breitbart, Senator Mike Braun (R-IN) presses Senator Chuck Schumer (D-NY) to pass the Laken Riley Act.

From Newsmax, the U.S. Military Academy will no longer use the motto "Duty, Honor, Country" in its mission statement.

And from the Genesius Times, Boeing jets are not safe, but come out as "trans-safe".

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