Tuesday, March 19, 2024

Tuesday Tidings For The Spring Equinox

On a sunny but cool Tuesday, which will include the spring equinox later this evening, here are some things going on:

From National Review, morale is better when you're allowed to shoot back.

From FrontpageMag, the Supreme Court will decide whether the 1st Amendment should exist.

From Townhall, Democrats cause Minneapolis, Minnesota to lost Uber and Lyft.

From The Washington Free Beacon, Senators J.D. Vance (R-OH) and Jim Banks (R-IN) move to stop colleges from hiring illegal aliens.

From the Washington Examiner, the Washington state Supreme Court approves new avenues to become a licensed attorney without passing the bar exam.

From The Federalist, four things to be learned from right-wing commentator Bill Whittle's history of the Soviet Union.

From American Thinker, in Louisiana, parents prevail against child-corrupting Marxists.

From MRCTV, Tyson Foods lays off Americans and replaces them with illegal aliens.  (But, but, the "great replacement" is just a conspiracy theory, isn't it?)

From NewsBusters, The Atlantic begs Supreme Court Justice Sonya Sotomayor to retire.

From Canada Free Press, former President Trump a "galloping certainty", and the left aren't as smart as they think they are.

From TeleSUR, Brazilian police file several charges against former President Jair Bolsonaro.

From TCW Defending Freedom, coronavirus vaccines for farm animals could endanger humans.

From Snouts in the Trough, does the U.K. spend too much on defense?

From VRT NWS, work keeps advancing on restoring the Cloth Hall in Ieper, Belgium.  (I visited Ieper and its Cloth Hall in 2005 during my trip to Belgium.  From what I understand, the city and hall were heavily damaged during World War I.)

From The Brussels Times, STI rates in Belgium have sharply increased in recent years.

From the NL Times, a Dutch court rules that third-country citizen who fled from Ukraine to the Netherlands cannot be deported.

From Dutch News, a plan for reserving 30 percent of places in Delft University of Technology's aerospace engineering training course for women is shot down for being illegal.  (To get a look at the Dutch city of Delft, go to this blog's archives for May 2017.)

From Deutsche Welle, a German soldier is charged with spying for Russia.

From Voice Of Europe, the German state of Bavaria prohibits gender distinctions in its universities and schools.  (If you read German, read the story at Spiegel.)

From the CPH Post, the Danish government loses its parliamentary majority.

From Polskie Radio, Polish military leader General Wiesław Kukuła warns that Russia is preparing for a confrontation with NATO.

From Sovereignty(dot)PL, according to an opinion column, "Europe must defends its values at home and abroad".  (The article was first published in the Daily Sabah, but does not provide any link thereto.)

From Radio Prague, a documentary about the last Czechoslovak President Václav Havel is given a special screening at Prague Castle.

From The Slovak Spectator, a popular place to get relief near a peak in Slovakia's High Tatra mountains will be replaced by new ecological relief devices.

From EuroNews, trying to track what the next European Parliament will look like.

From ReMix, dozens of illegal aliens land on the Spanish island of Mallorca and disappear.

From Balkan Insight, former inmates of the Heliodrome, which was run by Bosnian Croats, mark the 30th anniversary of the start of its dissolution.

From The North Africa Post, Tunisia closes its Ras Jdir border crossing with Libya after clashes between rival Libyan factions.

From The New Arab, why are more floods are happening in Lebanon, and what will be needed to prevent them?

From Allah's Willing Executioners, Islamists make a plan to blow up the Eiffel Tower.  (If you read French, read the story at RTL and FDeSouche.)

From The Jerusalem Post, according to a Palestinian official, the Red Cross is involved in the Palestinian Authority's "pay for slay" policy.

From Gatestone Institute, Hamas's strategy of atrocity in its fight against Israel.

From The Stream, fake female Dylan Mulvaney makes a video that should even make trans activist cringe.

From The Daily Signal, the Corporate Transparency Act, which was snuck into the 2021 NDAA, is ruled to be unconstitutional.

From The American Conservative, we're stuck with Russian President Putin for the foreseeable future.

From The Western Journal, the media went Sergeant Schultz when then-candidate Joe Biden warned about a "bloodbath" in 2020.

From BizPac Review, left-wingers whine that Trump is raising campaign money from their "bloodbath" hoax.

From The Daily Wire, according to a newsletter distributed to agents of the federal intelligence community, crossdressing made one official "a better intelligence officer".

From the Daily Caller, the centrist party No Labels wants to nominate a "Unity Ticket" for the upcoming presidential election, but no one wants to be its nominees.

From Breitbart, Texas divests $8.5 billion from the asset manager BlackRock due to its anti-fossil fuel.

From Newsmax, the Supreme Court allows Texas law enforcement personnel to arrest people suspected of entering the U.S. illegally from Mexico.

And from the New York Post, two American missionaries evacuated from Haiti by an international rescue group were worried that "no one would come" to save them.

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