Friday, May 10, 2024

Friday Fuss

On a cool and rainy Friday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, an admission by presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (I) opens a can of worms about medical records.

From FrontpageMag, fighting the so-called "far-right" in western Europe.

From Townhall, congresscritter Cory Mills (R-FL) files a new article of impeachment against President Biden.

From The Washington Free Beacon, Biden again caves into the Senator Socialism (I-VT) faction of the left.

From the Washington Examiner, police arrest 33 pro-HamasPalestinian protesters at the University of Pennsylvania.

From The Federalist, the "mass graves" of Native American children in Canada was a huge hoax.

From American Thinker, the aforementioned RFK Jr.'s stance on abortion could help former President Trump.

From MRCTV, two climate activists, both over 80 years old, try to vandalize Magna Carta.  (I've been told that because Magna Carta is a Latin term, there should not be an article such as "the" before it.)

From NewsBusters, CNN analyst Mark Preston claims that one "sordid" detail from Stormy Daniels's testimony in Trump's hush money trial will hurt him with women voters.

From Canada Free Press, Hamas gets a spring break.

From TeleSUR, floods leave 114 dead in Brazil.

From TCW Defending Freedom, the "shocking" naivete of the U.K.'s energy secretary.

From EuroNews, Italy's declining birth rate is a crisis that will only get worse.

From Voice Of Europe, about 11,000 Ukrainian men have illegally entered Romania to avoid military service.

From ReMix, the German party CDU ditches, at least on paper, most of the policies of former Chancellor Angela Merkel.

From Balkan Insight, according to German Ambassador to Kosovo Jorn Rohde, Kosovo must set up an association of Serb-majority municipalities in order to join the Council of Europe.

From The North Africa Post, Moroccan security chief Abdellatif Hammouchi is invited to Spain's celebration of the 200th anniversary of its police force.

From The New Arab, Iraq's top court suspends the region of Kurdistan's preparations for a parliamentary election.

From In-Cyprus, according to Cypriot conservationists, utility poles are "serial killers of endangered vultures".

From The Syrian Observer, jaundice spreads among children in the Rukban refugee camp.  (This camp is in southern Syria near the point where Syria, Jordan and Iraq all meet.)

From The961, you might just like Lebanon's weird food combos.

From Arutz Sheva, at least 14 rockets are fired at Be'er Sheva, Israel.

From The Times Of Israel, four IDF soldiers are killed in battles across Gaza.

From The Jerusalem Post, IDF troops find tunnel shafts and send terrorists to their virgins.

From YNetNews, the terror group Hezbollah is preparing for war.

From the Egypt Independent, Egypt's project to restore coral reefs in the Red Sea achieves success.

From Egypt Today, Egypt promises to protect its national security "by all means".

From the Sudan Tribune, Sudan gives greater powers to its intelligence agency.

From the Ethiopian Monitor, Ethiopia earns $1 billion from exporting coffee.

From RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty, Iranian official Kamal Kharrazi threatens a change in Iran's nuclear policy.

From IranWire, Iran denies medical treatment for women who don't wear hijabs.

From Iran International, according to Iranian parliamentcritter Ahmad Bakhshayesh Ardestani, Iran might already have nuclear weapons.

From Khaama Press, according to the World Food Programme, three million children in Afghanistan suffer from malnutrition.

From the Afghanistan Times, the Taliban warn journalists against collaborating with a broadcaster based in London.

From Gatestone Institute, a tribute to Israeli warriors.

From The Stream, raising kids in a world that promotes transgenderism.

From The Daily Signal, young people whose bodies were sacrificed to the "gender ideology cult".

From The American Conservative, a review of a book about anti-white racism and its effect on the U.S.

From The Western Journal, a sneak peek at the upcoming movie about President and actor Ronald Reagan.

From BizPac Review, Trump attorney Alina Habba calls his hush money trial something from the Twilight Zone.

From The Daily Wire, the organization formerly known as the Boy Scouts wants to be inclusive, but no one wants to join them.

From the Daily Caller, the Biden administration is reportedly ready to strengthen tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles and certain minerals.

From the New York Post, a high school student in Lexington, North Carolina sues to overturn his suspension for using the term "illegal alien".

From Breitbart, First Son Hunter Biden loses his appeal to have gun charges thrown out.

From Newsmax, Texas Governor Greg Abbott (R) slams Biden's "feckless" immigration proposals.

And from SFGate, police in Butte County, California find a missing child - and 6,674 pounds of marijuana.

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