Now that I've returned from running around, here are some things going on:
From National Review, the University of North Carolina's board of governors votes to get rid of its DEI bureaucracy.
From FrontpageMag, what's this about colonization?
From Townhall, Senator Chuck Schumer's (D-NY) attempt to revive his border bill meets the same fate as before.
From The Washington Free Beacon, fire Northwestern University President Michael Schill.
From the Washington Examiner, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis (R) and former President Trump set aside their differences in an effort to garner campaign cash.
From The Federalist, how the media falsely claim that getting poorer under President Biden's economy is "all in your head".
From American Thinker, the southern border so so wide open that even illegal aliens are warning about it.
From MRCTV, Walmart announces its newest pride collector.
From NewsBusters, PBS pushes congresscritter Jamie Raskin (D-MD) into harassing an American energy industry.
From Canada Free Press, WEF leader Klaus Schwab is not really resigning but is going deeper underground.
From TeleSUR, Cuba rearranges its government ministers.
From TCW Defending Freedom, the unelected figures who scuppered the U.K.
From The Times Of Israel, according to a poll, 70 percent of New Yorkers believe that anti-Israel protests on campuses "went too far".
From Israel Hayom, why did Reuters censor the subtitles of a Hamas video which uses an Arabic term which translates to "sex slaves".
From Gatestone Institute, South Africa, Russian President Putin's Marxist cohorts, and the ICJ. (If you want to see the building where the ICJ meets, go to this blog's archives for May 2017.)
From The Stream, "stop the migrant invasion".
From The Daily Signal, Supreme Court Justice Sam Alito drives the left nuts by flying flags at his home.
From The American Conservative, Senator Rick Scott's (R-FL) Republican leadership platform draws some reaction.
From The Western Journal, according to documents, the Obama administration interference with FBI efforts to arrest people allegedly illegally aiding the Iranian nuclear program.
From BizPac Review, British comedian Stephen Merchant, who created The Office, blasts cancel culture.
From The Daily Wire, how the University of Louisville's law school lost rankings as it embrace DEI and drag shows.
From the Daily Caller, the Norfolk Southern Railway Company reaches a settlement with the EPA for the derailment in East Palestine, Ohio.
From the New York Post, Trump promises to "make New York City great again" at a rally in the NYC area of South Bronx.
From Breitbart, Trump was not the first presidential candidate to stage a rally in South Bronx.
From Newsmax, according to a poll, 54 percent of Americans identify as middle class.
And from SFGate, the coastal California town of Aptos is world famous, but the reason why is unknown.
No comments:
Post a Comment