Thursday, May 16, 2024

Thursday Links

On a warm sunny Thursday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, could the Democrats forego having a convention this year?

From FrontpageMag, former President Obama's "longer game" about the U.S., Jews and Israel.

From Townhall, White House correspondent Peter Doocy has an idea about why President Biden is eager to debate former President Trump.

From The Washington Free Beacon, inside Senator Bob Casey's (D-PA) relationship with Turkish President Erdoğan's best friend in Pennsylvania.

From the Washington Examiner, former NIH Director Francis Collins admits that the lab leak theory about the origins of the coronavirus is not a conspiracy theory.

From The Federalist, the corporate media wants us to regard questioning election results as violence.  (Does this include questioning the results of the 2000 and 2016 presidential elections, which Democrats have often done?)

From American Thinker, why does the left exist?

From MRCTV, Biden repeats his lie that he inherited 9 percent inflation when he took office.

From NewsBusters, leftist billionaire George Soros gave $80 million to groups calling for Big Tech censorship.

From Canada Free Press, when Justice is lost, public safety suffers.

From TeleSUR, drugs and handmade weapons are found in an Ecuadorian prison.

From TCW Defending Freedom, say "no" to the whole lot of the U.K.'s politicians.

From EuroNews, the Dutch government moves to the right after a four-party coalition is established.

From Voice Of Europe, Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico is in critical but stable condition.

From ReMix, a migrant is arrested after allegedly stabbing six people in Zofingen, Switzerland.

From Balkan Insight, Bosnian war victims protest after uniformed military personnel pay tribute to a monument to convicted Bosnian Serb war criminal Ratko Mladić.

From The North Africa Post, Moroccan King Mohammed VI reaffirms his support for the Palestinian cause.

From The New Arab, the Arab League calls for U.N. peacekeepers in the West Bank and Gaza.

From BBC News, a man sets a mosque on fire and traps 40 worshippers inside in the Nigerian state of Kano, resulting in 11 deaths.

From The Times Of Israel, the president of Sonoma State University in California agrees to an academic boycott of Israel.

From The Jerusalem Post, masked protesters harass University of Michigan regents in their homes in the middle of the night.

From Gatestone Institute, Russia, China and Iran must not be allowed to take control of Sudan.

From The Stream, the WHO lied, thousands died, and millions got locked down or injured by the coronavirus vaccines.

From The Daily Signal, Biden's effectively open borders challenge the police in all 50 states.

From The American Conservative, was there a failed coup against Ukrainian President Zelensky?

From The Western Journal, Senator Mike Lee (R-UT) has an "epic" proposal for the second Biden-Trump debate.

From BizPac Review, according to a study, the food stamp program is an economic nightmare and has created a culture of dependency after reforms made under Biden.

From The Daily Wire, financial planning expert Dave Ramsey rescues a pro-Israel conference.

From the Daily Caller, according to law professor Jonathan Turley, Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg's team isn't calling a former Trump Organization CFO because it would hurt their case.

From Breitbart, presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (I) could qualify for the first presidential debate and thus join Biden and Trump, but faces an uphill battle to do so.

From Newsmax, the debut of rookie Caitlin Clark of the Indiana Fever becomes the most watched WNBA game ever on ESPN.

And from the New York Post, a pro-Trump artist releases 100 balloons having the faces of the aforementioned DA Alvin Bragg and Judge Merchan, and having a provocative shape.

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