Tuesday, June 4, 2024

Tuesday Tidbits

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

From National Review, why American socialists are happy about Mexico's president-elect.

From FrontpageMag, President Biden plans to sign a "tough" executive order that will allow 900,000 illegal aliens to cross the border each year.

From Townhall, Senator John Kennedy (R-LA) quickly roasts Biden's order for the border.

From The Washington Free Beacon, a "special advisor" to congresscritter Cori Bush (D-MO) wants to abolish police, prisons, and the Supreme Court.  (Does he want anarchy?)

From the Washington Examiner, former President Trump's conviction boosts fundraising for other Republican candidates.

From The Federalist, Senator Chuck Schumer's (D-NY) brother works for a law firm which allowed three of its attorneys to join the Manhattan district attorney's office as it investigated Trump.

From American Thinker, leftists should realize that they will solve nothing by "getting Trump".

From MRCTV, how local news in the Chicago area reported about a "woman" charged with murder.

From NewsBusters, the networks protect Biden and hide his termination of about 350,000 asylum cases.

From Canada Free Press, rogue judges in the U.S. and Canada.

From CBC News, the Canadian government won't commit to releasing the names of parliamentcritters who allegedly conspired with foreigners.

From TeleSUR, a judge forces Argentine President Javier Milei to distribute previously stored food.

From TCW Defending Freedom, if you're in the U.K., some questions for the politician who visits your doorstep.

From Snouts in the Trough, has the author of SitT bamboozled one of the U.K.'s leading economists?  (The post is numerically dated to yesterday, but by days of the week is intended for today and tomorrow, so I'll let the numerical date slide.)

From the Express, residents of the area which parliamentary candidate Nigel Farage (Reform) seeks to represent explain why they intend to vote for him.  (Wiki has some information on his party.)

From the Irish Independent, putting your kids in daycare in Ireland is gonna cost ya more, parental pilgrim.  (I've noticed that this source now explicitly recites "Irish" in its title.  Perhaps they wanted to reduce confusion with the U.K. source called Independent.  Thus, I no longer have to recite "Irish" in parentheses.)

From VRT NWS, farmers protest against the E.U. in Brussels, Belgium.  (The structure in the top picture, including rods that connect spheres, is called the Atomium.  It was one of the first things my tour group saw when I visited Belgium in 2005.)

From the NL Times, the new Dutch party NL Plan reportedly has close ties to China.  (If you read Dutch, read the story at RTL Nieuws.)

From Deutsche Welle, police raid 10 "Reichsbürger" sites in three German states.

From Polskie Radio, a Polish Border Guard officer is injured in a clash with illegal migrants near the city of Białowieża.  (Did any of the migrants see any bison?)

From ReMix, President Andrzej Duda criticizes the Polish government for using forceful measures in nominating ambassadors.

From Radio Prague, the Czech government is willing to help any Ukrainians who wish to return home.

From The Slovak Spectator, Bratislava, Slovakia has a new "kiss and go" road sign.

From Daily News Hungary, Budapest, Hungary issues flood warnings for parts of the Danube.

From EuroNews, a country-by-country guide to the E.U. elections.

From Voice Of Europe, according to a survey, about half of Ukrainians think that democracy and the economy have declined under President Zelensky.

From Balkan Insight, segregation of minority students in Albania is believed to fuel a high dropout rate.

From The North Africa Post, Algeria wants tourists but needs to improves its perception and infrastructure.

From The New Arab, a Russian company has plans to build an oil refinery in Libya.

From Crux, Islamists attack Catholics in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

From Gatestone Institute, who is funding the pro-Hamas protests in the U.S.?

From Jewish News Syndicate, the myth of the "innocent" majority in Gaza.

From The Stream, more about the democracy movement of 1989.

From The Daily Signal, the Chinese government tries to erase the memories of the Tiananmen Square massacre 35 years later.

From The American Conservative, the connections among people behind Trump's prosecutors.

From The Western Journal, Attorney General Merrick Garland scrambles when pressed by congresscritter Matt Gaetz (R-FL) about Trump's prosecutors.

From BizPac Review, the director of the Trump biopic The Apprentice is frustrated because he can't find a distributor for it.

From The Daily Wire, the NGOs pushing mass migration under the banner of religion.

From the Daily Caller, Biden doesn't like being questioned about his age by reporters.

From Breitbart, two people are arrested after throwing a milkshake at the aforementioned Nigel Farage.

From Newsmax, in a poll, Trump leads Biden by eight points in North Carolina.

And from the New York Post, a remote tribe in Brazil's Amazon rainforest connects to the Chief Twit's Starlink internet, and becomes addicted to social media and adult content.

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