Thursday, July 4, 2024

A Few Things For July 4th

Now that I've returned from a bit of exercise, as you're celebrating American independence, here are some things going on:

From National Review, happy 248th birthday, America.

From FrontpageMag, a tale of two revolutions, each with a significant date in July.

From Townhall, the sentence from President Biden that should terrify his fellow Democrats.

From the Washington Examiner, some tips for watching the Fourth of July fireworks on the Mall in Washington, D.C.

From The Federalist, why you should read The Federalist Papers, and where you could start.

From American Thinker, what the Preamble to the Constitution would look like if it were written by modern woke leftists.

From NewsBusters, the networks surely but slowly continue to turn on Biden.

From Canada Free Press, the Democrats are fixing to replace Biden with another dangerous-to-America candidate, who would get the approval of former President Obama.

From TeleSUR, Mexican President-elect Claudia Sheinbaum presents her incoming Cabinet.

From TCW Defending Freedom, "a tale of two elections".

From The Standard, according to exit polls, the U.K.'s Labour Party has won 410 seats in the House of Commons, a majority of 170 seats.  (On America's Independence Day, the country from which we became independent has held a parliamentary election.  The Standard appears to be the new name of what was called the Evening Standard.)

From the (U.K.) Independent, some top Tory parliamentcritters appear set to lose their seats.

From Jewish News Syndicate, Canadian parliamentcritter Anthony Housefather (Liberal-Montreal) condemns a flyer calling him a neo-Nazi and telling him to leave Canada.

From Gatestone Institute, what democracy really looks like.

From The Stream, the forgotten Founding Father whose steady hand wrote the Declaration of Independence and made it legible.

From The Daily Signal, Virginia decouples from California's electric vehicle mandate.

From The American Conservative, an examination of Biden's life and inner circle.

And from BizPac Review, actor and comedian Rob Schneider offers some good advice.

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