Thursday, August 15, 2024

Thursday Tidbits For Traveling

Now that I've arrived at and settled into my temporary undisclosed location in southwestern Ohio, here are some thing going on:

From National Review, the Arizona Supreme Court allows the phrase "unborn human being" in an informational pamphlet about the state's upcoming abortion referendum.

From FrontpageMag, a Jordanian is arrested after threatening to blow up a gas plant in Florida.

From Townhall, Governor (D-Min) and vice presidential candidate Tim Walz lied about his DUI.

From The Washington Free Beacon, Vice President and presidential candidate Kamala Harris stonewalls a congressional investigation into her national security advisor's alleged ties to an Iranian government influence network.

From the Washington Examiner, the eight most shocking revelations from the plot to sabotage the Nord Stream pipeline.

From The Federalist, how the media are lying about "violent crime dropping".

From American Thinker, Democrat National Committee operatives try to remove a Green Party candidate from the ballot.  (What's this about defending "democracy", Democrats?)

From MRCTV, President Biden's response to former President Trump wanting to "make America affordable again" doesn't make much sense.

From NewsBusters, the network NBC declines to report on the resignation of Columbia University President Minouche Shafik.

From Canada Free Press, Catholics who profess communism really aren't.

From TeleSUR, Bolivia will seek to nullify an award by the ICC giving Shell Oil $10 million.

From TCW Defending Freedom, the U.K. people no longer believe their system.

From EuroNews, Ukrainian President Zelenskyy claims that his country's forces have taken over the Russian town of Sudzha.

From ReMix, German politicians are still divided about whether Germany will continue to host U.S. missiles.

From Balkan Insight, Serbia and Kosovo refuse to cooperate in an investigation businessman and party leader Milan Radoičić.

From The North Africa Post, Morocco steps up its vigilance against monkeypox.  (As has been previously pointed out, the "k" in "monkeypox" is silent.)

From The New Arab, why is Egypt's new grand mufti being intensely scrutinized?

From Israel Hayom, more on the resignation of the aforementioned president of Columbia University.

From The Times Of Israel, UCLA criticizes a court ruling that prevents pro-HamasPalestinian protesters from keeping Jews from entering its campus.

From Gatestone Institute, France goes into political chaos.

From The Stream, before giving 12-year-old boys x-rays, let's ask them if they're pregnant.

From The Daily Signal, New York City is on track to spend almost $10 million on illegal aliens in three years.

From The American Conservative, Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador proposes sweeping constitutional amendments during his last month in office.

From The Western Journal, the Trump campaign brings back his old campaign manager Corey Lewandowski.

From The Daily Wire, ESPN fires host Sam Ponder after she spoke out again having males in female sports.  (Sam Ponder is the wife of former Florida State and Minnesota Vikings quarterback Christian Ponder.)

From The Daily Caller, the media give less attention to Harris than to Walz's dog.

From Breitbart, former Argentine President Alberto Fernández is charged with allegedly beating his wife Fabiola Yañez when she was pregnant.

From Newsmax, according to presidential historian Allan Lichtman, Ukraine's incursion into Russian territory could help Harris.

And from the New York Postthe Secret Service approves a plan to protect Trump with bulletproof glass at his outdoor rallies.

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