Friday, September 6, 2024

Friday Fuss

On a fairly warn and partly sunny Friday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, a judge delays former President Trump's sentencing in his hush money case until November 26th, which is after the election.

From FrontpageMag, Democrats hate the Chief Twit because he allows you to speak.

From Townhall, the White House responds to what Russian President Putin said about presidential candidate Vice President Harris.

From The Washington Free Beacon, how Harris weaponized vagueness.

From the Washington Examiner, in three years, President Biden has taken the amount of vacation that the average American takes in 48 years.

From The Federalist, the Democrats desperately push another version of the Trump-Russia collusion hoax.

From American Thinker, Colorado policemen crack down on migrant gangs who have taken over apartment buildings, while ICE confirms that the gangs are illegal aliens.

From MRCTV, the Associated Press is blasted for deceptively editing a quote by vice presidential candidate Senator J.D. Vance (R-OH) about the Georgia school shooting.

From NewsBusters, the worst from ABC debate moderators David Muir and Linsey Davis.

From Canada Free Press, former presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (I) endorsed Trump, while pollsters endorsed Harris.

From TeleSUR, the Colombian government reaches an agreement with truckers and transportation representatives to end their strike and blockades.

From TCW Defending Freedom, U.K. energy official Ed Miliband blames the Tories for the increase in energy prices, but he should instead blame himself.

From Russia Today, the Russian government has no official interpretation of President Putin's endorsement of American presidential candidate Harris.

From Sputnik International, a Russian strike on a military training center in Poltava, Ukraine killed or wounded about 500 mercenaries from Europe.

From The Moscow Times, the Russian government will restrict U.S. media outlets in response to sanctions against the aforementioned Russia Today.

From Romania-Insider, if you drive on Romania's main highways, you will be watched.

From Novinite, when Bulgaria was unified.

From The Sofia Globe, according to the European Copernicus Climate Change Service, the global average temperature for the past 12 months is the highest on record.  (Why a climate change and temperature monitoring agency is named after the Polish scientist Nicolaus Copernicus, I have no idea.)

From Radio Bulgaria, the Bulgarian city of Plovdiv celebrates the country's Unification Day.

From EuroNews, Hungarian Prime Minister Orbán demands new laws to deal with migration.

From ReMix, the group Patriots for Europe wants changes to the E.U.'s 2025 budget.

From Balkan Insight, after 15 months on the job, Albania's general director of its public broadcaster resigns.

From The North Africa Post, rival factions in Libya agree to appoint a new central bank governor.

From The New Arab, according to German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock, a "purely military approach" is not the solution for Gaza.

From Gatestone Institute, on U.S. campuses, the "taboo" pandemic of Muslim hate against Jews.

From The Stream, Scandinavian countries ban "blasphemy", but for the benefit of which religion?

From The Daily Signal, Speaker Johnson (R-LA) makes his opening salvo in the congressional spending battle.

From The American Conservative, Harris is "a new quarterback" with "the same old playbook".

From The Western Journal, the latest jobs report is good for foreign-born workers and bad for native-born Americans.

From BizPac Review, Virginia Governor Glenn Youngkin (R) goes off on the Biden-Harris administration over a crime committed against children by an illegal alien from El Salvador.

From The Daily Wire, the Florida Department of State investigates allegedly "fraudulent" pro-abortion amendment petitions.

From the Daily Caller, the deadliest crack in Harris's campaign has just burst wide open.

From the New York Post, comedian George Lopez slams singer Jennifer Lopez for posting a cheeky selfie.

From Breitbart, First Son Hunter Biden's tax case sentencing is scheduled for December 16, when his father will still be the president.

From Newsmax, a North Carolina court blocks the state from sending out absentee ballots as it considers a lawsuit from the aforementioned Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

And from SWNS, according to a new survey, Paris is no longer the top romantic travel destination.  (via the New York Post)

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