Monday, September 30, 2024

Stories For The End Of September

Yesterday I returned from Arizona, just over two hours after I expected to, because of technical difficulties with the airplane that was originally supposed to be used on my fight.  Except for that, my return trip went well.  Now that I'm back on a cool and misty Monday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, ICE reveals that 662,000 illegal aliens in the U.S. either have a criminal conviction or are awaiting a verdict back in their home countries, including 15,000 convicted of sexual assault.

From FrontpageMag, presidential candidate Vice President Harris is not pro-choice but very pro-abortion.

From Townhall, what's this about someone being weird?

From The Washington Free Beacon, vice presidential candidate Governor Tim Walz's (D-Min) state homelessness council starts by acknowledging land "stolen" from Native Americans.

From the Washington Examiner, the rules of the vice presidential debate between Walz and Senator J.D. Vance (R-OH).

From The Federalist, President Biden appears to not give a rat's rear end about flood victims in North Carolina.

From American Thinker, Harris's and Walz's real positions on abortion.

From MRCTV, the LGBT ideology is inflicted on........flamingos.

From NewsBusters, climate czar and former Senator (D-MA) John Kerry has a problem with the 1st Amendment.

From Canada Free Press, the Democrats are in effect attempting to reelect the Biden regime.

From TeleSUR, Mexico gets ready for the inauguration of Claudia Sheinbaum as its next president.

From TCW Defending Freedom, U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer is happy to dance with the devil.

From EuroNews, new NATO leader and former Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte inherits several security headaches.

From ReMix, former German Chancellor Gerhard Schröder wants former U.S. President Trump to regain his old office.

From Balkan Insight, election results in the Montenegrin capital of Podgorica spell trouble for Montenegro's governing coalition.

From The North Africa Post, Mali denounces Algeria's interference in its internal affairs.

From The New Arab, the mother of British-Egyptian activist Alaa Abdel-Fattah goes on a hunger strike.

From Jewish News Syndicate, Israel has sent as many wanted terrorists to their virgins in six weeks as the U.S. has done in 20 years.

From The Times Of Israel, the life and death of Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah.

From Gatestone Institute, Iran finds a new proxy in Sudan.

From The Stream, Harris has 13,099 Willie Hortons.  (I don't mean the Willie Horton who played baseball.)

From The Daily Signal, according to CEO Stacy Blakely of The Policy Circle, faith-based groups are better at solving social challenges than the government is.

From The American Conservative, a letter to Trump on what he should have said during his debate with Harris.

From The Western Journal, the NGO Samaritan's Purse, whose CEO is Franklin Graham, tries to help victims of Tropical Storm Helene.

From BizPac Review, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis (R) launches Operation Blue Ridge to aid southern states hit by Helene.

From The Daily Wire, Trump mocks Biden's poor response to Helene.

From the Daily Caller, the second would-be Trump assassin pleads not guilty.

From the New York Post, according to a memoir written by former U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson, Queen Elizabeth II had "a form of bone cancer" before her death.

From Breitbart, Biden snaps at a reporter who asks him why he and Harris weren't in Washington, D.C. for the federal government's response to Helene.  (Silly reporter.  Doesn't he know that such a question is legitimate only when there's a Republican in the White House?)

From Newsmax, Veterans Affairs workers improperly viewed the medical records of both Vance and Walz.  (I'll give them credit for being even-handed.)

And from The Babylon Bee, in a deal to receive aid from the federal government, North Carolina agrees to purchase several paintings made by First Son Hunter Biden.

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