Thursday, September 19, 2024

Thursday Things

On a warm and partly cloudy Thursday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, an Alaska man is arrested for allegedly threatening to kill or injure six Supreme Court justices and their families.

From FrontpageMag, the Department of Justice's two-tiered system when it comes to which side of the abortion issue people are on.

From Townhall, CNN reporter Scott Jennings raises some important questions about exploding pagers that injured or killed Hamas terrorists.

From The Washington Free Beacon, according to a report, the Democratic campaign of Vice President Harris and Minnesota Governor Walz is on track to hold the fewest number of interviews on history.  (If Vice President Harris can't handle the American media, how will she deal, if elected, with Russian President Putin, North Korean leader King Jong-un, Chinese President Xi, etc.?)

From the Washington Examiner, cities are sinking under the costs of illegal immigration.

From The Federalist, mass immigration is destroying far more than Springfield, Ohio.

From American Thinker, yes, some people really want to incite violence.

From MRCTV, congresscritter Harriet Hageman (R-WY) trolls a bunch of Hamas supporters by asking them if they have their pagers.

From NewsBusters, NBC host Craig Melvin and former CIA Director John Brennan smear Israel for making Hezbollah pagers go "boom".

From Canada Free Press, why would someone want to assassinate former President Trump if he were losing?  (The author is right-wing commentator Tucker Carlson.)

From TeleSUR, an indigenous people's march in Bolivia continues heading toward the capital city of La Paz.

From TCW Defending Freedom, England is being invaded for the first time since 1066.

From EuroNews, why is Russia so focused on the Ukrainian town of Pokrovsk?

From ReMix, Polish Foreign Minister Radosław Sikorski is irritated at Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.

From Balkan Insight, Zagreb, Croatia opens a "one-stop shop" for refugees and asylum seekers.

From The North Africa Post, Morocco and Gabon sign a memorandum of understanding for strengthening their mutual judicial cooperation.

From The New Arab, Iraq seeks to strengthen its border security and to prevent the importation of exploding electronic devices.  (Doesn't Iraq realize that making border security stronger is racist and xenophobic?  Oh wait, that's only true when Western countries such as the U.S. do it.  Never mind.)

From The Jerusalem Post, U.S. presidential candidate Vice President Harris targets Arab Americans with an ad highlighting the "suffering" in Gaza.

From CNN, according to prosecutors, a teenager in Philadelphia who allegedly made and tested bombs wanted to join a foreign terrorist group.

From Arutz Sheva, a court in Be'er Sheva, Israel allows the publication of the identity of an Israeli man who allegedly conspired with Iran to assassinate Israeli officials.

From Gatestone Institute, "why is Hamas so confident that it's winning" the war in Gaza?

From The Stream, radio host Eric Metaxas recites the John Zmirak poem I Will Not Eat Grilled Haitian Cat.

From The Daily Signal, Republican congresscritters warn that proposed U.N. policies would extinguish U.S. sovereignty and free speech.

From The American Conservative, the Supreme Court should repudiate gender ideology.

From The Western Journal, a co-host on The View launches a racist attack against Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes and his wife Brittany due to their support for Trump.

From BizPac Review, Harris asks Americans to "imagine" what mass deportations would look like, and users of the platform X oblige her.

From The Daily Wire, Georgetown University will host a conference featuring terrorism-related speajers at its campus in Qatar.

From the Daily Caller, a couple livestreaming their activities on YouTube discover a body believed to be that of the suspected Kentucky highway shooter.

From Breitbart, according to a report from the House Homeland Security Committee, over 85 percent of the migrants arriving at the southern U.S. border are released into the country.

From Newsmax, according to Senator Chuck Schumer (D-NY), the Senate will prepare a stopgap bill to avert a government shutdown.

And from the New York Postwhy the two astronauts stranded on the International Space Station will be just a bit younger than their friends on earth when they finally arrive back on earth.

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