On a cool and cloudy Sunday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, San Francisco 49ers defensive end Nick Bosa is fined for donning a "MAGA" hat during a post-game interview.
From FrontpageMag, the Women's March, which is run by a Muslim man, returns to oppose President-elect Trump.
From Townhall, for what does Trump have a mandate?
From The Washington Free Beacon, a review of a book about what Franklin Roosevelt, Winston Churchill, Adolf Hitler, Joseph Stalin and Benito Mussolini learned from World War I.
From the Washington Examiner, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) is slammed for not inviting Senator-elect David McCormick (R-PA) to Senate orientation day. (Since the Republicans have won enough seats to take the majority in the Senate, Schumer will soon have a different title.)
From The Federalist, a judge forces federal officials to reveal more evidence pertaining to a free speech case.
From American Thinker, some post-election musings, including about the National Popular Vote Compact.
From NewsBusters, how the media wrongly claimed that a new law in Georgia would "restrict" voting.
From TCW Defending Freedom, the U.K. observance of Remembrance Sunday is not just about the fallen, but also about nationhood.
From The Jerusalem Post, the Pakistani Senate passes a bill banning the promotion of Zionism.
From Gatestone Institute, Hamas should be defeated and never legitimized.
From The Stream, when Hungarian governor John Hunyadi terrorized the Ottoman Turks.
From The Daily Signal, more billionaires supported Vice President Harris than former President Trump.
From The American Conservative, former presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy is a "dark-horse" choice for secretary of state.
From The Western Journal, all the ways in which Harris dropped the proverbial ball.
From BizPac Review, the FEMA supervisor who told workers to "avoid homes advertising Trump" claims to be a "patsy" and a "scapegoat".
From The Daily Wire, a former Harris aid calls on President Biden to resign so that she can be president until Trump takes office. (If this were to happen, Harris would be America's first female president, but not the first woman to be elected president. The distinction would be similar to that between Teddy Roosevelt, the youngest person to take office as president, after the assassination of President William McKinley, and John F. Kennedy, the youngest person to be elected president.)
From the Daily Caller, NBC correspondent Steve Kornacki describes how Trump "transformed" the Republicans into a "more diverse" party.
From the New York Post, according to British Armed Forces Admiral Sir Tony Radakin, Russia lost an average of 1,500 soldiers in Ukraine each day in October.
From Breitbart, Dutch authorities admit that no one has yet been arrested for alleged involvement in the recent attacks on Israeli soccer fans in Amsterdam. (If you read Dutch, read the story at De Telegraaf.)
From Newsmax, Senator John Barrasso (R-WY) agrees with Trump's intent to deport illegal aliens.
And from Bleacher Report and the Sprechen Sie Deutsch? department, during the football game between the New York Giants and Carolina Panthers in Munich, Germany, an NFL referee calls a penalty in German.
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