On a sunny and cool Saturday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, a federal judge blocks a bid by The Onion to buy Alex Jones's platform InfoWars.
From Townhall, Senator John Fetterman (D-PA) says what right-wingers are thinking about his party.
From The Washington Free Beacon, Secretary of State nominee Senator Marco Rubio (R-FL) and the return of the Monroe Doctrine.
From the Washington Examiner, Secretary of Defense nominee Pete Hegseth has (gasp!) Christian tattoos.
From American Thinker, some ideas for the new Department Of Government Efficiency. (Yes, I know. The term "government efficiency" is all too often an oxymoron.)
From NewsBusters, on MSNBC, Hegseth's aforementioned tattoos are alleged to be "white supremacist".
From TCW Defending Freedom, the budget proposed by U.K. Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves brings the two certainties of debt and taxes.
From Snouts in the Trough, more about Reeves and her allegedly being "economical with the truth". (Yesterday, I linked another SitT article about Reeves. Have I picked on her enough for two days?)
From Union of Catholic Asian News, Parahyangan Catholic University in Bandung, West Java, Indonesia beefs up its security an alleged bomb threat from an Islamic terrorist group.
From Gatestone Institute, the possibility of the Middle East having a "golden age".
From The Stream, why in the Jewish and Christian traditions, a remnant preserves society.
From The Daily Signal, pro-lifers explain how President-elect Trump can protect pregnancy resource centers from attacks, such protection currently being undermined by the Biden administration.
From The American Conservative, President Biden "gets the last laugh", or at least the last smile.
From The Western Journal, an illegal alien is glad that Trump won, even if Trump deports him.
From BizPac Review, the Chief Twit defends Attorney General nominee and congresscritter Matt Gaetz (R-FL) against accusations from former National Security Advisor John Bolton.
From The Daily Wire, some government waste that could be targeted by the new Department Of Government Efficiency, such as transgender monkeys and Barbie fraud.
From the Daily Caller, the University of Oklahoma is accused of defying a state law by requiring a DEI course. (Tell me again how "no one is above the law".)
From the New York Post, Democrats in Bucks County, Pennsylvania admit breaking the law to overturn Senator-elect Dave McCormick's (R) victory over incumbent Senator Bob Casey (D). (Tell me again how "no one is above the law".)
And from Breitbart, congresscritter Seth Moulton (D-MA) admits what's wrong with his party.
No comments:
Post a Comment