On a sunny but cold Friday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, HHS Secretary nominee Robert F. Kennedy Jr. gets support from Senator Socialism (I-VT) on his criticism of the American food industry.
From FrontpageMag, is there a silver lining to President Biden pardoning his son Hunter?
From Townhall, Mr. Bill claims that Hunter's pardon is not the same as the one he gave to his brother Roger Clinton.
From The Washington Free Beacon, how narrow congressional majorities complicate President-elect Trump's plans.
From the Washington Examiner, Trump names an acting director for ICE, thus pushing out a Biden holdover.
From The Federalist, a Venezuelan arrested for allegedly extorting illegal aliens in Pennsylvania shows the evil side effect of open borders policies.
From American Thinker, will Senator Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) be fair in assessing Secretary of Defense nominee Pete Hegseth?
From MRCTV, the NBA plans to play two pre-season games in China.
From NewsBusters, a "queer" specialist at The Washington Post promotes puberty blockers and ignores international bans on them.
From Canada Free Press, a "parade of potential pardons" which Biden could grant.
From TeleSUR, the E.U. and MERCOSUR reach a tree trade agreement after 25 years of negotiations.
From TCW Defending Freedom, the great DEI myth is debunked.
From ReMix, the Swedish government strengthens its efforts to track going on vacation back to their home countries. (I'd like someone to explain how a home country can be so dangerous that some people have to leave for their own safety, yet still be reasonably safe for these same people to visit.)
From Balkan Insight, police in Greece arrest 24 people ahead of expected protests in Athens and Thessaloniki marking the anniversary of the fatal police shooting of a teenager in 2008.
From The North Africa Post, Moroccan and Belgian police sign a joint work plan for 2025 and 2026.
From The New Arab, rebels in Syria approach the city of Homs.
From Allah's Willing Executioners, a Pakistani family in Wächtersbach, Germany fakes a right-wing arson attack on their house. (If you read German, read the story at Augsburger Allgemeine.)
From Arutz Sheva, a man who shot at children at a school in California claims to have been motivated by the "genocide" and "oppression" of Palestinians.
From Gatestone Institute, America's future depends on Trump's promise to defund universities that push wokeness and antisemitism.
From The Daily Signal, five reasons why turning the District of Columbia into a state is not a good idea.
From The American Conservative, the hidden logic behind Trump's choices for national security positions.
From The Western Journal, viewers catch the "telling" moment when former President Obama embarrasses himself.
From BizPac Review, New York City Mayor Eric Adams (D) doesn't rule out switching parties - for the second time.
From The Daily Wire, Trump stands by the aforementioned Pete Hegseth.
From the Daily Caller, a pediatric medical organization refuses to endorse a girls sports initiative because it doesn't mention "trans girls".
From the New York Post, a Christmas tree sculpture is worth $5.5 million, and it's not even the most expensive one.
From Breitbart, congresscritter James Clyburn (D-SC) warns that Jim Crow might come back. (He apparently has conveniently forgotten that Jim Crow was a Democrat.)
From Newsmax, the National Police Association endorses Trump's pick Kash Patel for FBI director.
And from USA Today, "snow doughnuts" appear in a back yard in Paw Paw, Michigan. (Should the residents expect a visit from Homer Simpson?)
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