Thursday, December 5, 2024

Thursday Tidbits

As the cold and cloudy weather continues on a Thursday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, Southwest Airlines backs away from DEI hiring programs in response to legal action from a conservative group.

From FrontpageMag, the left launches a crusade against the Crusaders.

From Townhall, the Supreme Court hears the most unhinged arguments for medically mutilating children.

From The Washington Free Beacon, the National Black Church Initiative calls on MSNBC to suspend and investigate Al Sharpton over payments to his organization from Vice President Harris's presidential campaign.

From the Washington Examiner, according to Senator John Fetterman (D-PA) pardons to both President-elect Trump and First Son Hunter Biden would be "appropriate".

From The Federalist, according to "Trump world sources", Senator Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) is waging a "personal jihad" against Defense Secretary nominee Pete Hegseth.

From American Thinker, Democrats are right in that Trump is a threat to "our democracy", according to their definition of "democracy".

From MRCTV, writer Taylor Lorenz justifies the death of healthcare executives.

From NewsBusters, the regime media keep going after the aforementioned Pete Hegseth.

From Canada Free Press, a Delaware judge decides that she, and not the Chief Twit's shareholders, has the right to decide how much money he will make.

From TeleSUR, the Bahamas decides against accepting deportation flights from the U.S. as proposed by Trump.

From TCW Defending Freedom, the U.K.'s Reform party needs to spell out what it intends to do about immigration.

From Snouts in the Trough, how large organizations tell us all to [bleep] ourselves.

From EuroNews, contrary to some claims, Prime Minister Keir Starmer's approval ratings are not the lowest on record for the U.K.

From ReMix, according to an Alternative for Germany leader in the city of Hamburg, Germans are becoming a minority in their own country.

From Balkan Insight, former Kosovo Liberation Army guerilla officer Sokol Bashota claims "victory" as a war crimes investigation against him comes to an end.

From The North Africa Post, potential cooperation between Morocco and the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development is discussed in the capital city of Rabat.

From The New Arab, Syrian rebels led by the group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham capture the city of Hama.

From BBC News, the most popular baby boy's name in England and Wales is Muhammad.  (How many boys born in Egypt, Syria or Algeria are named Geoffrey, Nigel or Trevor?)

From Gatestone Institute, "will China eat America's lunch" in the race to harness nuclear fusion energy?

From The Stream, is Turkish President Erdoğan's claim that Western progress is "built on blood, tears, massacres and exploitation" also true of the spread of Islam?

From The Daily Signal, how President Javier Milei is making Argentina great again.

From The American Conservative, will Trump deal with Ukraine in a Nixonian manner?

From The Western Journal, a video of former and future First Son Barron Trump goes viral.

From BizPac Review, the response from FEMA to victims of Hurricane Helene in North Carolina "is worse than you can imagine".

From The Daily Wire, according to an audit, only 6 percent of federal government workers are working in an office full time.

From the Daily Caller, seven Republican Senators are the most likely to stand between Trump and the cabinet he wants.

From Breitbart, more pardons should be expected from President Biden on his way out.

From Newsmax, an earthquake strikes off the coast of northern California.

And from the New York Post, Harry Potter's "invisibility cloak" gets one step closer to reality.

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