Wednesday, December 4, 2024

Wednesday Whatnot

On a cold and cloudy Wednesday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, the nomination of Pete Hegseth for secretary of defense runs into some obstacles.

From FrontpageMag, Texas and the incoming Trump administration plan to fight together against illegal immigration.

From Townhall, was Vice President Harris the first presidential candidate since 1932 to not flip a single county from four years earlier?

From The Washington Free Beacon, the revolving door between the Biden administration and left-wing environmental groups keeps on revolving.

From the Washington Examiner, the Supreme Court appears to be skeptical about overturning Tennessee's ban on transgender procedures for minors.

From The Federalist, the case for mass deportation of illegal aliens.

From American Thinker, five cases for President-elect Trump's proposed tariffs.

From MRCTV, a 13-year-old illegal alien from El Salvador is arrested after allegedly stabbing a man in New York City.

From NewsBusters, the show PBS News Hour uses the term "far right" 27 times as much as "far left".

From Canada Free Press, Trump should not allow his nominees to be derailed by Fox News backstabbers or Canadian politicians.

From TeleSUR, the Ecuadorian National Assembly suspends the impeachment trial of former energy minister Andrea Arrobo.

From TCW Defending Freedom, neither parents nor farmers nor car workers nor anyone else are safe from the scourge of U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer.

From Snouts in the Trough, welcome to Starmer's hell socialist paradise.

From EuroNews, the French government under Prime Minister Michel Barnier is ousted in a no-confidence vote.

From France24, France prepares for more turmoil ahead of the no-confidence vote.

From RFI, more about the no-confidence vote faced by the French government.

From ReMix, police carry out raids against a vast human smuggling network dominated by Iraq.  (If you read German, read a related story at Bild.)

From Balkan Insight, former Croatian Serb leader and linguistics professor Milorad Pupovac warns against wartime "myths".

From The North Africa Post, Panama snubs a delegation from Algeria.

From The New Arab, the Syrian government launches a counter offensive against rebel forces advancing toward the city of Hama.

From Gatestone Institute, Arabs are no longer believing the lies made by Hamas and Hezbollah.

From The Stream, the U.K.'s assisted suicide bill was supported by global depopulation lobbies.

From The Daily Signal, fact-checking some claims relating to the aforementioned Tennessee ban on transgender procedures for minors and the related Supreme Court case.

From The American Conservative, Trump could learn some things from immigration-related proposals made in 2012 by then-presidential candidate Mitt Romney.  (The "Romney" label pops up again.)

From The Western Journal, New York City Mayor Eric Adams (D) starts to oppose criminal illegal aliens and dares the media to "cancel" him.

From BizPac Review, Trump's team considers buying land in Texas along the Rio Grande to facilitate his plans for mass deportation.

From The Daily Wire, a Defense Department DEI official's unit was allegedly disbanded, but she was actually promoted.

From the Daily Caller, Trump's legal team asks the state of Georgia to dismiss the indictment against him made by Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis.

From the New York Post, the Republican majority in the House of Representatives will be razor-thin, in part due to Trump's nominees.

From Breitbart, "MAGA world" and other people come out in support of the aforementioned Pete Hegseth.

From Newsmax, private payrolls increased moderately in November.

And from five different sources, ccccooooooookkkiiiiieeeee!!!!

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