Monday, February 24, 2025

Monday Mania

On a sunny and mild Monday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, President Trump selects right-wing commentator Dan Bongino to be the deputy director of the FBI.  (The article uses the term "right-wing commentator", just as I have done to indicate right-wing commentators.)

From FrontpageMag, searching the Muslim world for condemnations of Hamas's killing of Israeli children Kfir and Ariel Bibas.  (Don't worry.  I won't hold my breath either.)

From Townhall, Border Czar Tom Homan is coming to Boston and bringing [bleep] with him.

From The Washington Free Beacon, the Biden administration claimed that the U.S. could monitor Afghanistan after its withdrawal, but Secretary of State Marco Rubio calls the situation "far more uncertain".

From the Washington Examiner, Trump imposes new sanctions on Iran's "shadow fleet".

From The Federalist, the resistance to Trump proves the left-wing disdain for democracy.

From American Thinker, Democrats once opposed illegal immigration, but now support birthright citizenship for the children of illegal aliens.

From MRCTV, a boy claiming to be a girl takes third and fourth places in girls' skiing events in Maine.

From NewsBusters, the "Big Three" spend less than two minutes combined on the taxpayer savings from DOGE.

From Canada Free Press, offshore bird choppers are blowing away.

From TeleSUR, Ecuadorian presidential candidate Luisa Gonzalez is leading current President Daniel Noboa in a poll conducted by an Argentine research firm.

From TCW Defending Freedom, the U.K. needs its own President Trump and Vice President Vance, or it's doomed.

From EuroNews, U.K. parliamentcritter Mike Amesbury gets 10 weeks in jail for punching a man in the town of Frodsham.

From ReMix, Austria is set to form a new government, which will not include the FPÖ.

From Balkan Insight, on the third anniversary of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, Ukrainian exiles in Balkan countries rebuild their lives in uncertain times.

From The North Africa Post, year-long investigations and monitoring lead to Morocco's latest dismantling of a terrorist cell.

From The New Arab, Egypt criticizes Ethiopia's dam "unilateralism".

From The Jerusalem Post, former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert reveals that Israel offered Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas 94 percent of the West Bank in 2008.

From the Daily Mail, a British teacher, arrested with his wife in Afghanistan, could die because the Taliban are withholding his heart medication.

From The Times Of Israel, according to data from famine review groups, rumors of a famine in Gaza have been greatly exaggerated.

From Gatestone Institute, Hamas's October 7th, 2023 attack was part of its jihad to destroy Israel.

From Radio Free Asia, a North Korean soldier captured by Ukrainian troops expresses a desire to defect to South Korea.

From The Stream, according to new Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the coronavirus panic was a plan to establish totalitarianism.  (I realized a while back that the coronavirus gave the left the chance to do what it has always wanted to do, which is to control the lives of the people.)

From The Daily Signal, according to Alaska Governor Mike Dunleavy (R), Trump has "rescued Alaska".

From The American Conservative, yes, we can and should negotiate with Russian President Putin.

From The Western Journal, more on the aforementioned Dan Bongino being named as deputy director of the FBI.

From BizPac Review, TV host Megyn Kelly can't find any "white women tears" for TV host Joy Reid, whose show has just been canceled.

From The Daily Wire, the Trump administration is eliminating at least 1,600 positions at USAID.

From the Daily Caller, former Mr. Bill henchman James Carville says that he doesn't "give a [bleep]" about efforts to "protect" female athletes.

From the New York Post, just when you thought it was safe to watch videos.

From Breitbart, congresscritter James Comer (R-KY) reveals that four government agencies were investigating the Biden family but were told to stand down.  (Tell me again how "no one is above the law".)

From Newsmax, anchor Lester Holt of NBC Nightly News announces that he will step down.

And from The Babylon Bee, Admiral Firmus Piett receives an email from Darth Vader asking about what he accomplished last week.

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