Saturday, March 29, 2025

Saturday Stuff

On a warm and cloudy Saturday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, Poland is projected to surpass Japan in per capita GDP.

From FrontpageMag, former First Lady/Senator (D-NY)/Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is in no position to lecture President Trump about foreign policy.

From Townhall, the creator of the comic strip Dilbert has a new ploy for Trump to deal with the Democrats and the media.

From The Washington Free Beacon, Europe needs to spend more on defense, the sooner the better.

From the Washington Examiner, Trump is winning with Americans, but not with the swamp.

From The Federalist, the Democrats' last-resort attack on Wisconsin Republican Supreme Court candidate Brad Schimel amounts to "[bleep] you".

From American Thinker, New York state's highest court greenlights quarantine camps.

From NewsBusters, CNN mischaracterizes Trump's order that the Smithsonian remove "improper ideology" from is museums as "banning history".

From TCW Defending Freedom, the Chief Twit takes on censorship in Australia.

From The Jerusalem Post, a column about why, in the columnist's opinion, Islam and the West will never be able to really coexist.

From Gatestone Institute, China and Russia are making sure that Iran gets nuclear weapons before the end of U.S. President Trump's deadline.

From Radio Free Asia, over 1,600 people have been killed in the earthquake centered in Myanmar.

From The Stream, 10 reasons why open borders is not a biblically sound policy.

From The Daily Signal, according to a poll, Americans aren't buying the climate alarmist propaganda.  (When was the last time that climate alarmists protested in front of any Chinese embassy or consulate?)

From The American Conservative, Michaelangelo and his paintings on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel.  (I was on a tour that visited the Sistine Chapel in 2004.)

From The Western Journal, former Fox News host Steve Hilton says that he's "seriously considering running" for governor of California.

From BizPac Review, a "Karen" who tried to snatch the MAGA hat off another passenger on the New York City subway turns out to be "extremely liberal".

From The Daily Wire, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth goes to Japan to honor the military personnel who died on Iwo Jima during World War II.

From the Daily Caller, the Supreme Court is set to consider whether states may restrict Planned Avoidance Of Parenthood from receiving Medicaid funds.

From the New York Post, the Taliban release an American woman whom they had detained in February in Afghanistan.

From Breitbart, Dutch police reveal that the suspect in a mass stabbing in Amsterdam is a man from the Ukrainian region of Donetsk.  (If you read Dutch, read the story at De Telegraaf.)

From Newsmax, Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr. reportedly plans to visit areas of St. Louis affected by illegally dumped nuclear waste.

And from PJ Media, some of the stuff that the Department of Health and Human Services was funding is hard to believe.

No comments:

Post a Comment