Monday, March 17, 2025

Stories For Saint Patrick's Day

Top o' the afternoon to you.  On a cool and cloudy Monday, on the date when we celebrate the patron saint of Ireland, who wasn't even Irish, and whose real name wasn't Patrick (although some would differ), here are some things going on:

From National Review, President Trump takes aim at the Houthis in Yemen.

From FrontpageMag, meet a Marxist hate group who are trying to interfere with ICE raids.

From Townhall, is former congresscritter Liz Cheney (R-WY) in trouble after then-President Biden's autopen use?

From The Washington Free Beacon, the Trump administration cuts millions more from grants to Columbia University.

From the Washington Examiner, new Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney snubs U.S. President Trump and courts other "reliable allies" in Europe.

From The Federalist, voter turnout in Wisconsin proves the media wrong about voter ID.

From American Thinker, Speaker Johnson (R-LA) explains why the autopen scandal is a big deal.

From MRCTV, according to an Illinois mother, high school girls were forced to change in a locker room with a trans-identifying boy.

From NewsBusters, according to columnist George Will of The Washington Post, the Corporation for Public Broadcasting is useless, and should therefore be defunded.

From Canada Free Press, the autopen was mightier than the sword.

From TeleSUR, Cuba rejects the use of the Alien Enemies Act by the U.S. to deport Venezuelan criminal illegal aliens.  (The article uses the euphemism "migrants".)

From TCW Defending Freedom, the religious rite of the coronavirus vaccination.

From EuroNews, after the collision of two ships off the east coast of England, small plastic pellets are found washing up on shore.

From ReMix, left-wing extremists destroy a mountain climbing route used by Freedom Party of Austria leader Herbert Kickl.  (If you read German, read the story at Salzburger Machrichten.)

From Balkan Insight, the Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina issues an arrest warrant for Bosnian Serb leader Milorad Dodik.

From The North Africa Post, Libyan Education Minister Moussa al-Megarief is sentenced to three and a half years in prison for his involvement in a school textbook shortage.

From The New Arab, a tense calm returns to the Syria-Lebanon border after the killing of three Syrian soldiers by Lebanese groups.

From Gatestone Institute, do not count on Arab countries to rebuild the Gaza Strip or to help the Palestinians.

From Radio Free Asia, China and Kiribati explore the possibility of a deep sea mining agreement.

From The Stream, Ukrainians are the victims of both Russia and the deep state.

From The Daily Signal, Trump strikes the aforementioned Houthis and warns Iran.

From The American Conservative, what sensible reform of H1-B visas would look like.

From The Western Journal, what will the fate of Syrian Christians be under imposed sharia?

From BizPac Review, the Houthis claim to have attacked the carrier Harry S. Truman while getting pummeled by the U.S. Navy.

From The Daily Wire, Irish UFC fighter Connor McGregor warns Trump about the "illegal immigration racket" in Ireland.

From the Daily Caller, congresscritter Byron Donalds (R-FL) has a message for Democrats and media outlets who "vilify" black conservatives.

From the New York Post, Tesla cybertrucks have some technical difficulties.

From Breitbart, Senator Chuck Schumer (D-NY) postpones his book tour.

From Newsmax, two U.S. astronauts stranded on the International Space Station for over nine months are expected back on earth Tuesday evening.

And from The Babylon Bee and the "don't give him any ideas" department, a federal judge orders that the two astronauts are returned to the International Space Station.

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