Sunday, March 2, 2025

Sunday Stuff

On a sunny but cold Sunday, here are some things going on:

From FrontpageMag, according to CNN, federal employees who are not being fired suffer from "survivor's guilt".

From Townhall, pro-Ukraine protesters disrupt Vice President Vance's family ski trip in Vermont, so the Vances move to an "undisclosed location".

From The Washington Free Beacon, a review of a book by a courtroom sketch artist.

From the Washington Examiner, former Chicago Mayor, congresscritter (D-IL), Ambassador to Japan and White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel admits that the Democrats have lost the DEI culture war.

From American Thinker, has Riyadh, Saudi Arabia become the world's new diplomatic hub?

From NewsBusters, NPR White House correspondent Tamara Keith is not "independent".

From TCW Defending Freedom, the week in review as we live in turbulent times.

From Gatestone Institute, the persecution of Christians in January 2025.

From The Stream, why freedom of speech matters and must be restored in the U.K.

From The Daily Signal, five ways by which the Trump administration can level the playing field for the pro-life movement.

From The American Conservative, what have sanctions on Iran achieved?  (For that matter, when have sanctions ever achieved the stated goal of those who apply them?)

From The Western Journal, according to friends, an 11-year-old girl who committed suicide was not bullied over her family's immigration status, but was a victim of something more insidious.

From The Daily Wire, an interview with Secretary of the Interior Doug Burgum.

From the Daily Caller, Senator Socialism (I-VT) dodges questions from a news host on NBC about whether Democrats should "have done more" to cut waste under then-President Biden.

From the New York Post, for the first time in five years, North Korea allows tourists in to visit, and lets them see some shocking things.

From Breitbart, migrant encounters at the southern border in February 2025 were down 94 percent from February 2024.

From Newsmax, Major League Baseball commissioner Rob Manfred is reportedly considering whether to remove the late Pete Rose from its ineligible list.

And from Fox Business, the fast food chain Steak 'n Shake announces that it has "RFK'd" their French fries.

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