Thursday, March 6, 2025

Thursday Tidings

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

From National Review, the Supreme Court prevent one-judge constitutional crises, not encourage them.

From FrontpageMag, the White House legacy media has a conniption fit.

From Townhall, congresscritter Al Green (D-TX) gets censured.

From The Washington Free Beacon, the top ten failed climate catastrophe predictions.  (When people on your side of an issue repeatedly make predictions that fail, isn't time for a bit of introspection and humility?)

From the Washington Examiner, former First Son Hunter Biden claims to have run out of money as his paintings are no longer selling.

From The Federalist, red states line up to help President Trump enforce immigration law.

From American Thinker, Democrats treat women's sports like Schrödinger's cat.

From MRCTV, Washington D.C. plans to paint over its "Black Lives Matter" street mural.

From NewsBusters, when the media insisted that then-President Biden could only do so much about the border crisis.

From Canada Free Press, can the "Canadian cavalry" come to the U.S. Democratic Party's rescue?

From TeleSUR, in the Caribbean, the Carnival festival comes from a tradition of resistance and cultural heritage.

From TCW Defending Freedom, no charges are filed in a case of alleged Koran burning which never should have been brought in the first place.

From Snouts in the Trough, insulting Vice President Vance is not a good idea.

From EuroNews, a German court jails five people for a "far-right" plot to overthrow the German government.

From Free West Media, according to a Ukrainian official, Ukraine will run out of American weapons in two to three months.

From ReMix, numerous videos show Ukrainian men being kidnapped off the streets to be inducted into its military.  (If you read Hungarian, read the story at Magyar Nemzet.  Unfortunately, there's no available corresponding Ukrainian article.)

From Balkan Insight, Romanian prosecutors detain six people alleged treason and making contact with foreign agents in Romania and Russia.

From the Sarajevo Times, the Prosecutor's Office of Bosnia and Herzegovina summons Republika Srpska President Milorad Dodik for questioning, but he refuses to attend.

From Total Croatia News, how can luxury tourism in Croatia be improved?

From The Slovenia Times, Slovenia plans to increase its defense spending.

From The Malta Independent, Maltese parliamentcritter Karol Aquilina withdraws comments that he had made about Speaker Anglu Farrugia.

From Malta Today, Maltese Prime Minister Robert Abela speaks against increasing defense spending.

From ANSA, S&P downgrades the credit rating of the Italian-American-French automaker Stellantis.

From SwissInfo, far fewer unaccompanied underage migrants apply for asylum in Switzerland.

From France24, French President Emmanuel Macron plans to discuss with European allies the possible use of French nuclear weapons to help protect Europe.

From RFI, according to French Defense Minister Sebastien Lecornu, France will keep sharing intelligence with Ukraine, even while U.S. doesn't.

From The Portugal News, Coimbra, Portugal will put on a craft beer festival.

From Morocco World News, the Moroccan NGO Bayt Mal Al Quds Agency and the Palestinian Ministry of Social Development team up to help orphaned and amputee children in Gaza.

From The North Africa Post, Côte d'Ivoire and Ghana urge Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger to rejoin the Economic Community of West African States.

From The New Arab, in the Syrian governorate of Daraa, government forces clash with armed groups loyal to former President Bashar al-Assad.

From The Times Of Israel, an Iranian singer is flogged 74 times for his song calling for women to remove their headscarves.

From Mamba Online, after the murder of a gay imam in South Africa, another South African imam preaches hate.

From Arutz Sheva, some German cities celebrate the start of Ramadan instead of Carnival.

From Gatestone Institute, rebuilding Gaza is pointless as long as Hamas exists.

From Radio Free Asia, Vietnamese Buddhist monk Thich Minh Tue and his companions, unable to enter Myanmar from Thailand, enter Malaysia instead.

From The Stream, Democrats need to prepare themselves for the upcoming midterm elections.

From The Daily Signal, the Justice Department drops a Biden-era lawsuit against Idaho's abortion law.

From The American Conservative, yes, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky is a dictator.

From The Western Journal, Maine state Representative Deqa Dhalac (D), a native of Somalia, is shown on video urging Somalis outside of Somalia to prioritize Somalia.

From BizPac Review, the musical Hamilton cancels its run at the Kennedy Center, after which its interim Executive Director Ric Grenell hits back.

From The Daily Wire, an aide to former Vice President Harris is under Department of Justice investigation for allegedly falsifying paperwork to get a buyout from the Chief Twit.

From the Daily Caller, more on the censure of the aforementioned Al Green.

From the New York Post, the House Judiciary Committee subpoenas Alphabet, the parent company of Google, over Biden-era content moderation.

From Breitbart, an illegal alien from Honduras gets 12 years in prison minus time served for killing Pinellas County, Florida Sheriff's Deputy Michael Hartwick.

From Newsmax, top Democrats go Sergeant Schultz on former New York Governor Mario Cuomo (D) running to be mayor of New York City.

And from Clickhole, former President Biden renames his son Hunter "Parfait".

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