Saturday, April 5, 2025

Saturday Links

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

From National Review, former Vice President Harris promises to stay politically active.

From FrontpageMag, California Governor Gavin Newsom (D) asks China for a separate tariff agreement.

From Townhall, the automaker Ford teams up with the Trump administration to decrease car prices and increase jobs.

From The Washington Free Beacon, his colleagues agree that Jerry Nadler (D-NY) is the worst smelling congresscritter.

From the Washington Examiner, President Trump tests his MAGA support and drives the swamp nuts.

From American Thinker, smart nations are starting to line up for tariff deals with the U.S.

From NewsBusters, according to podcaster Joe Rogan, the media downplayed the Chief Twit's rescue of two astronauts who were stranded on the International Space Station.  (Of course, Rogan didn't use the term "Chief Twit".  I use the term because that's what Elon Musk he called himself.)

From TCW Defending Freedom, the outcome of the Chief Twit's fight against Australian censorship remains uncertain.

From Snouts in the Trough, a video about why so many people are angry at Trump tariffs.

From The Jerusalem Post, according to New York City police, Jews are the most frequent targets of hate crime in the city.

From The Times Of Israel, the New York City education department investigates after an office thereof sends out an anti-Israel toolkit that includes "antisemitic language".

From the Daily Mail, a journalist who appeared on the BBC's Arabic Channel reportedly called Israelis "not human beings" and Jews "devils".

From Northeast Now, a man in Yairipok, Manipur, India is killed by a lynch mob after he allegedly burned a copy of the Koran and placed a video of the act on social media.  (via OpIndia)

From Gatestone Institute, the Iranian government loves to talk and talk, which is its path to having nuclear weapons.

From The Stream, now that Roe v. Wade has been overturned, pro-life pregnancy centers have even more responsibility than they did when it was in force.

From The Daily Signal, stories in The Washington Post and The AP show the liberal media's bias in favor of transgender athletes.

From The American Conservative, "steak and company" in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia.

From The Western Journal, Northglenn, Colorado limits its residents to owning a combined total of four dogs and cats.  (I hope that the city government realizes that litters of puppies and kittens are often greater than four, and gives their humans a reasonable amount of time to find homes for the youngsters.)

From The Daily Wire, Auburn University basketball coach Bruce Pearl uses the spotlight of his team being in the NCAA Final Four to draw attention to American hostage Edan Alexander, believed to be held by Hamas in Gaza.

From the Daily Caller, Republican Senators advance Trump's tax cuts and border security spending after a marathon session.

From the New York Post, 80 years after the World War II Battle of Okinawa, bones are still being found on the island.

From Breitbart, Senator Chris Coons (D-Del) comes out in favor of Trump's tariffs on Russia and China.

From Newsmax, according to Senator John Cornyn (R-TX), Trump's policies should be given a chance to work.

And from The Daily Squib, 46 percent tariffs are imposed on Nike sweatshops in Vietnam.

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