Thursday, October 2, 2025

Thursday Things

On a sunny and mild Thursday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, two Jews are killed in an attack at a synagogue in Manchester, England.

From FrontpageMag, how President Trump can bust the Democrat money machine that's funding ProFa.

From Townhall, illegal alien Kilmar Abrego Garcia finally might get deported.

From The Washington Free Beacon, Northwestern University's Center for Enlightened Disagreement calls for civil dialogue, but its co-chair negotiated on behalf of activists who called Jews "pigs".

From the Washington Examiner, Governor Gavin Newsom (D) signs a bill that reverses California's anti-truancy law, which was championed by then-San Francisco District Attorney Kamala Harris (D).

From The Federalist, former Trump White House advisor Peter Navarro recalls how he became a political prisoner during the Biden presidency.

From American Thinker, we all identify with the victims of horrific attacks.....until we don't.

From NewsBusters, according to a new Gallop poll, trust in news media has dropped to a new low.

From Canada Free Press, Pope Leo XIV appears clouded on the issues of abortion and the death penalty.

From TeleSUR, Peruvian journalists denounce the over 200 attacks against the media and demand an end to their being harassed.

From TCW Defending Freedom, the BBC program Panorama shows its bias about asylum hotel protests.

From Snouts in the Trough, is Reform party leader Nigel Farage already running the U.K.?

From EuroNews, more on the aforementioned attack at a synagogue in Manchester, England.

From ReMix, Italy moves to revive its nuclear energy industry with a new bill.

From Balkan Insight, the Romanian government approves legislation to establish a volunteer military training program.

From The North Africa Post, young protesters in Morocco can be genuine demonstrators or goons, rioters and manipulators.

From The New Arab, three Christian men are shot and killed in Anaz, Syria.

From RAIR Foundation USA, a Spanish priest faces three years in prison for telling the truth about Islam.  (What is this "freedom of speech" you speak of?)

From the Daily Mail, still more about the twice-aforementioned attack at a Manchester, England synagogue.

From Sp!ked, how the West has failed the Danish cartoon test.

From Gatestone Institute, Qatar must apologize for its support of terrorist groups.

From The Stream, Canadian churches burn as the left provides the fuel.

From The Daily Signal, even as the federal government shuts down, construction on the border wall continues.

From The American Conservative, former U.K. Prime Minister Tony Blair should not be inflicted upon Gaza.

From The Western Journal, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt pushes back on criticism from the aforementioned Pope Leo XIV.

From BizPac Review, FBI Director Kash Patel cuts ties with the Anti-Defamation League because it branded Turning Point USA as an extremist group.

From the Daily Caller, Fox and Friends co-host Lawrence Jones fact-checks Senator Jeanne Shaheen's (D-NH) claim about health care for illegal aliens.

From the New York Times, a strip mall in Los Angeles blasts classical music at night to keep vagrants away.

From Breitbart, right-wing commentator Dennis Prager talks on camera for the first time since being injured and paralyzed in 2024.

From Newsmax, according to the aforementioned press secretary Leavitt, federal government layoffs due to the shutdown could reach the thousands.

And from SFGate, the actor known as "The Rock" wears heavy prosthetics for his lead role in the movie The Smashing Machine.

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