Tuesday, October 14, 2025

Tuesday Things

As the cool and cloudy weather continues on a Tuesday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, why Democrat activists can't celebrate the ceasefire that they demanded.

From FrontpageMag, why no female hostages taken by Hamas were returned alive to Israel.

From Townhall, you won't believe who's living in the Virginia home of New York Attorney General Letitia James (D).

From The Washington Free Beacon, Virginia Lieutenant Governor and gubernatorial candidate Wincome Earle-Searles's (R) campaign launches a seven-figure ad buy pointing out her opponent Abigail Spanberger's (D) refusal to withdraw her endorsement of attorney general candidate Jay Jones (D).

From the Washington Examiner, Speaker Johnson (R-LA) turns up the heat on the Democrats over the federal government shutdown.

From The Federalist, the man whom the left calls a "Nazi" just signed a peace deal that millions of Jews.

From American Thinker, without the surge of illegal immigration on then-President Biden's watch, mass deportations would be unnecessary.

From MRCTV, a podcast about how the "Open Society Foundations" back the violent far-left fringe.

From NewsBusters, Saturday Night Live portrays critics of New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani (D) as paranoid Islamophobes.

From Canada Free Press, "blessed be the dealmakers".

From TeleSUR, a prison break by members of the gang Barrio 18 from a Guatemalan prison leads to President Bernardo Arevalo possibly making a change in his cabinet.

From TCW Defending Freedom, a power grab to create a two-tiered response to public chants.

From EuroNews, a general strike against proposed public spending cuts disrupts travel across Belgium.

From ReMix, according to Hungarian Prime Minister Orbán, U.S. President Trump "did what others thought was impossible".

From Balkan Insight, Serbia again convicts three Serb fighters who abducted 20 passengers from the Štrpci railroad station in Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1993.

From The North Africa Post, the British airline Jet2 launches a new route from Newcastle, England to Marrakesh, Morocco.  (Will Graham Nash now have to sing "flying..." instead of "riding on the Marrakesh express"?)

From The New Arab, Tunisian army personnel fire teargas to disperse protesters in the city of Gabes.

From The Jerusalem Post, how Hamas kept Israeli hostages in chains.

From the Daily Mail, Hamas executes Gazan civilians.

From BBC News, who are the released Israeli hostages?

From Gatestone Institute, Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez is on the wrong side of history.

From Radio Free Asia, the U.S. and the U.K. sanction a Cambodian conglomerate for alleged involvement in scams.

From The Stream, "Trump has the right idea" about preventing another civil war.

From The Daily Signal, the Maryland Supreme Court will get to decide on a climate change case against oil companies.

From The American Conservative, yes, U.S. President Trump can end the war between Russia and Ukraine.

From The Western Journal, the New Zealand parliament is suspended after an unexpected Māori haka breaks out.

From BizPac Review, a Chicago TV producer [bleep]s around with ICE and finds out.

From the Daily Caller, American activist Linda Sarsour is unexpectedly on the guest list of a conference in Turkey put on by an allegedly Hamas-linked group.

From the New York Post, everything to know about the "National Day of Remembrance" for slain right-wing activist Charlie Kirk.

From Breitbart, Hollywood's silence about the peace deal between Israel and Hamas shows that they never really wanted one.

From Newsmax, dashcam video footage contradicts actor Alec Baldwin's version of events that led to his crashing his car into a tree.

And from the Genesius Times, the GT releases its debut single Everyone I Don't Like Is Hitler.

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