Friday, November 14, 2025

Friday Phenomena

On a cool and cloudy Friday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, could Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa become a U.S. ally?

From FrontpageMag, the Trump administration has a new possible place to deport illegal alien Kilmar Abrego Garcia.

From Townhall, has the "bromance" between former Presidents Obama and Biden come to an end?

From The Washington Free Beacon, why no one cares about COP30.

From the Washington Examiner, what the FBI really said about the online presence of the man who allegedly killed right-wing activist Charlie Kirk.

From The Federalist, after removing its statue of Revolutionary War hero Brigadier General George Rogers Clark, the University of Virginia plans to replace it with a park dedicated to "Indigenous stewardship practices".  (As the article notes, General Clark was a brother of William Clark of the Lewis and Clark expedition.  See this blog's archives from June 2019 for my visit to the George Rogers Clark National Historical Park in Vincennes, Indiana.)

From American Thinker, the waste, fraud and abuse in the SNAP includes its receipt by dead people.  (If dead people can vote, why can't they get SNAP, too?)

From NewsBusters, Fox News hosts Ainsley Earhardt and Trace Gallagher cover the story of an illegal alien who caused a vehicle DUI death after not being deported.

From Canada Free Press, Canada's WEF-controlled government is coming for the grandchildren and great-grandchildren of today's Canadians.

From TeleSUR, the U.S. and Ecuador signs a "safe third country" deal for refugees of certain nationalities, who are in good health and have no criminal record.

From TCW Defending Freedom, electric vehicles are a train wreck in the making.

From EuroNews, Poland builds a mesh fence alongside its metal barrier on the border between the province of Podlaskie and Belarus.

From ReMix, a court in Mannheim, Germany upholds the deportation order against a 75-year-old Turkish woman who switched off her hospital roommate's oxygen machine.  (If you read German, read the story at SWR.)

From Balkan Insight, Bulgaria raises its business taxes to increase pay for its government employees.

From The North Africa Post, Morocco sends the U.K. a record number of lemons.

From The New Arab, Syrian government forces and Druze militaria keep clashing in the province of Suweida.

From the Daily Mail, a former academic at University College London is reported to police after accusing Jews of killing a monk and then using his blood to make bread.

From Arutz Sheva, the terrorists who attacked Paris 10 years ago are winning.

From Jewish News Syndicate, the best days for Jewish New York City are in the past.

From Gatestone Institute, it's time to "lock and load".

From The Stream, Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani's (D) takeover of New York City will be a training ground for numerous left-wing activists.

From The Daily Signal, right-wing students at the University of California, Berkeley welcome the Department of Justice probe of left-wing violence on campus.

From The American Conservative, the ghost of two-time former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld.

From The Western Journal, leftists react to the hospitalization of Senator John Fetterman (D-PA) in sickening ways.

From BizPac Review, FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino brutally rebuts congresscritter Thomas Massie's (R-KY) claim about the January 6th pipe bomb case.

From the Daily Caller, the head of the Prosecuting Attorneys Council of Georgia, unable to find an attorney willing to take up the case prosecuted by Fulton County Fani Willis against Trump, appoints himself.

From the New York Post, archaeologists from the Russian Academy of Sciences discover "traces of a submerged city" under Lake Issyk Kul in Kyrgyzstan.

From Breitbart, a federal judge rules that congresscritter LaMonica McIver (D-NJ) must face trial for allegedly assaulting a federal law enforcement officer in Newark, New Jersey.  (No one's above the law, right?)

And from Newsmax, according to ICE Deputy Director Madison Sheahan, a operation in Florida has resulted in the arrests of over 230 alleged sex offenders.

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