Monday, December 22, 2025

Monday Links

Now that I'm (mostly) done with Christmas shopping and present wrapping on a cool and mostly sunny Monday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, congresscritter Elise Stefanik (R-NY) goes "over and out".

From FrontpageMag, the U.N. stages a fake famine in Kenya to save USAID and wrongly blames it on U.S. President Trump.

From Townhall, what a custodian at Brown University reveals adds more intrigue about the shooting there.

From The Washington Free Beacon, senatorial candidate Abdul El-Sayed (D-Mich), in social media posts which have been deleted, draws an equivalence between 9/11 and the U.S. response to it.

From the Washington Examiner, CBS News Editor-in-Chief Bari Weiss admits to pulling a story about El Salvador's CECOT prison from 60 Minutes because it "did not advance the ball".

From The Federalist, new documents show the "shocking lengths" that then-President Obama and then-Vice President Biden went to protect protect presidential candidate Hillary Clinton and get Trump.

From American Thinker, the Supreme Court reverses a lower court decision about Catholic Charities Bureau.

From NewsBusters, the networks keep trying to tie Trump to the late Jeffrey Epstein.

From Canada Free Press, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney and Ontario provincial Premier Doug Ford put on a comedy routine without laughs.

From TCW Defending Freedom, possibly the best documentary ever made about soccer.

From ReMix, a 14-year-old Muslim girl who stabbed a caregiver is regarded as so dangerous that the German government is building a "high-security container" to house her.  (If you read German, read the story at WDR.)

From The Jerusalem Post, according to a spokesman for President Bola Tinubu, 130 Nigerian schoolchildren abducted from a Catholic school in the state of Niger have been released.

From Jewish News Syndicate, pro-HamasPalestinian agitators harass Jews heading to a Chanukah candle lighting in İstanbul, Turkey.

From Gatestone Institute, placing Pakistan on the proposed International Stabilization Force for Gaza would result in "jihad on steroids".

From The Daily Signal, the Department of Homeland Security offers illegal aliens more money to self-deport.

From The American Conservative, this Christmas, liberals should stop being so afraid of things.

From BizPac Review, a mock funeral is held for the American penny at the Lincoln Memorial.

From the Daily Caller, Japan plans to reopen the world's largest nuclear power plant.

From the New York Post, the largest soup kitchen on Long Island is now feeding cats and dogs along with their humans.

From Breitbart, according to a poll, over 60 percent of Jews in Britain are considering leaving the country due to rising antisemitism.

From Newsmax, the Department of the Interior pauses leases on five offshore sets of bird choppers.

And from The Babylon Bee, singer Nicki Minaj reveals that her song Anaconda is about how the federal government needs to reduce its deficit spending.

No comments:

Post a Comment