On a cold and cloudy Friday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, the executive director of Oklahoma City Black Lives Matter faces 25 charges for allegedly spending donated money on shopping, vacations and six properties. (If true, this would show that "BLM" stands for "buy large mansions".)
From FrontpageMag, high school students in San Jose, California form a "human swastika" on their football field.
From Townhall, CNN commentator Scott Jennings gives a Democratic guest a history lesson on the suppression of voting rights.
From The Washington Free Beacon, yes, congresscritter Ilhan Omar (D-Min) did what she's been accused of doing.
From The Federalist, President Trump should model immigration policy after those of the 1920s, because they worked.
From American Thinker, has Kenosha, Wisconsin self-defense shooter Kyle Rittenhouse found a happy ending?
From NewsBusters, ICE Director Todd Lyons explains how to keep ICE agents out of your neighborhood.
From Canada Free Press, Trump's version of the Monroe Doctrine becomes active in Latin America.
From TeleSUR, Cuba doesn't approve of the U.S. seizing a Venezuelan oil tanker.
From TCW Defending Freedom, TCWDF asks its reader to help find non-woke churches this Christmas.
From Snouts in the Trough, be astonished for U.S. President Trump's success, while weeping for the U.K.'s future.
From EuroNews, three years after being accused of money laundering and corruption, former europarliamentcritter Eva Kaili still hasn't been put on trial. (What is this "right to a speedy trial" you speak of?)
From Free West Media, the modern versions of The Camp of the Saints.
From ReMix, police arrest a 15-year-old Iraqi migrant after he allegedly stabbed a teenager near the Christmas market in Herford, Germany. (If you read German, read the story at Bild and Radio Herford.)
From Balkan Insight, Albania's Constitutional Court temporarily restores Deputy Prime Minister Belinda Balluku to her duties.
From The North Africa Post, the UAE plans to make a major investment for renewable energies in the Moroccan region of Sahara.
From The New Arab, more women are seated in the Iraqi parliament, but struggle to exert any influence.
From Iran International, an Iranian nuclear scientist is executed after confessing, only from severe torture and threats to his mother.
From EU Today, at last, some European countries are pushing back against the infantilization of Muslim girls.
From India Today, Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma of the Indian state of Assam claims that other communities will not "survive" if the state's Muslim population exceeds 50 percent.
From The Times Of Israel, video footage shows six Israeli hostages observing Hanukkah in December 2023, eight months before they were executed.
From Allah's Willing Executioners, Muslims in Germany cheer that the country allegedly belongs to them. (If you read German, read the story at Philosophia Perennis. The last five links come via The Religion Of Peace.)
From Gatestone Institute, the E.U. has a plan to read all of your messages.
From The Daily Signal, Governor Tim Walz (D), the aforementioned Ilhan Omar, and the billion-dollar fraud scandal in Minnesota.
From The American Conservative, the brain drain in the U.K.
From The Western Journal, the Department of Justice sues four states for allegedly violating election law.
From BizPac Review, the Senate's "blue slip" tradition blocks another highly qualified conservative from becoming a U.S. attorney.
From the Daily Caller, how the late Jeffrey Epstein used the Ivy League to white wash his reputation.
From the New York Post, a raccoon who broke into a liquor store, ransacked the place, and got drunk has had other misadventures, and lived.
From Breitbart, more about one European country, Austria, banning head scarves in schools.
From Newsmax, White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles earns a spot on the Forbes list of the World's Most Powerful Women.
And from SFGate, a"spectacular" phenomenon is seen on the Farallon Islands, 30 miles west of San Francisco.
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