Wednesday, December 3, 2025

Wednesday Whatnot

On a sunny but cold Wednesday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, the Catholic Church is clear in calling antisemitism a grave sin.

From FrontpageMag and the "I know nothing" department, Christians are massacred in Africa, as the West goes Sergeant Schultz.

From Townhall, the left will be [bleep]ed off at President Trump's pardon of a Democrat congresscritter.

From The Washington Free Beacon, Hamas's own internal documents show how it infiltrated U.N.-affiliated aid groups in Gaza.

From the Washington Examiner, Republicans enjoy congresscritter-elect Matt Van Epp's (R-TN) special election victory in Tennessee.

From The Federalist, the top five moments from the arguments in front of the Supreme Court in the case about a pro-life pregnancy center in New Jersey.

From American Thinker, the U.S. Navy sinks pirate boats, just like it's supposed to.

From NewsBusters, only 24 percent of likely voters know that the alleged murderer of right-wing activist Charlie Kirk was left-wing.

From Canada Free Press, celebrities show their climate hypocrisy.  (To paraphrase a certain great Jewish man, before you pluck the SUV out of your neighbor's eye, take the private jet out of your own.)

From TeleSUR, Mexico plans to reduce its work week from 48 hours to 40 hours by 2030.

From TCW Defending Freedom, the U.K.'s Labour Party lies because its policies are evil.

From Snouts in the Trough, the devil went down to......Westminster.

From EuroNews, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen pushes ahead with a reparations loan from Ukraine, to which Belgium maintains its opposition.

From ReMix, a man from Afghanistan in Sweden allegedly murders his friend, dismembers his body, stores it in a freezer, and uses his identity to commit fraud.

From Balkan Insight, Kosovo authorities (again) ban the Srpska Lista party from participating in this month's parliamentary elections, which is harshly criticized by Western diplomats.

From The North Africa Post, Libya plans to accelerate the repatriation of illegal irregular migrants from sub-Saharan Africa, but will grant access to public services to refugees from Sudan.

From The New Arab, according to Amnesty International, Sudan's Rapid Support Forces committed war crimes in the Zamzam camp in the province of North Darfur.

From Jewish News Syndicate, over 200 public figures support a petition calling for the release of Palestinian terrorist Marwan Barghouti.

From The Times Of Israel, a middle school in the New York borough of Brooklyn denies a Holocaust survivor a chance to give a talk because of his opinions on Israel and Palestine.

From Gatestone Institute, Venezuela's alliances against the U.S.

From The Stream, do humans really have free will?

From The Daily Signal, Secretary of State Marco Rubio announces new restrictions on visas for anyone believed to be conducting or supporting violations of religious freedom.

From The American Conservative, Trump should echo President Reagan when it comes to Israel.

From The Western Journal, singer Sabrina Carpenter slams the Trump administration for using one of her songs in a video about deporting illegal aliens, but she did worse to Christians.

From Brain Flushings, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy revokes 3,000 commercial drivers licenses after an illegal alien crashes his truck.

From BizPac Review, Pope Leo XIV urges Trump to not oust Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro.

From the Daily Caller, a study on climate change and its economic effects published in 2024 is retracted.

From the New York Times, foreigners but 52 percent of newly built homes in Miami.

From Breitbart, Senator Tom Cotton (R-Ark) submits a bill to remove non-citizens from welfare and to expedite deportations.

From Newsmax, congresscritter Elise Stefanik (R-NY) secures the addition of a provision in the NDAA to require the FBI to notify Congress when it investigates candidates seeking federal office.

And from the Genesius Times and the "don't give him any ideas" department, Prime Minister Keir Starmer orders the arrest of anyone who says that the U.K. doesn't have free speech.

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