Friday, January 9, 2026

Friday Phenomena

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

From National Review, the unnecessary crisis over Greenland.

From FrontpageMag, when ramming ICE and Border Patrol officers became a left-wing trend.

From Townhall, a new video obliterates a bunch of left-wing narratives about the ICE shooting in Minneapolis.

From The Washington Free Beacon, when senatorial candidate Abdul El-Sayed (D-Mich) was a professor at Columbia University, he claimed to have Egyptian citizenship, which his campaign claims to have been a mistake.

From the Washington Examiner, the House Oversight Committee threatens Mr. Bill and Mrs. Hill with contempt if they don't show up to hearings about the late Jeffrey Epstein.

From The Federalist, how professional activists use guerilla tactics to interfere with ICE arrests.

From American Thinker, the left howls as President Trump frees political prisoners in Venezuela.

From NewsBusters, media networks omit the anti-ICE activism of the woman killed in Minneapolis.

From Canada Free Press, white left-wingers don't protest on behalf of black victims if the suspected perpetrator does not fit their stereotype of the right.

From TeleSUR, Honduran governing party lawmakers approve a recount of the 2025 elections.

From TCW Defending Freedom, does U.S. President Trump regard Greenland as more important than NATO?

From Snouts in the Trough, why are (Israel-hating) "elites" in the U.K. ignoring the most important story in 50 years?

From EuroNews, Russia strikes Ukraine with a hypersonic Oreshnik missile.

From ReMix, four illegal aliens from Algeria are caught burglarizing a house in Yvelines, France, and released after claiming that they were 16 years old.

From Balkan Insight, Bosnian Serbs defy a court ban by holding a parade in the city of Banja Luka.

From The North Africa Post, Morocco and Spain intensify their investment partnership in the sectors of biscuits and industrial bread.  (Your guess for the definition of "industrial bread" is as good as mine.)

From The New Arab, members of the Southern Transitional Council in Yemen claim that reports of its dissolution have been greatly exaggerated.

From Jewish News Syndicate, elite Iranian officials are reportedly seeking save haven in Europe.

From The Times Of Israel, Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei digs in amid protests and claims that claims that Trump will be "overthrown", and anti-Israel protesters in New York City admit that they support Hamas.

From OpIndia, the UAE is concerned that its people could become radical Muslims if they attend college in the U.K.  (Please bear in mind that the UAE is a Muslim-majority country.)

From Arutz Sheva, according to an opinion column, Arabs have as much to learn from Iranians as they do from Israelis.

From Gatestone Institute, the E.U.'s Digital Services Act is "a mechanism of mass censorship".

From The Daily Signal, Trump announces plans to ban institutional investors from buying up houses and then renting them out.

From The American Conservative, how Chinese President Xi Jinping views the capture of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro.

From The Western Journal, footage of the aforementioned ICE shooting in Minneapolis released by CNN doesn't help the left's case.

From BizPac Review, independent journalist Nick Shirley floats an "interesting" theory on why Minnesota Governor Tim Walz (D) was chosen to run for vice president.

From the Daily Caller, video obtained by Alpha News shows the ICE agent's perspective in the twice-aforementioned Minneapolis shooting.

From Breitbart, more on the aforementioned Alpha News video.

From Newsmax, according to congresscritter Dan Meuser (R-PA), the recent operation in Venezuela was about ending a dictatorship, not seizing its oil.

And from the New York Post, if you have some extra money lying around, you can buy a drum played by Ringo Starr on The Ed Sullivan Show, Elton John's old Steinway piano, and/or a baseball bat used by Jackie Robinson, among other items from the estate of Indianapolis Colts owner Jim Irsay.

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