Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Tuesday Things

On a warm and sunny Tuesday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, the "Freedom 250" UFC fight can't distract from President Trump's woes.

From FrontpageMag, the real scam by the Southern Poverty Law Center.

From Townhall, you'll get a good laugh at how Trump will keep the media from lying about the deal with Iran.

From The Washington Free Beacon, New York City has a riot celebrating the Knicks winning the NBA championship, and no one seemed to care.

From the Washington Examiner, a woman's call to police about her son's stockpile of weapons helps to unravel an alleged plot to attack the aforementioned "Freedom 250" UFC fight.

From The Federalist, miserable old fogeys hold an anti-Trump cringefest on his birthday.

From American Thinker, what happened to the elderly white people "left behind" during the era of white flight from cities to their suburbs?

From NewsBusters, actor Rainn Wilson calls out left-wing hypocrisy over senatorial candidate Graham Platner's (D-ME) tattoo.

From Canada Free Press, a review of the upcoming movie Young Washington.

From TeleSUR, Bolivia bars the entry of an international human rights delegation.

From TCW Defending Freedom, the U.K.'s Labour Party succeeds where Napoleon and Hitler both failed - by sinking the Royal Navy.

From Snouts in the Trough, the true horror of the Sikh murder of Anglo-Polish student Henry Nowak.

From EuroNews, a Russian artist critical of President Putin is shot dead in Biała Podlaska, Poland.

From ReMix, in a new poll, the German party AfD jumps to a record nine percent lead over the CDU, its main rival.

From Balkan Insight, Bulgarian President Iliana Yotova condemns the arson attack on two cars belonging to the Bulgarian embassy in Skopje, North Macedonia.

From The North Africa Post, Libya adopts an ambitious marine fisheries strategy for 2027 through 2037.

From The New Arab, Kuwait revokes the citizenship of two brothers who have been highly influential in shaping the music of the Gulf region.

From AMU, the Taliban bans smartphones for government employees in the Afghani province of Kandahar.

From Jewish News Syndicate, experts warn that the Palestinian Authority's cash payments to terrorists and the families of slain terrorists remains active amid international funding.

From Culture Watch, "on migration and culture".

From Gatestone Institute, China builds up its stockpile of nuclear weapons.

From The Daily Signal, 15 ProFa members are indicted for allegedly conspiring to injure federal officers.

From The American Conservative, Trump changes the conversation about Iran.

From The Western Journal, Vice President Vance explains how the current deal with Iran is different from the one made under then-President Obama.

From BizPac Review, Fox News panelist Dana Perino slams the Trump administration over a lack of transparency over the aforementioned deal with Iran.

From the Daily Caller, more on the aforementioned indictment of 15 ProFa members.

From the New York Post, former Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger (R-Cal) drops a truth bomb about California's high gas prices.

From Breitbart, a left-wing pastor at a "No Kings" concert offers thanks to "every God".

From Newsmax, President Trump and Georgia Governor Brian Kemp (R) support the same gubernatorial candidate but different senatorial candidates in the state's Republican runoff primary.

And from SFGate, a drag queen shut down Lombard Street for four hours to film a movie in San Francisco.

No comments:

Post a Comment