Monday, July 13, 2026

Monday Mania

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

From National Review, the recently departed Senator Lindsey Graham gets the last laugh.

From FrontpageMag, the U.S. has always been involved in war.

From Townhall, the U.S. reestablishes its blockade of Iran.

From The Washington Free Beacon, senatorial candidate Abdul El-Sayed (D-MI) wants "Medicare for all", but his psychiatrist wife Sarah Jukaku doesn't accept any form of medical insurance.

From the Washington Examiner, President Trump calls for the late Lindsey Graham to be succeeded in the Senate by his sister Darline Graham Nordone.

From The Federalist, how Trump can stop the export of American babies to China.

From American Thinker, open borders is a death sentence for Western countries.

From NewsBusters, hypocritical liberals cheer Senator Graham's death online.

From Canada Free Press, "a republic, if you can keep it", as Benjamin Franklin said.

From TeleSUR, Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele wins his party's nomination for presidential reelection.

From TCW Defending Freedom, the think tank Migration Watch has never taken its eye off the ball.

From Snouts in the Trough, is the mayor of Seattle, Washington "the high priestess of economic illiteracy"?

From EuroNews, France temporarily shuts down three nuclear reactors to comply with environmental regulations.

From ReMix, Hungarian parliamentcritter Gergely Gulyás resigns as parliamentary leader of the Fidesz party.

From Balkan Insight, according to Dutch europarliamentcritter Tineke Strik, Albanian environmental protesters are "defending E.U. values".

From The North Africa Post, a Sudanese court sentences Rapid Support Forces leader Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo and 15 others to death in absentia for war crimes committed in the region of Darfur.

From The New Arab, archaeologists discover a 3,000-year-old tomb near the Egyptian city of Luxor.

From The Times Of Israel, weapons are found in a car near a synagogue Sarcelles, France, which has a large Jewish population.

From Arutz Sheva, Hamas terrorists storm a World Food Programme food distribution site in Jabaliya, Gaza.

From Gatestone Institute, Palestinian elections are a scam.

From The Daily Signal, in Virginia, Big Brother is watching you.

From The American Conservative, the "northern kingdom" of soon-to-be U.K. Prime Minister Andy Burnham.

From The Western Journal, according to British rock singer Mick Jagger, musicians and athletes should not "lecture" their fans about politics.

From BizPac Review, a fatal shooting by ICE in Maine sparks a major investigation.

From the Daily Caller, multiple Republicans in South Carolina vie for the chance to fill the late Senator Graham's seat.

From the New York Post, the surprising health benefit from going bald.

From Breitbart, the Red Cross withdraws its workers from the main asylum seeker registration in the Netherlands because their "safety can no longer be guaranteed".

From Newsmax, banks are given new guidance on the risk of lending to illegal aliens.

And from The Babylon Bee, furniture made by IKEA now includes instructions on how to cuss in Swedish.

No comments:

Post a Comment