Some various and sundry stuff going on out there:
From Voice Of Europe, strong borders make Hungary safe.
From Breitbart London, the U.K government wants charities to be less white.
From Philly(dot)com, Christmas comes back to Philadelphia's Village Park.
From the New York Post, thanks to President Trump, three UCLA basketball players are coming home.
From BBC News, when in the real Kazakhstan, do not dress like Borat. (via the New York Post)
From National Review, in the "he said/she said", Roy Moore loses.
From Townhall, three Christian pastors in Alabama deny signing a letter supporting Moore.
From The American Spectator, "put Roy Moore out of his misery." (via HotAir)
From FrontpageMag, the Mueller investigation about relationships with Russia expands to include Hillary Clinton.
From the Independent, in London, a teenage girl is arrested on suspicion of aiding and abetting an act of terrorism.
From Russia Today, U.K. politician Nigel Farage wants the E.U. to investigate George Soros.
From the Express, Germany will not allow U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May to directly address the E.U. summit next month.
From WestMonster, Polish Prime Minster Beata Szydło calls the E.U. bureaucrats "out of touch" with ordinary Europeans. (The article cites the Financial Times, whose article is behind a subscriber wall.)
From The Local DE, Germany needs to do a better job monitoring mosque, says the Tolerance Minister of the U.A.E.
From The Local IT, Italy seizes over €28 million in counterfeit bills.
From Sputnik International, in Sweden, migrant boys are "replacing" girls as prostitutes.
From Assyrian National New Agency, in Iraq, Kurds "back away" from independence.
From Fox News, in California, a gunman kills four people and wounds seven before being killed by police.
From The Federalist, Keurig coffeemakers are terrible.
And from Management Today, "the good, the bad, and the weird".
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