Monday, March 26, 2018

Monday Links

According to an old saying, "Monday sucks", and that's especially true today if you're a Russian diplomat.  To learn more about this and other matters, keep reading.


From the Winnipeg Sun, Canada kicks out four Russians.

From LifeNews, Indiana Governor Eric Holcomb (R) signs a law mandating improved health and safety standards for abortion facilities.  (He is the successor to our current vice president.)


From Click Orlando, lawyers for the widow of the Orlando night club shooter claim that his father was an FBI informant.  (via CBS News)

From Bloomberg, Rocket Man has reportedly made a visit to the place where rockets were first invented.  (The story comes via HotAir.  For some rocket history, go to Wiki.)



From Ekathimerini, Turkish President Erdoğan says that E.U. membership is still a "strategic goal" for his country.

From Breitbart London, British Muslim children as young as two have been indoctrinated into terrorist ideology and hating the west.

From Hürriyet Daily News, the European Commission defends the promoting of President Juncker's top aide.

From AP News, the head of the U.N. food agency warns of another possible migration crisis.  (via Axios)




From Sputnik International, in Sweden, the leader of the New Coalition Assembly party is "in hot water" for praising Saddam Hussein.




From The Liberal, Poland continues to say "no" to taking in migrants.  (It seems that here's a liberal, so to speak, with whom I can agree.)

From WestMonster, the Welsh still back Brexit.


From National Review, "waiting for the smoking gun" in the alleged affair between Trump and Stormy Daniels.  (The article includes a photo of her, which isn't all that flattering.)

From FrontpageMag, the motive of the man who crashed his car, which contained propane tanks, into the front gate of Travis Air Force Base remains a mystery to the FBI.

From The Daily Signal, students at a California high school plan a pro-life walkout, which might be a test for double standards.

From the Chicago Tribune, a man released after a wrongful conviction and serving 23 years returns to his job as a Chicago White Sox groundskeeper.  (via the New York Post)



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