As I again take a break from driving in an undisclosed location in North Carolina, here are some things going on:
From National Review, let each state be what each one wants to be.
From Townhall, why Democrats condone illegal immigration.
From the Washington Examiner, according to an opinion column, the Democrats want a "technological wall" that won't really work.
From American Thinker, congressional Democrats are wobbling on the wall more than Republicans.
From Arutz Sheva, was a car crash that killed an Israeli woman caused by someone throwing stones? (H/T Gadi Adelman, who Tweeted this story)
From The Jerusalem Post, the Palestinian Authority is set to take the helm of the U.N. bloc known as G77.
From Hürriyet Daily News, the U.S. and Turkey will "intensify" their talks over the American withdrawal from Syria.
From the Greek Reporter, Greece goes to pot.
From Novinite, Bulgarian resorts are getting a boost from Brexit.
From the Malta Independent, the Maltese government is reluctant to use its veto power to force a solution on migration.
From Malta Today, Maltese Prime Minister Joseph Muscat condemns "keyboard warriors" who take extreme positions on migration.
From Deutsche Welle, the AdF demands "radical" reforms for the E.U.
From Radio Poland, the mayor of Gdańsk, Poland is in "serious" condition after being stabbed at a charity event.
From Daily News Hungary, the Hungarian party Fidesz believes that George Soros's people are manipulating European Commission leaders.
From Sputnik International, a magnitude-4.3 earthquake strikes Russia's Kamchatka region.
From Pakistan Today, Bahria University in Islamabad fines female students for dress code violations.
From the Janta Ka Reporter, an Egyptian actress faces jail because of her dress.
From India Today, an Indian woman claims to have been forced to covert to Islam and eat beef.
From the Daily Star, ISIS-inspired fanatics call for Princess Kate to be poisoned. (via The Sun)
From the Express, Brexit support Nigel Farage reveals a "shocking" prediction that Brexiteers will loathe.
From the Evening Standard, Prime Minister Theresa May issues her "desperate final rallying cry".
From the Independent, some senior MPs takes steps to implement a second Brexit referendum.
And from The Telegraph, a family flying from Menorca back to the U.K. finds that their seats do not exist.
No comments:
Post a Comment