Here on a cool cloudy Monday are the mania and some things going on:
From National Review, Chik-fil-A gives in to LGBT demands.
From FrontpageMag, President Trump grants clemency to three members of the U.S. military.
From Townhall, Mayor Pete Buttigieg (D-South Bend, IN) offers a list of endorsements from black people, of whom 42 percent are white. (If a Republican were to do such a thing, the screams of "racism!" would deafen us.)
From The Washington Free Beacon, Democrats push for California-style gun control, after a shooting in California. (In other words, they want to pass gun-control laws which would be the same as the laws which failed to prevent the shooting.)
From the Washington Examiner, because of low asylum acceptance rates in the U.S., migrants cross illegally into Canada.
From The Federalist, let's not pretend that these impeachment witnesses are all selfless heroes.
From American Thinker, has Trump been setting up the left all along?
From CNS News, the acting commissioner of Customs and Border Protection gives a progress report on the wall.
From LifeZette, here's why congresscritter Elise Stefanik (R-NY) annoyed fellow congresscritter Adam Schiff (D-Cal).
From NewsBusters, the vast majority of Americans did not watch Friday's impeachment hearings.
From Canada Free Press, in 2016, Ukraine campaigned against Donald Trump (R).
From CBC News, how the environmental movement in the U.S. dealt a blow to the oil industry in the Canadian province of Alberta.
From Global News, the province of Ontario considers changing how its judges are appointed.
From CTV News, a look at life aboard the HMCS Ottawa as it enforces sanctions against North Korea.
From Morocco World News, a second earthquake hits central Morocco.
From Hürriyet Daily News, Turkey expects to complete the TurkStream natural gas pipeline by the end of this year.
From Turkish Minute, a Turkish court orders the arrest of two journalists on terrorism charges. (What is this "freedom of the press" you speak of?)
From Rûdaw, a Turkish-backed group reportedly kills a Yezidi woman in the Syrian region of Afrin.
From In-Cyprus, Pope Francis will visit Cyprus next year to mark the 60th anniversary of its current republic.
From The Syrian Observer, the bodies of six Free Syrian Army fighters are recovered from a mass grave in Aleppo.
From Arutz Sheva, according to U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, the American government does not regard Israeli settlements in Judea and Samaria to be against international law.
From The Times Of Israel, six "far-fetched" ways to prevent another round of Israeli elections.
From The Jerusalem Post, a look at Israeli right-wing and left-wing views on the West Bank.
From YNetNews, Blue and White party leader Benny Gantz asks Arab knessetcritters to not attack the IDF. (A knessetcritter is the Israeli equivalent of a U.S. congresscritter.)
From the Egypt Independence, the Egyptian Ministry of Irrigation comes up with another dam idea.
From Egypt Today, Egypt successfully lures investments from major U.S. oil and gas companies.
From StepFeed, big Arab boys don't cry.
From The New Arab, Yemenese Houthi rebels seize a ship towing a South Korean oil rig.
From Radio Farda, protests in Iran continue even after dozens of people are reportedly killed.
From IranWire, who in Iran decided to raise the price of gasoline?
From Dawn, Pakistan's interior ministry issues a notification allowing former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif to travel abroad.
From The Express Tribune, according to Prime Minister Imran Khan, there will be no compromise on the rule of law in Pakistan.
From Pakistan Today, Nawaz's party demands elections in 2020.
From Khaama Press, the good guys in Afghanistan have a productive day.
From The Hans India, will the city of Agra, which includes the Taj Mahal, be renamed?
From the Hindustan Times, police in Indian state of Chhattisgarh fear that Maoists are using drones for surveillance.
From ANI, Pakistan has allegedly committed 1,029 ceasefire violations along the Line of Control in Jammu and Kashmir from August through October.
From India Today, a magnitude-4.3 earthquakes strikes in the Indian state of Gujarat.
From the Daily Mirror, according to the E.U. observation mission, the presidential election in Sri Lanka was "largely free of violence".
From the Colombo Page, Gotabaya Rajapaksa is sworn in as the president of Sri Lanka. (The transition period in that country appears to be very short.)
From Business Insider, China has developed ways of dealing with Uighur university students who return home to find their families in prison.
From The Christian Post, an Iranian Christian pastor who fled to Turkey fears being deported back to Iran.
From Al Arabiya, at least 40 people have reportedly been killed during the protests in Iran.
From Gatestone Institute, "radical persecution must be eradicated".
From The Jakarta Post, the daughter of Indonesian President Sukharno is accused of blasphemy for comparing her father to Mohammed. (What is this "freedom of speech" you speak of?)
From The Straits Times, police and protesters clash on the campus of Hong Kong Polytechnic University.
From the Borneo Post, according to Malaysian Deputy Home Minister Datuk Mohd Azis Jamman, police have the right to inspect mobile phones. (What is this "freedom from unreasonable search and seizure" you speak of?)
From Free Malaysia Today, Malaysian Entrepreneur Development Minister Redzuan Yusof will take a ride in a "flying car" this coming Thursday.
From The Mainichi, the Japanese government allows water contaminated by the Fukushima nuclear disaster to be released back into the ocean. (Wasn't Godzilla awakened by something similar to that?)
From The Stream, the impeachment inquiry might be a "slow-motion train wreck".
From WPVI-TV, the U.S. Postal Service kicks off "Operation Santa".
From Breitbart, an actor tells former Vice President Biden that "it's time for you to go".
From Real Clear Investigations, the media's double standard on reporting about Biden and Trump. (via Twitchy)
From the Daily Caller, what U.K. Prince Andrew had to say about the idea that convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein didn't kill himself.
From the New York Post, a man calls in a bomb threat to a federal court in Manhattan to avoid taking a drug test.
And from The Babylon Bee, Joseph Stalin warns that the Democrats might be going too far left.
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