Wednesday, November 20, 2019

Wednesday Links - Part 1

On a cool cloudy Wednesday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, those children were held in immigration detention centers back in 2015?  Never mind.

From FrontpageMag, it's time to support the protesters in Iran.

From Townhall, congresscritter Mark Meadows (R-NC) recites the "most important quote" so far from today's impeachment hearing.

From The Washington Free Beacon, according to a lawsuit, a candidate for a seat on the Democratic National Committee committed age discrimination and used a racial slur.

From the Washington Examiner, White House press secretary Stephanie Grisham calls the "anti-Trump media" an "arm of the Democrats".

From The Federalist, the defense of marriage in the Manhattan Declaration is needed even more now than when it was made ten years ago.

From American Thinker, why the rich like poor immigrants.

From CNS News, President Trump has a few things to say, including a denial of heart attack rumors.

From LifeZette, a report from yesterday's impeachment hearings.

From NewsBusters, students at Washington and Lee University wants portraits of the school's namesakes to be removed from its diplomas.

From Canada Free Press, according to newsman Neil Cavuto, Trump is picking on the media, not vice versa.

From CBC News, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau presents Canada's new cabinet, including seven new members.

From Global News, Canada's view on Israeli settlements remains unchanged.

From CTV News, an attempt to stop the extradition of Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou from Canada to the U.S. falls short.

From TeleSUR, ousted Bolivian President Evo Morales promises to recover power democratically.

From Morocco World News, Moroccan authorities seize 476 kilos of cocaine in Harhoura, on the outskirts of Rabat.

From Hürriyet Daily News, according to Interior Minister Süleyman Soylu, Turkey has expanded its anti-terror operations during the past three years.

From Turkish Minute, Turkish police question two staffers from a U.S. consulate over a video taken at a Halloween party.

From Rûdaw, will the Peshmerga reform, or become part of the Iraqi Army?

From In-Cyprus, five suspected human traffickers are referred for trial before the criminal court of Paphos, Cyprus.

From The Syrian Observer, Syria condemns the U.S. policy on Israeli settlements.

From Arutz Sheva, Blue and White party leader Benny Gantz returns his mandate to form a government to Israeli President Reuven Rivlin.

From The Times Of Israel, photos show suspected Iranian buildings at two Syrian airports destroyed by IDF strikes.

From The Jerusalem Post, "when will there be a third election?"

From YNetNews, a rocket from Gaza leaves a crater in the Israeli region of Eshkol.

From the Egypt Independent, Egypt's Tourism Ministry suspends licenses for new diving and safari yacht centers.

From Egypt Today, Egyptian President Abdel al-Sisi meets with German Interior Minister Horst Seehofer.

From StepFeed, UAE residents purchase the first tickets for space flights.

From The New Arab, a woman in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia is arrested for allegedly "harassing" men.

From Radio Farda, Iranian security forces arrest dual nationals as Supreme Leader Khamenei and President Rouhani blame protests on foreigners.

From IranWire, "is Khamenei taking responsibility for the protests?"

From National Council of Resistance of Iran, the leaders of protests in Iran reportedly face execution by hanging.

From Dawn, 17 students at Sindh University are charged with sedition for allegedly chanting anti-Pakistan slogans and wall chalking.

From The Express Tribune, according to Pakistan's Civil Aviation Authority, a U.S. plane approached, but did not enter, Pakistani airspace.

From Pakistan Today, former Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif undergoes a medical check-up in London.

From Khaama Press, unidentified gunmen kill a political analyst in Kabul, Afghanistan.

From The Hans India, the Dalai Lama will address a global meeting of Buddhists in Aurangabad, India.

From the Hindustan Times, a kidnapping attempt is foiled by congested traffic.

From ANI, India successfully test-fires two Prithvi-2 ballistic missiles.

From India Today, according to India's Home Ministry, 609 people in Jammu and Kashmir are under detention.

From the Daily Mirror, a study of Sri Lankan villages on the border between government-controlled and Tamil Tiger-controlled areas.

From the Colombo Page, Sri Lankan Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe announces his resignation.

From ZeroHedge, a Swedish left-wing journalist admits that "everyone knew" that mass migration into Sweden's suburbs "would end in disaster".

From Gatestone Institute, crimes against humanity by Iran in 2019.

From The Jakarta Post, a Chinese-Indonesian student challenges a ban on land ownership in Yogyakarta for Indonesians having foreign descent.

From The Straits Times, four Malaysian men are caned for having homosexual relations.

From the Borneo Post, according to Malaysia's deputy home minister, police can confiscate the cell phone of criminal suspects, but not check those of random members of the public.

From Free Malaysia Today, a Malaysian minister urges the government of Singapore to have mercy on a Malaysian man facing execution for trafficking diamorphine.

From The Mainichi, Japan's space agency releases the last images of the asteroid Ryugu, taken from the spacecraft Hayabusa2, now heading back toward earth.

From The Stream, Chik-fil-A learns that LGBTQ activists can never be appeased.

From the Arkansas Democrat Gazette, DNA testing shows Hunter Biden to be the father of an Arkansas woman's baby.  (Yes, this is about Hunter Biden, not Bill Clinton.  It looks like a certain former vice president should be congratulated on his new grandchild.  The story comes via Twitchy.)

From Breitbart, congresscritter Jackie Speier (D-Cal) accidentally proves that there is no law protecting the identity of the "whistleblower".

From the Daily Caller, according to congresscritter Devin Nunes (R-Cal), there is no conspiracy theory "too outlandish for the Democrats".

From Accuracy in Media, the U.N. report on U.S. immigration centers is debunked.

From the New York Post, New York Yankees infielder Miguel Andujar, who sat out most of the 2019 season with an injury, uses videos to show his recovery progress.

And from Sky News and the "historical amnesia" department, according to screen writer Gregory Allen Howard, a Hollywood executive recommended Julia Roberts to play Harriet Tubman.

1 comment:

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