From National Review, about 80 percent of Americans are not worried about any gloom for next year.
From FrontpageMag, the magazine Elle puts Linda Sarsour on its list of "women in politics to watch".
From Townhall, former Vice President Biden tells the media that fossil fuel company executive could go to jail.
From The Washington Free Beacon, another choice by TWFB for Man of the Year is whoever killed Jeffrey Epstein.
From the Washington Examiner, the weirdest things confiscated by the TSA in 2019.
From The Federalist, the attacks on Jews in New York City can no longer be ignored.
From American Thinker, family separation, Chinese style.
From CNS News, four quotes to keep in mind during 2020.
From LifeZette, the persecution of Christians is happening, just as Jesus said.
From NewsBusters, an MSNBC host prods Governor Andrew Cuomo (D-NY) to blame attacks against Jews on President Trump.
From Canada Free Press, the response to the shooting at a church in Texas shows former President Obama and other leftists are wrong about gun control.
From CBC News, according to Steve Martin (not the comedian), algae could be a secret weapon against climate change.
From Global News, more Canadian firefighters to go help fight Australian wildfires.
From TeleSUR, Bolivia expels the ambassador from Mexico.
From Morocco World News, Morocco will receive a new set of AMRAAM missiles from the U.S.
From Hürriyet Daily News, Turkey establishes a safe space for Syrian gazelles.
From Turkish Minute, the Ankara Chief Prosecutor's Office ordered the detention of 2,765 Turkish military personnel in 2019, for possible Gülen links.
From In-Cyprus, according to the U.S. State Department, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo will reaffirm American support for the reunification of Cyprus when he visits.
From Arutz Sheva, a court in Cyprus finds a British woman guilty of falsely accusing Israeli teenagers of rape.
From The Times Of Israel, Knesset Speaker Yuli Edelstein denies reports that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had filed a request for immunity.
From The Jerusalem Post, who is Kataib Hezbollah, whose facilities were recently attacked by the U.S.? (This group is based in Iraq and should not be confused with the Hezbollah of Lebanon.)
From YNetNews, a displaced Syrian feeds his family with mushrooms.
From the Egypt Independent, an Egyptian parliamentcritter writes a letter rejecting the transfer of sphinxes from Luxor to Tahrir Square.
From Egypt Today, some amazing Egyptian archaeological discoveries in 2019.
From StepFeed, a Syrian film director is shortlisted for the Oscars, but can't get a visa to travel to the U.S.
From The New Arab, the Kataib Hezbollah militia promises revenge for attacks by the U.S.
From Radio Farda, friends and relatives of Iran's supreme leader keep expanding their power.
From Dawn, Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan launches a health card scheme for the country's transgenders.
From The Express Tribune, the chairman of the Pakistan People's Party tries to arrange a deal to get support to overthrow Imran Khan's government.
From Pakistan Today, a leader of the outlawed Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan militia is killed in Afghanistan.
From Khaama Press, 5,000 prisoners held by the Taliban will reportedly be released when it and the U.S. sign a peace deal.
From The Hans India, Hindu refugees from Pakistan gather in Delhi to run a signature campaign in support of the Citizenship Act.
From the Hindustan Times, Delhi, India endures its coldest day in 119 years. (How long before this cold spell is attributed to man-made global warming?)
From India Today, according to India's additional solicitor general, all Indian states must enforce the Citizenship Act.
From the Dhaka Tribune, the Bangladeshi government shuts down mobile networks in the country's border areas due to "security reasons".
From the Daily Mirror, Sri Lankan President Gotabaya Rajapaksa points out the need for a centralized data platform.
From the Colombo Page, Sri Lankan officials will review a controversial textbook on sex education.
From Israel, Islam and End Times, "what are the differences between Jesus and Muhammad?"
From Gatestone Institute, Turkey makes a "gunboat gambit" in the Mediterranean.
From The Jakarta Post, a flash flood destroys a bridge and isolates villages in the Indonesian province of South Sumatra.
From The Straits Times, the Chinese state media tries to control the narrative about the re-education camps for Uighurs in the province of Xinjiang.
From the Borneo Post, Malaysia will launch a "holistic plan" next year to rid itself of illegal immigrants.
From Free Malaysia Today, a ship with 16 Malaysian crew members is seized by Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corps for alleged fuel smuggling.
From The Mainichi, the Japanese satellite Tsubame is registered by Guinness World Records as having the lowest orbital altitude of any earth-observing satellite.
From The Stream, New York's Mr. Bill is wrong to blame the attacks on New York Jews on President Trump.
From the Daily Caller, Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg's father worries about her, even though she is happy.
From the New York Post, blades fly off a bird chopper wind turbine in the Bronx, smashing a car and a billboard.
And from Twitchy, Senator Fake Cherokee (D-MA) is called out for hypocrisy.
No comments:
Post a Comment