Today is the start of Christmas shopping season. While you're hitting the stores, here are some things going on:
From National Review, bowing down to former President Obama.
From FrontpageMag, unmasking ProFa.
From Townhall, the "unity" that Democrats want.
From The Washington Free Beacon, "big labor" expects a concession from presumptive president-elect Biden.
From the Washington Examiner, President Trump criticizes two NFL anthem kneelers.
From The Federalist, the future of Trump's agenda depends on Georgia.
From American Thinker, what this year's election will come down to.
From LifeZette, yes, there is a war on Thanksgiving.
From NewsBusters, Biden is not as adored as his old boss was.
From Canada Free Press, some early clues to election fraud left by Democrats.
From CTV News, according to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, a top general will lead Canada's coronavirus vaccine rollout.
From TeleSUR, the Mexican Senate passes legislation to end presidential immunity.
From The Conservative Woman, new sinister state controls in the U.K. must be resisted.
From Snouts in the Trough, can we believe anything from our "scientists" and "experts" say these days?
From the (U.K.) Independent, what would be the impact of a no-deal Brexit?
From the (Irish) Independent, what do Ireland's level 3 coronavirus measures mean?
From VRT NWS, shops in Belgium selling "non-essential goods" will be allowed to open next Tuesday under strict conditions.
From the NL Times, climate groups in the Netherlands protest against Black Friday.
From Deutsche Welle, according to a "top doctor", Germany should not ease its coronavirus lockdown over Christmas.
From EuroNews, Carrefour withdraws advertising from Polish state TV over LGBT rights.
From ReMix, according to a Polish editor, France shows the dangers from mass migration.
From Radio Prague, the Czech cabinet will discuss easing coronavirus restrictions this coming Sunday.
From Daily News Hungary, are Hungarian walnuts in danger from a fly?
From Russia Today, according to its developers, Russia's second coronavirus vaccine will be ready for release in December.
From Novinite, Bulgaria will be under a partial lockdown starting tonight.
From the Greek Reporter, Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis holds a virtual meeting with Greeks who have gone abroad for work.
From Independent Balkan News Agency, according to Kosovo Prime Minister Avdullah Hoti, reports of his resignation have been greatly exaggerated.
From Balkan Insight, Bosnia and Herzegovina indicts Ivan Djuric for war crimes allegedly committed at a detention camp in Brčko in northern Bosnia.
From the Malta Independent, three Italians are arrested in Marsascala, Malta after 55 kilos of cannabis is found in their boat.
From ANSA, a man is arrested on terror charges in the Italian province of Cosenza.
From SwissInfo, Swiss officials issue coronavirus Christmas shopping advice.
From France24, France considers forcing coronavirus patients to self-isolate.
From El País, the Spanish Health Ministry identifies 15 priority groups for coronavirus vaccination.
From Free West Media, migration from Africa to the Canary Islands increases eleven-fold.
From The Portugal News, according to Portuguese judges, coronavirus PCR tests have doubtful reliability.
From Euractiv, how much does "green hydrogen" really cost?
From Morocco World News, Morocco is the fourth safest MENA country.
From Hürriyet Daily News, Turkey rejects the European Parliament's resolution on Cyprus.
From Rûdaw, four people die in clashes between rival protesters in southern Iraq.
From ArmenPress, Russia considers establishing a railway to transport goods to Nagorno-Karabakh.
From In-Cyprus, Black Friday in Limassol, Cyprus.
From The Syrian Observer, dozens of people are arbitrarily arrested in the Syrian region of Afrin.
From Arutz Sheva, according to intelligence officials, Israel was behind the assassination of an Iranian nuclear scientist.
From YNetNews, according to Israel's coronavirus czar, a third lockdown is on the agenda.
From the Egypt Independent, the Egyptian electricity ministry plans to use renewable energy to power desalination plants.
From the Ethiopian Monitor, Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed meets African Union envoys about the Tigray issue.
From the Saudi Gazette, the U.S. condemns attacks by Houthi rebels in Yemen against civilian targets in Saudi Arabia.
From The New Arab, according to the charity Save the Children, Iraqi children are living among corpses and bombs.
From Radio Farda, Iran blames Israel for the death of its top nuclear scientist.
From Pakistan Today, over 2,000 coronavirus patients in Pakistan are in critical condition during the disease's second wave.
From Khaama Press, the Afghan National Army foils 10 possible IED attacks.
From India Today, India sets up coastal radar systems in friendly neighboring countries.
From the Dhaka Tribune, an armed gang robs a bus on a Bangladeshi highway.
From the Colombo Page, according to Sri Lankan Minister of Fisheries Douglas Devananda, measures will be taken to keep Indian fishermen out of Sri Lankan waters.
From New Age, sharia police in Nigeria ban the term "Black Friday".
From The Jakarta Post, an Indonesian prosecutor appeals a musician's sentence for "hate speech".
From Free Malaysia Today, according to Malaysian Prime Minister Muhyiddin, the first coronavirus vaccine recipients are not "lab rats".
From The Mainichi, retired baseball player Ichiro Suzuki recounts the 1995 Great Hanshin earthquake.
From Gatestone Institute, the Taliban are not honoring the peace deal with the U.S.
From The Stream, the news is not just fake, but from an alternative reality.
From SmallBizDaily, this year's worst bits of advice.
From Space War, the Russia military successfully tests a new anti-ballistic missile.
From The Daily Wire, actor Seth McFarlane tries slamming Justice Neil Gorsuch for his decision in a case involving religious liberty.
From The American Conservative, driving on U.S. Route 11 in Virginia. (I've done parts of it myself over the years.)
From Fox News, President Trump urges supporters to vote in the Georgia senatorial runoffs.
From AP News, three funeral workers are fired for posing for photos alongside the dead body of soccer start Diego Maradona. (via the Daily Caller)
From Breitbart, a student at the University of Texas-San Antonio is kicked out of her sorority for a pro-Trump post on TikTok.
And from The Peedmont, archaeologists find the remains of a shopper from Glen Allen, Virginia who was trampled during the 2003 Black Friday in the nearby town of Short Pump.
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