On a sunny and manic Monday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, according to trial data, Moderna's coronavirus vaccine is 94.5 percent effective.
From FrontpageMag, wanton leftwing violence against MAGA marchers.
From Townhall, the Democrats and the media are indeed hypocritical about accepting election results.
From The Washington Free Beacon, presumptive president-elect Biden puts a reparations advocate on his transition team. (This shows that I'm not that worried about what Biden himself might propose, but I'm more worried about what could come from the leftists who would be in a Biden administration.)
From the Washington Examiner, Ivanka Trump condemns the media silence on the violence against Trump supporters at the MAGA march.
From The Federalist, Republicans have good reasons against trusting the election results.
From American Thinker, Trump team lawyer Sidney Powell gives some details about the "election fraud Kraken".
From CNS News, a dentist points out problems from "mask mouth".
From LifeZette, according to congresscritter Ilhan Omar (D-MN), the Democrats are a "big family".
From NewsBusters, the organization Eventbrite shows its bias.
From Canada Free Press, the U.S. could change from one type of republic to another.
From CBC News, according to experts, the Canadian province of Quebec's ban on new gas-powered cars by 2035 won't meet its emission reduction targets.
From TeleSUR, Peruvians celebrate the resignation of interim President Manuel Marino.
From The Conservative Woman, normal health care service in the U.K. must be resumed.
From Snouts in the Trough, debunking climate change bunk.
From the Express, according to Health Secretary Matt Hancock, the U.K. will have to wait for four months to receive 5 million doses of Moderna's coronavirus vaccine.
From the (Irish) Independent, retail workers in Northern Ireland complain of being targeted by a very Irish projectile.
From VRT NWS, according to Belgian health ministers, a coronavirus vaccine will be free and not mandatory.
From the NL Times, Dutch police are using drones more and more often.
From Deutsche Welle, Germany observes the 75th anniversary of the Nuremberg trials.
From the CPH Post, rats!
From Polskie Radio, a second temporary coronavirus hospital is under construction in Warsaw.
From Radio Prague, Czech first and second graders return to school.
From Euractiv, according to an opinion column, the E.U. should follow the Czech Republic by banning hen cages.
From The Slovak Spectator, Slovakia prepares a third round of coronavirus antigen testing in selected municipalities.
From Hungary Today, Hungary reports a daily high of 6,495 new coronavirus cases.
From EuroNews, Hungary and Poland veto the E.U.'s coronavirus recovery package due to its "rule of law" requirements.
From Russia Today, President Putin signs off on a Russian naval base on the Red Sea in Sudan.
From Romania-Insider, six localities in Alba County, Romania are placed under a coronavirus quarantine. (If you read Romanian, read the story at Alba24.)
From Novinite, according to Prime Minister Boyko Borissov, Bulgaria will start importing natural gas from Azerbaijan by next January 1st.
From the Greek Reporter, Greece requests the U.S. to sell it up to two dozen F-35 stealth fighter jets.
From Independent Balkan News Agency, citizens of Bosnia and Hercegovina elect new local governments.
From Balkan Insight, pro-Europe candidate Maia Sandu wins the Moldovan presidential race in a landslide.
From Total Croatia News, the Oldest Lady in Medulin is selected the Croatia Tree of the Year.
From Total Slovenia News, Slovenian Prime Minister Janez Janša is willing to congratulate the winner of the U.S. presidential election, whoever he is.
From the Malta Independent, according to Animal Rights Minister Anton Refalo, an animal cemetery will be built in Ta Qali, Cyprus.
From ANSA, according to Health Minister Roberto Speranza, the next 7 to 10 days will be crucial for Italy.
From SwissInfo, Swiss public radio is admonished for ignoring the Romansh language.
From France24, French President Emmanuel Macron walks a "diplomatic tightrope" while hosting U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.
From Free West Media, French Justice Minister Éric Dupond-Moretti defends the release of nine jihadists convicted of terrorism from prison.
From El País, the migrant crisis in the Canary Islands pushes the Spanish government into action.
From The Portugal News, Portugal's National Republican Guard shuts down three parties in the region of Algarve.
From Morocco World News, according to King Mohammed VI, Morocco intends to ensure security in the Western Saharan village of Guerguerat.
From Hürriyet Daily News, President Erdoğan seeks parliamentary permission to send Turkish troops to Azerbaijan.
From Rûdaw, Iraq executes 21 people convicted of terrorism-related charges.
From ArmenPress, according to Armenian President Armen Sarkissian, it's OK to lose a battle, but not to lose a country.
From In-Cyprus, distance learning is fully implemented in the Cypriot districts of Limassol and Paphos.
From The Syrian Observer, 30 villages in the Syrian region of Raqqa have no drinking water.
From Arutz Sheva, according to a poll, the Israeli right-wing party Yamina has closed in on Likud.
From the Egypt Independent, according to a spokesman, the Coptic Orthodox Church rejects insults toward all religions.
From the Ethiopian Monitor, Ethiopian Deputy Prime Minister Demeke Mekonnen and Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni hold talks on security issues.
From the Saudi Gazette, the Saudi Aquaculture Society denies reports that a batch of shrimp exported to China was contaminated with the coronavirus.
From The New Arab, Bahraini Foreign Minister Abdellatif al-Zayani plans his first visit to Israel.
From IranWire, according to a poll, most Iranians don't trust the government about the coronavirus.
From Dawn, Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan announces new coronavirus restrictions.
From Khaama Press, according to Afghanistan's ministry of defense, the Taliban has been defeated in the province of Khandahar.
From the Hindustan Times, after 28 years in Pakistan, including eight in prison, a man from Kanpur, India returns home.
From the Dhaka Tribune, two out of three ICU beds in Dhaka, Bangladesh are occupied.
From the Colombo Page, for the first time, the Sri Lankan air force commissions two female pilots.
From the Daily Post, a Malian jihadist leader and two others are sentenced to death for terrorism.
From Swarajya, the Hindu girl who was kidnapped in the Indian state of West Bengal was forced to recite from the Koran.
From Gatestone Institute, lax security in Europe aids terrorists.
From The Jakarta Post, police chiefs in the province of West Java and the city of Jakarta are removed for failing to enforce Indonesia's coronavirus health protocols.
From The Straits Times, Singapore reports five new coronavirus cases, all imported.
From Free Malaysia Today, when in Malaysia, don't slap the Starbucks employees.
From Vietnam Plus, Vietnam reports two new coronavirus cases.
From The Mainichi, photos of Japanese astronaut Soichi Noguchi on his way to space.
From The Stream, the "miraculous" circumstances of former Vice President Biden's alleged victory in the presidential election.
From The Daily Signal, 11 examples of defensive gun use which show Biden's and Senator Kamala Harris's (D-Cal) ignorance on the Second Amendment.
From Military History Matters, a new book claims that communists spied on writer George Orwell during the Spanish Civil War.
From the Daily Caller, the U.S. stock markets close at record highs due to news of the Moderna coronavirus vaccine.
From Muhabarishaji, a teenager who traded his kidney for an iphone is bedridden for life.
From CBS Philly, children help cut the ribbon at a renovated playground in north Philadelphia.
And from The Babylon Bee, a defeated presidential candidate keeps claiming that the election was stolen.
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