On a sunny and windy Saturday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, what will happen to President Trump's border wall.
From Townhall, China tries to blame another country for the coronavirus.
From The Washington Free Beacon, according to a survey, 600 protests this past summer led to violence.
From the Washington Examiner, those who oppose illegal immigration will find presumptive president-elect Biden's policies a "shop of horrors".
From American Thinker, the unknown reason why hypocritical politicians (if you'll pardon the redundancy) break their own coronavirus lockdown rules. (I might have said this before, but I believe that it bears repeating. Just as Mark Twain once talked about members of Congress and imbeciles, but admitted repeating himself, to talk about politicians and hypocrites is likewise to repeat oneself.)
From NewsBusters, how political comedy "took a knee" when it came to President Obama.
From Canada Free Press, Biden's path to the presidency erodes with revelations of voter fraud.
From Global News, a look at coronavirus vaccine plans in Canada's provinces and territories.
From The Conservative Woman, there is at last hope of a Tory mutiny over the U.K.'s coronavirus restrictions.
From the Express, the U.K. and France agree on a deal to stop illegal crossings of the English Channel.
From EuroNews, E.U. chief Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier arrives in London for trade talks with his U.K. counterpart David Frost.
From the Irish Examiner, an expert warns that Christmas gatherings could lead to deaths from the coronavirus next spring.
From The Brussels Times, the company Engie Electrabel plans to build four gas-fired power plants to replace a nuclear power station.
From Allah's Willing Executioners, an Iraqi refugee gets two and a half years in prison for attempting to rape a female pastor in Eichsfeld, Germany.
From Polskie Radio, stores in Polish shopping malls reopen under strict sanitary regulations.
From The Slovak Spectator, some graphs showing coronavirus-related data in Slovakia.
From Hungary Today, according to a Hungarian foreign ministry official, the European Commission has proposed giving voting rights and housing to migrants. (If you read Hungarian, read the story at Magyar Nemzet.)
From The Moscow Times, rival peoples in Nagorno Karabakh adjust to life along new borders.
From Radio Bulgaria, vandalized Bulgarian monument in Ohrid, North Macedonia has been restored.
From Ekathimerini, the Greek government hopes to let retail stores reopen before Christmas.
From Total Croatia News, construction starts on a recycling yard for construction waste from Split and Dalmatia County in Croatia. (If you read Croatian, read the story at Novac.)
From Total Slovenia News, anti-government protesters in Slovenia get off their bikes and into their cars.
From Free West Media, according to Italian MEP Silvia Sardone, the E.U. is doing everything for migrants.
From Malta Today, coronavirus sceptics stage a protest in Valletta, Malta.
From RFI, thousands of people protest against France's new security law.
From ReMix, according to French MEP Jordan Bardella, unlimited migration threatens Europe's demographic future. (If you read French, read the story at CNews.)
From Turkish Minute, opposition leader Ali Babacan slams the Turkish government for shortages of coronavirus and flu vaccines.
From The Times Of Israel, Israeli missions and Jews around the world are said to be on alert after the assassination of an Iranian nuclear scientist.
From Egypt Today, Egypt and South Sudan agree on the need for a legal dam agreement.
From IranWire, infighting starts in Iran after the assassination of a nuclear scientist.
From Dawn, Pakistani political activists take over a venue in order to stage a rally on November 30th.
From The Hans India, farmers invade Delhi, India to protest against recently passed laws.
From Northeast Now, a radical Islamist group in Bangladesh threatens to pull down a statue.
From the Daily Mirror, Sri Lankans have been eating less fish due to a coronavirus cluster in the town of Peliyagoda.
From The Street Journal, seven people are killed and 10 others injured by a suicide bomber who blew himself up in an ice cream parlor in Mogadishu, Somalia.
From Barron's, ISIS-linked terrorists kill four Christians in a remote community on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi.
From Gatestone Institute, the E.U. has a new pact on migration and asylum.
From The Straits Times, Singapore does not have to rely on a single coronavirus vaccine.
From the Borneo Post, the reopening of the border between Malaysia and Singapore is delayed due to a spike in coronavirus cases.
From Vietnam Plus, 368 Vietnamese citizens are brought home from the Chinese region of Macau.
From The Stream, a columnist is glad that the Democrats cheated, even if it can't be proven in time to prevent former Vice President Biden from being elected president.
From The American Conservative, the last American maker of baseball gloves.
From The Daily Wire, the federal government will start allowing the death penalty to be carried out by methods other than lethal injection starting next month.
From CBS Philly, Delaware Governor John Carney (D) cancels events after a staffer tests positive for the coronavirus.
And from the Daily Caller, kicker Sarah Fuller becomes the first woman to play in a Power Five college football game.
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