As the rain continues on a Thursday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, yes, voter fraud exists.
From FrontpageMag, some thoughts for our dark times.
From Townhall, some weird stuff from the election.
From The Washington Free Beacon, senatorial candidate Raphael Warnock (D-GA) can't say whether Jeremiah Wright is an anti-Semite.
From the Washington Examiner, Democrat congresscritters declare a "mandate" for former Vice President Biden despite their own losses.
From The Federalist, what "unity" really means to Democrats.
From American Thinker, computers that cheat leave evidence.
From CNS News, Senator Socialism (I-VT) wants to be secretary of labor in a Biden administration.
From LifeZette, Biden is not getting the presidential treatment just yet.
From NewsBusters, Instagram labels posts by President Trump which honor the military.
From Canada Free Press, does the Constitution or the Hammer determine the will of the people.
From Global News, a First Nation in the Canadian province of Ontario has been under a boil water advisory for 25 years.
From TeleSUR, 14 miners trapped underground in Pueblito Mejia, Colombia are rescued alive.
From The Mainichi, Japan considers exempting Olympic and Paralympic fans from abroad from its 14-day quarantine.
From Gatestone Institute, investors in Hong Kong dump $250 billion worth of Chinese tech stocks.
From Vietnam Plus, topographic maps of the Vietnam-Cambodia border are handed over to Vietnamese ministries, agencies and sectors. (Perhaps former U.S. Senator John Kerry, who once claimed to have been ordered to move into Cambodia from Vietnam around Christmas of 1968, can use these maps to show us where he was deployed.)
From Free Malaysia Today, water is restored to 87 percent of areas in Malaysia where a shutdown had been exercised due to pollution.
From The Straits Times, Singapore will launch a new work pass for top-tier foreign professionals starting next year.
From The Jakarta Post, authorities in the Indonesian areas of Central Java and Yogyakarta evacuate nearly 1,300 people due to an anticipated eruption of Mount Merapi.
From the Colombo Page, quarantine law violators in Sri Lanka get droned.
From ANI, green firecrackers go on sale in Vijayawada, Andhra Pradesh, India.
From Pakistan Today, Lahore, Pakistan deals with the coronavirus and smog.
From Khaama Press, the leader of the Uzbekistan Islamic movement is reportedly killed in the Afghani province of Faryab.
From IranWire, Iran runs a campaign of terror in the Iraqi region of Kurdistan.
From The New Arab, Libyans agree to a preliminary plan to hold elections.
From the Ethiopian Monitor, according to Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, Ethiopia's military has taken control of the western part of the region Tigray.
From Egypt Today, government-mandated closing times will be imposed on shops, restaurants, cafes and malls in Egypt.
From The Jerusalem Post, an order by Israel's High Court of Justice could lead to the overturning of the country's unity government.
From ArmenPress, according to Armenian Foreign Minister Zohrab Mnatsakanyan, the ceasefire in Nagorno Karabakh does not mean that the conflict there is over.
From Hürriyet Daily News, the Turkish government doesn't like U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo's remarks on religious freedom.
From Morocco World News, Morocco and The Gambia sign two agreements on health and diplomatic training.
From El País, bars and restaurants in the Spanish region of Catalonia will stay closed for 10 more days.
From France24, according to a survey, more than half of the French disobey the country's coronavirus rules.
From ANSA, Foreign Minister Luigi Di Maio calls for the Italian army to assist hospitals in the region of Campania.
From the Malta Independent, a woman is turned away from a gynaecology department after being accused of being a man.
From Total Croatia News, the Varionica craft brewery expands its sales network. (If you read Croatian, read the story at Poslovni Dnevnik.)
From Balkan Insight, the Serbian government considers making vaccination against the coronavirus mandatory.
From the Greek Reporter, the Volos Museum shows historical treasures from ancient Greece.
From Euractiv, Thessaloniki, Greece risks a coronavirus having the same coronavirus scenarios as Bergamo, Italy.
From Radio Bulgaria, nearly 1,000 people in Bulgaria recover from the coronavirus every day.
From EuroNews, why Bulgaria is putting the brakes on North Macedonia's E.U. membership.
From The Moscow Times, Russia lifts the house arrest order on American investor Michael Calvey.
From About Hungary, Prime Minister Orban hopes that Hungary's coronavirus restrictions could be lifted by Christmas.
From Polskie Radio, police in Warsaw arrest over 300 "far-right" supporters who allegedly marched in violation of Poland's coronavirus rules.
From ReMix, according to President Andrzej Duda, Poland can overcome its greatest challenges, just like it did 102 years ago.
From Deutsche Welle, Germany see signs that its coronavirus curve could be "flattening".
From the NL Times, support wanes for the Dutch folk character Zwarte Piet.
From The Brussels Times, it's not possible to give every Belgian a coronavirus test every week.
From the Evening Standard, when is Queen Elizabeth's Platinum Jubilee and how will it be celebrated?
From the Irish Examiner, pubs in Ireland face a "nightmare scenario" if they can't open by Christmas.
From The Conservative Woman, the real news is the stories that the left-wing media won't cover.
From The Stream, why we don't trust the media.
From the Daily Caller, congressional candidate Nicole Malliotakis (R-NY) flips a New York city district to red.
From The Daily Wire, according to Franklin Graham, socialists are attacking America from within.
From Breitbart, Senator Kelly Loeffler (R-GA) puts out ads against her opponent Rafael Warnock (D).
From CBS News, two former Philadelphia officials are charged with embezzlement.
And from the Genesius Times, in case they lose the presidential election in court cases, Democrats hand out "unity" Molotov cocktails.
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