On the first Thursday in December, here are some things going on:
From National Review, the left no longer defends free expression.
From FrontpageMag, "how Big Tech's obsession with control is tearing us apart".
From Townhall, never-Trumpers think that conservatives will take them back.
From The Washington Free Beacon, Massena, New York Mayor Timmy Currier (D) is arrested after allegedly throwing crack out of his car.
From the Washington Examiner, the Supreme Court sides with churches against California's coronavirus restrictions.
From The Federalist, why speech limitations from identity politics will cancel self-government.
From American Thinker, "governor, may I?" must come to an end.
From CNS News, the E.U. tells presumptive president-elect Biden to "make multilateralism great again".
From LifeZette, Biden wants to be a travel Grinch for Christmas.
From NewsBusters, journalist Byron York "destroys" economist Paul Krugman's hypocrisy about Trump.
From Canada Free Press, the left's big unfounded lie about fraud in the 2020 election.
From CBC News, the Canadian province of Alberta claimed to be removing "underutilized" parks from its system, but some data suggest otherwise.
From Free West Media, both English and French are in decline in the Canadian province of Quebec due to immigration.
From The Conservative Woman, faces are covered and souls are destroyed.
From the Evening Standard, four people are killed in a "chemical" blast at a waste water treatment facility near Bristol, England.
From the Irish Examiner, nursing home residents will be the first people in Ireland to receive a coronavirus vaccine.
From The Brussels Times, according to the Flemish health minister, teachers should be given priority for a coronavirus vaccine.
From Dutch News, officials in Amsterdam make new rules for outdoor Christmas lights.
From the CPH Post, fewer Danes are dying from the coronavirus.
From ReMix, according to a survey, the Polish opposition is not capable of governing Poland.
From Radio Prague, the Czech Republic allows shops, restaurants, and other services to reopen and ends it nighttime curfew.
From The Slovak Spectator, five walks in or around Trnava, Slovakia to enjoy during late autumn.
From Daily News Hungary, a Hungarian deputy state secretary is arrested on suspicion of corruption.
From Russia Today, according to the head of the company that produces Russia's coronavirus vaccine, producing the "safe" vaccine is "a complex task", but they can do it.
From Novinite, Bulgaria sets priorities for who will receive a coronavirus vaccine.
From Ekathimerini, Greece and the E.U. sign an agreement for a new migrant center on the island of Lesvos.
From Balkan Insight, the first snow in Bosnia and Herzegovina hits migrants in a tent shelter hard.
From Allah's Willing Executioners, four teachers of Islam are suspects in an anti-terrorism operation in Austria.
From Total Slovenia News, Slovenia adopts a five-level approach to easing its coronavirus restrictions.
From Malta Today, a ban on petting cubs in Maltese zoos is rescinded.
From EuroNews, Italy introduces tougher coronavirus travel restrictions ahead of the Christmas season.
From Euractiv, populists have been a big coronavirus casualty in Italy.
From RFI, former French President Valéry Giscard d'Estaing dies from the coronavirus at age 94.
From Turkish Minute, UNESCO asks Turkey for permission to examine possible alterations to the Hagia Sophia and the Chora Church.
From Arutz Sheva, four million doses of a coronavirus vaccine are on their way to Israel.
From Egypt Today, the Egyptian Ministry of Foreign Affairs keeps an eye on a cargo ship hijacked off the Nigerian coast and carrying two Egyptian citizens.
From the Ethiopian Monitor, Ethiopia and the U.N. sign a deal for humanitarian access to the region of Tigray.
From The New Arab, Israel plan to open an embassy in Bahrain by the end of 2020.
From IranWire, who was Dr. Naser Vafa'i, a Baha'i who was executed in Iran?
From The Hans India, a group of 34 Indian farm leaders sets forth its demands.
From the Daily Mirror, over 12,000 people in Sri Lanka are affected by Cyclone Burevi.
From Gatestone Institute, a terrorist group in Mozambique is set to establish an Islamic emirate.
From The Straits Times, the Royal Caribbean ship Quantum of the Seas becomes the second ship to offer cruises to nowhere from Singapore.
From the Borneo Post, according to the prime ministers of Malaysia and Singapore, details on a high-speed rail service between the two countries will be announced "in due course".
From Vietnam Plus, Vietnam rejects information from Amnesty International.
From The Stream, the dangers of presumptive president-elect Joe Biden's abortion agenda.
From The Daily Signal, President Trump won his other campaign, to destroy the media's credibility.
From Space Daily, Chinese scientists test a prototype of a hypersonic aircraft engine that can get a plane to go anywhere in the world in two hours.
From Sino Daily, a pro-democracy media tycoon in Hong Kong is charged with fraud.
From The American Conservative, there will always be an elitist like New York Governor Andrew Cuomo (D).
From Fox News, according to an opinion column, the use of fantasy by Speaker Pelosi (D-Cal) and other Democrats for their narrative "is astounding and sad".
From Breitbart, senatorial candidate Kelly Loeffler (R-GA) warns that her opponent Raphael Warnock (D) is a "radical activist" who mocks gun ownership.
From the Daily Caller, an angry shop owner in Michigan interrupts a TV broadcast to air his own grievances about coronavirus lockdowns.
From the New York Post, the NYPD and federal agents arrest 14 alleged crack cocaine dealers in the New York neighborhood of Harlem.
From CBS Philly, Hershey's faces backlash on social media after changing its long-running "Christmas bells" ad.
And from KIRO, a landmark café is saved in Maltby, Washington. (via Breitbart)
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