Tuesday, December 15, 2020

Tuesday Things

On a cool sunny Tuesday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, the Chinese communist government further obscures where the coronavirus came from.

From FrontpageMag, how BLM has no problem with present-day child slavery.

From Townhall, law enforcement officials in Georgia react to anti-police rhetoric from Democrat senatorial candidates Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock.

From The Washington Free Beacon, a consulting firm connected to President-elect Biden removed references to its foreign dealings.  (Now that the Electoral College has voted for Biden, I must remove "presumptive" from my references to him and call him "President-elect" whether I like it or not.  No one reading this has to like it, either, nor is anyone required to accept his election as legitimate.  Let's also not forget that many Democrats still haven't accepted President Trump's election in 2016 as legitimate.)

From the Washington Examiner, the other climate deal that Biden wishes to implement.

From The Federalist, anti-religious bigots use riots and the coronavirus to vandalize churches.

From American Thinker, something historic happened yesterday.

From CNS News, Asian activists want Biden's cabinet to include an Asian.

From LifeZette, how the media covered the Hunter Biden scandal before and after the election.

From NewsBusters, ABC changes its stance on coronavirus vaccines.

From Canada Free Press, forensic analysis on Dominion voting machines reveals some troubling facts.

From TeleSUR, the International Commission of Jurists takes legal action against Guatemalan President Alejandro Giammattei and other officials.

From The Conservative Woman, we have a right to the facts on PCR coronavirus tests.

From Free West Media, 55,000 people in Germany died from the Hong Kong flu in 1970.

From EuroNews, how do European countries plan to vaccinate their citizens against the coronavirus.

From Euractiv, Poland decides to have its first state-backed electric car plant built in a coal-rich region.  (If you read Polish better than yours truly does, read the story at Misja Elektromobilność.)

From ReMix, according to Hungarian Prime Minister Orban, "Europe woke up at the last minute".

From Independent Balkan News Agency, according to Serbian Foreign Minister Nikola Selaković, the Dayton Agreement cannot be changed without consent from all three constituent peoples.

From Balkan Insight, Kosovo's electricity grid starts operating independently from Serbia's.

From The New Arab, Moroccan police disperse a protest against its to-be-normalized relations with Israel.

From Gulf News, the UAE emirate of Dubai conducts over 80,000 coronavirus tests every day.

From Gatestone Institute, more on the Dominion voting systems.

From Stuff, police talk to a man who wrote in chalk an alleged hate message in front of a mosque in Christchurch, New Zealand.

From Allah's Willing Executioners, 2,000 Muslim girls in Germany undergo female genital mutilation, which might be an undercount.

From The Express Tribune, a Pakistani woman wins a share of her father's inheritance, 22 years after she dies.

From The Stream, the real problem will not be Biden, but the people he appoints into his administration.

From The Daily Signal, Jewish prayer in Congress.

From The American Conservative, a book from which rightists can learn about leftist infrastructure.

From Breitbart, President-elect Biden reportedly plans to nominate former South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg (D) for Secretary of Transportation.

From the New York Post, a company based on Long Island will start trials of a potential coronavirus vaccine that is administered through the nose.

From CBS Philly, southeastern Pennsylvania prepares for a powerful winter storm.

And from Fox News, fundraising for Republican Georgia Senators David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler gets a boost from Karl Rove and former President George Bush the Younger.

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Because of the Christmas season and its shopping and travel, I will be keeping my daily lists fairly short for the next few weeks.  I will include articles from conservative commentary sites and news stories mainly from foreign international sources, although I might include things from single-country sources found linked at The Religion Of Peace or on Twitter.  I also might make some posts that aren't lists of links but are devoted to a single topic.  Stay tuned.

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