As the warm weather continues on a partly cloudy Tuesday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, why did the guests, including congresscritter AOC (D-NY), not wear masks at the Metropolitan Museum of Art's event, but the staff did? (Did AOC, whose dress said "tax the rich", realize that the guests, who reportedly paid $30,000 to attend, were quite well off?)
From FrontpageMag, communist China humiliates U.S. climate czar John Kerry.
From The Washington Free Beacon, congresscritter Mark Green (R-TN) presses the Department of Homeland Security on Afghan asylum seekers who might have ties to terrorism.
From the Washington Examiner, two outgoing FDA officials criticize President Biden's plan for coronavirus vaccine boosters.
From The Federalist, a brewery in California picks up the pieces after month's of Governor Gavin Newsom's (D) coronavirus tyranny
From American Thinker, Reuters can't understand why police officers in Minneapolis are retiring.
From CNS News, the Department of Defense confirms five cases of the measles among recently arrived Afghan refugees.
From LifeZette, according to new polling, Americans support the opposition by governors to Biden's vaccine mandate.
From NewsBusters, in an article about Biden's ancestry, Politico buries information about two of his ancestors who owned slaves.
From Canada Free Press, was Biden forced to abandon Americans in Afghanistan?
From Global News, new details are released on coronavirus vaccine certificates and penalties for non-compliance in the Canadian province of Ontario.
From TeleSUR, hearings resume in Peru about forced sterilizations carries out under President Alberto Fujimori.
From TCW Defending Freedom, a solitary U.K. parliamentcritter sticks out his head for the victims of coronavirus vaccines.
From the Evening Standard, the U.K. whips out coronavirus "Plan B".
From Euractiv, the U.K. announces new delays to checks on goods coming across the border with Ireland.
From the Irish Examiner, Irish Chief Medical Officer Dr. Tony Holohan warns that some coronavirus measures could be reintroduced.
From The Brussels Times, package delivery speeds in Belgium return to normal faster than expected.
From Dutch News, coronavirus cases and hospital and intensive care admissions decrease in the Netherlands.
From EuroNews, will Norway's new left-wing coalition government toppled the country's oil industry?
From Hungary Today, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban responds to criticism from British historian Timothy Garton Ash.
From ReMix, the Chinese battery maker Semcorp plans to build a €185 million plant in Debrecen, Hungary.
From Sputnik International, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov calls the presence of U.S. troops in Syria a "de facto partition".
From The Sofia Globe, according to Education Minister Nikolai Denkov, just over 30 percent of teachers in Bulgaria have been vaccinated against the coronavirus.
From Ekathimerini, Greece cuts corporate taxes.
From Independent Balkan News Agency, Bosnian Foreign Trade Minister Staša Košarac accuses Foreign Affairs Minister Bisera Turković of obstruction.
From Balkan Insight, a dispute arises between the unrecognized Montenegrin Orthodox Church and the Serbian Orthodox Church over a monastery in Cetinje, Montenegro.
From The Slovenia Times, a man who robbed a rectory in Višnja Gora, Slovenia is sentenced to three years in prison.
From Malta Today, Maltese Finance Minister Clyde Caruana warns that companies owned by political parties will have to pay their taxes.
From Italy24News, school and voluntary salivary coronavirus tests start for students in the Italian region of Lazio.
From Free West Media, according to the European Medicines Agency, one third of reported coronavirus vaccine side effects are severe.
From The North African Post, Moroccan authorities dismantle a terror cell linked to ISIS.
From Turkish Minute, 143 more people face detention over alleged links to the Gülen movement.
From The Times Of Israel, an investigation finds that 11 inmate in Israel's Gilboa Prison started digging an escape tunnel last November.
From Egypt Today, what challenges does Egypt face in its national strategy for human rights?
From The New Arab, an Iranian tanker unloads oil in Syria, which is intended to go to Lebanon.
From IranWire, will Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei engage in nepotism?
From The Express Tribune, Pakistan reopens a border crossing with Afghanistan to allow pedestrians to go between the two countries.
From The Afghanistan Times, the Taliban deny reports by Human Rights Watch about alleged war crimes in the region of Panjshir.
From The Hans India, India is slowly moving away from using coal to provide its electricity.
From New Age, the Bangladeshi government partially relaxes restrictions on movement from India.
From the Daily Mirror, according to State Minister Sudarshani Fernadopulle, Sri Lanka will soon start to reopen from its coronavirus lockdown.
From Palestinian Media Watch, after Fatah calls for a "popular uprising", Palestinians carry out three stabbing attacks.
From WION, the Taliban are reportedly ready to reimplement their interpretation of sharia.
From The Straits Times, former Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi returns to court after a health-related absence.
From the Borneo Post, 10,000 Malaysian mothers petition Prime Minister Ismail Yaakob and five others to drop their appeal of a court decision allowing citizenship for their foreign-born children.
From Vietnam Plus, Vietnam's Health Ministry plans to deploy oxygen supplies throughout the entire country.
From Gatestone Institute, legitimizing the Taliban would be disastrous.
From The Stream, President Biden's rhetoric about "women's rights" rings hollow after he abandoned the women of Afghanistan.
From Insider Paper, the U.S. Coast Guard spots four Chinese warships off the coast of Alaska.
From Space War, in an effort to push back against U.S. influence, Chinese Foreign Minister Lee Hsien Loong visits Singapore.
From The American Conservative, we should admire the small countries who have said "no" to China.
From The Daily Signal, the former wife of an al-Qaeda operative speaks out on the plight of women in Afghanistan.
From The Western Journal, in his coronavirus vaccine mandate, Biden gives Congress a present.
From BizPac Review, a landowner in Texas describes the "overwhelming" situation at the southern border.
From The Daily Wire, Secretary of State Antony Blinken admits not knowing if a person killed by a drone strike in Afghanistan was an aid worker or a terrorist.
From the Daily Caller, the Department of Justice decides to limit chokeholds and no-knock warrants.
From the New York Post, New York's Mr. Bill can't say how many students were in the city's schools on the first day of classes.
From Breitbart, the magazine Atlantic admits that coronavirus hospitalization numbers may be misleading.
From Newsmax, a Marine slams Biden in a new ad about the withdrawal from Afghanistan.
And from Military History Matters, caption the picture.
No comments:
Post a Comment