On a mostly sunny Sunday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, according to Senator Mark Warner (D-VA), Terry McAuliffe (D) could have won the Virginia gubernatorial election had congress passed the "infrastructure" bill sooner.
From Townhall, the city council of Charlottesville, Virginia tells the Lincoln project to stay out after the group's election publicity stunt.
From The Washington Free Beacon, singer-songwriter Leonard Cohen is "the low priest of pop".
From the Washington Examiner, Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) calls a video of the Sesame Street character Big Bird getting vaccinated against the coronavirus "propaganda".
From American Thinkers, are Republican congresscritters actually trying to demoralize their voters? (The italicized emphasis on "trying" is in the article's title.)
From Red Voice Media, Cornell University in Ithaca, New York offers tampons in men's restrooms and calls them "mxnstrual products". (Do the people who run Cornell think that mxn mxnstruate? The story comes via LifeZette.)
From NewsBusters, a panel on ABC's This Week pummels the Republicans over their victory in Virginia and predicts no repeat.
From Canada Free Press, in his confusion, President Biden "insists on building you back better".
From TeleSUR, President Daniel Ortega votes in Nicaragua's election.
From The Conservative Woman, some history of the lies about the Christian Church.
From Snouts in the Trough, why are none of our leaders or the media interested in how the communist Chinese coronavirus started?
From Free West Media, Hungarian Prime Minister Orban calls the E.U.'s bluff on migrant quotas.
From EuroNews, 70 members of Italy's largest mafia organization are convicted in a "mega-trial".
From The North Africa Post, Gabonese President Ali Bongo Ondimba visits Morocco.
From The New Arab, Baghdad is placed on high alerts after an attempt to assassinate Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa Al-Kadhimi.
From Republic World, Pakistan Maritime Security personnel open fire on Indian fishing boats, resulting in the death of one fisherman.
From Israel Hayom, E.U. parliamentcritters are given a tour of tunnels dug by Hezbollah.
From Allah's Willing Executioners, a French Jew recalls his being tortured in a Turkish prison. (If you read French, read the story at FDeSouche and a related story at La Dépêche.)
From Gatestone Institute, a new team and new fears in Tehran, Iran.
From The Stream, presidential candidate Hillary Clinton (D) colluded with a Russian to create the fiction that her opponent Donald Trump (R) colluded with Russia.
From Space War, more on the attempted assassination of Iraq's prime minister.
From The Western Journal, the 13 Republican congresscritters who voted for the "infrastructure" bill try to explain themselves.
From BizPac Review, San Franciscans ponder what to do about burglaries.
From The Daily Wire, Senator Rick Scott (R-FL) lays out a plan for Republicans to retake the Senate in 2022.
From the Daily Caller, unvaccinated Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers loses his deal with Prevea Health.
From Breitbart, according to congresscritter Jim Banks (R-IN), Republicans "must become the party of parents".
From Newsmax, Republicans are increasingly optimistic about flipping some governor's seats in 2022.
From the Daily Star, U.K. royal consort Camilla Bowles reportedly "hasn't stopped talking about" President Biden's breaking of wind. (I'd say that congresscritter Eric Swalwell (D-Cal) should move over.)
And from the New York Post, in the football game between the Jacksonville Jaguars and Buffalo Bills, Josh Allen sacks Josh Allen.
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