On a cloudy Sunday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, you don't have to be a Duke fan to appreciate retiring basketball coach Mike Krzyzewski. (This is especially true for yours truly, since my Virginia Tech Hokies have been playing against Duke and Coach K. since 2004.)
From Townhall, my governor disagrees with Florida's Parental Rights in education law.
From The Washington Free Beacon, we weren't always wild about President Truman.
From the Washington Examiner, three Chinese nationals are arrested for allegedly "stalking, harassing and spying on U.S. residents" on behalf of China's secret police.
From American Thinker, five videos about the coronavirus.
From the eponymous site of Drew Berquist, traditional liberal TV host Bill Maher "savages" the hypocrisy of modern liberals. (via LifeZette)
From NewsBusters, Twitter shows its double standards regarding author J.K. Rowling.
From Canada Free Press, who put Bill Gates in charge?
From TeleSUR, according to an election court, voting in Coast Rica has been incident-free.
From TCW Defending Freedom, the "candle-shaped vandal" in rural England.
From Snouts in the Trough, is this why the NHS needs more money from the U.K. taxpayer?
From Free West Media, Italian parliamentcritters are caught participating in a secret chat room on the Ukrainian region of Donbass.
From EuroNews, everything you need to know about Hungary's upcoming election.
From The North Africa Post, Algerian President Abdelmedjid Tebboune delivers a new diatribe against Morocco and complains to U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken about a milk shortage.
From The New Arab, Prince Hamzah bin Al-Hussein of Jordan relinquishes his title.
From the Altoona Mirror, the Muslim holy month of Ramadan starts in much of the Middle East amid rising food and fuel prices.
From Beyond The Great Divide, an alleged antisemitic Islamist extremist is elected president of the National Union of Students at the City University of London.
From Gatestone Institute, how Russian President Putin misunderstood U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld.
From The Stream, the Democrats are losing their power and they know it.
From Space War, Russian air strikes hit the Ukrainian port of Odessa.
From The Western Journal, the Biden administration releases a terrorist held in GITMO back to his native Algeria.
From BizPac Review, at his most recent rally, former President Trump lambastes Democrats for "waging war on reality, war on science, war on children, war on women".
From The Daily Wire, President Biden gets blasted for blaming high gas prices on Russia - by an anchor on CNN.
From the Daily Caller, Duke basketball players refuse to shake hands with UNC players after losing to them in the Final Four.
From Breitbart, as Russian troops retreat, Ukrainian forces recapture the remains of the world's largest aircraft.
From The Guardian, according to witnesses, Russian troops have been using Ukrainian children as "human shields". (via Newsmax)
From The U.S. Sun, a bartender quits his job after his boss forbids him from getting drunk on his day off. (via the New York Post)
And from the New York Post, why Justin Bieber's Grammy-nominated song Peaches was written by 11 people.
No comments:
Post a Comment