On a cool rainy Friday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, abortion is not good for men.
From FrontpageMag, pro-abortion Democrats disrespect the democratic process.
From Townhall, TV host Joy Behar issues a threat over abortion, which won't be a problem.
From The Washington Free Beacon, former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo criticizes senatorial candidate Mehmet Oz (R-PA) over his ties to Turkey.
From the Washington Examiner, Supreme Court Justice Sam Alito's leaked opinion is what most Americans want on abortion.
From The Federalist, five ways for American businesses to avoid following in Disney's footsteps.
From American Thinker, what do we know so far about the coronavirus?
From CNS News, some fact and fiction on Roe v. Wade.
From the eponymous site of Rob Maness, former President Trump fires back at President Biden for attacking his supporters. (via LifeZette)
From the eponymous site of Drew Berquist, reporter Peter Doocy and White House press secretary Jen Psaki argue over protests about Roe v. Wade. (via LifeZette)
From Red Voice Media, with his latest legal filings, businessman Mike Lindell makes another move to improve election security. (via LifeZette)
From NewsBusters, CBS "yawns" at Senator Fake Cherokee's (D-MA) pro-abortion rant and the left's doxing of conservative Supreme Court justices.
From Canada Free Press, the phone call from Stewart Rhodes of the Oath Keepers to Trump was "only a fantasy".
From CBC News, record high gas prices hit Canada.
From Global News, Canada's sixth coronavirus wave might be on its way out.
From CTV News, in the Peguis First Nation in the Canadian province of Manitoba, someone tawt they taw a putty tat.
From TeleSUR, an explosion at the Saratoga Hotel in Havana, Cuba kills 8 people and injures 19 others.
From TCW Defending Woman, the weather disaster swindle from the climate fearmongers.
From the Express, Britons will need coronavirus certificates in order to travel to the E.U. for at least six more months.
From the Evening Standard, U.K. Labour Party leader Keir Starmer will face an investigation over "beergate".
From the (U.K.) Independent, a British family has been stuck in New Zealand for seven months due to canceled flights.
From the (Irish) Independent, Tánaiste Leo Varadkar visits a mica stricken home in Donegal, Ireland.
From the Irish Examiner, a decision to spend tens of millions of euros on a National Maternity Hospital is referred to a state auditor for examination.
From VRT NWS, the Belgian "far-right" party Vlaams Belang tops a new poll.
From The Brussels Times, the Belgian commune of Flanders is experiencing deforestation.
From the NL Times, six British men are arrested for a brawl on a flight into Amsterdam's Schiphol Airport. (And I thought that my experience at Schiphol in 2017 was a hassle.)
From Dutch News, Dutch victims of rape and sexual assault reportedly await two years before their cases come to court. (If you read Dutch, read the story at NRC.)
From Deutsche Welle, Germany lowers its coronavirus risk assessment.
From Free West Media, Ukraine's ambassador to Germany calls on workers in workers in Rostock, Germany to not unload a tanker loaded with oil products from Russia.
From Space War, Germany plans to self-propelled send artillery howitzers to Ukraine.
From CPH Post, new coronavirus sub-variants are found in Denmark.
From Polskie Radio, according to Deputy Justice Minister Sebastian Kaleta, Poland has collected over 1,000 witness statements about Russian war crimes in Ukraine.
From Radio Prague, the European Commission offers the Czech Republic an exemption from its embargo of Russian oil until 2024.
From The Slovak Spectator, when in Slovakia, please refrain from trying to hit golf balls across the Danube.
From ReMix, the Slovak parliament refuses to lift former Prime Minister Robert Fico's immunity.
From Daily News Hungary, Hungarian Prime Minister Orban that his new government will be "significantly reshuffled".
From Hungary Today, Hungary's Order of Merit is presented to German professor Reinhard Holt.
From About Hungary, Budapest, Hungary will host the first CPAC event in Europe.
From EuroNews, according to two E.U. agencies, record amounts of she-don't-lie are seized in Europe.
From Balkan Insight, the remains of five war victims are exhumed in Medjine, Bosnia.
From Euractiv, French politicians are silent on E.U. plans to embargo Russian oil.
From The North Africa Post, a permanent joint Moroccan-Spanish migration group is formed in Rabat, Morocco.
From The New Arab, Lebanese citizens outside of Lebanon vote in their country's parliamentary election.
From Allah's Willing Executioners, an ISIS terrorist gets a security job at the largest coronavirus vaccination and testing center in Vienna, Austria and allegedly rapes a female co-worker. (If you read German, read the story at Exxpress.)
From the Daily Star, a look at ISIS's brutal torture methods.
From European Jewish Press, jihadi clerics in the Gaza strip praise a terror attack in Elad, Israel.
From Gatestone Institute, thanks to Russia and China, the worst moment in history is coming soon.
From The Stream, why many holy sites in the Holy Land are caves.
From Africa Daily, 11 Burkina Faso army troops are killed in two ambushes.
From The Daily Signal, a woman who survived two abortions tries to share her message with pro-choice activists.
From The American Conservative, when it comes to pressure campaigning, the right needs to learn from the left.
From Conservative Patriots, California Governor Gavin Newsom (D) suffers a defeat in a new lawsuit.
From The Western Journal, why President Biden doesn't hold press conferences in the Oval Office.
From BizPac Review, the FDA limits the use of Johnson & Johnson's one-shot coronavirus vaccine due to the risk of potentially deadly blood clots.
From The Daily Wire, a judge rejects an advocacy group's attempt to prevent congresscritter Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) from running for reelection.
From the Daily Caller, a student at Ohio State University dies, and two others are hospitalized, after a warning about Adderall pills laced with fentanyl.
From Breitbart, a conservative group plasters billboards against congresscritter Liz Cheney (R-WY) all over Wyoming.
From Newsmax, Elon Musk denies talking to former President Trump about purchasing Twitter.
And from the New York Post, is the takeout Ursula in New York City the best new restaurant in the U.S.?
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