Tuesday, October 25, 2022

Tuesday Things

As the cloudy but mild weather continues on a Tuesday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, it's too late for the Democrats put out any economic message.

From FrontpageMag, illegal aliens go glamping at taxpayer expense in a tent city in New York City.

From Townhall, serial election denier Hillary Clinton (D) is back, with a warning that "right wing extremists" will steal the next presidential election.  (Nowadays, in order to be a "right wing extremist", all you need to do is think that men cannot become women.)

From The Washington Free Beacon, New York Governor Kathy Hochul (D) downplays the large rise in crime in her state.

From the Washington Examiner, some key takeaways from two weeks before the midterm elections.

From The Federalistno, Hitler did not rise to power in Germany because of inflation.

From American Thinker, why has President Biden gone to the far left?

From CNS News, Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) make a sensible but often ignored recommendation on what to do about people who cross borders illegally.

From LifeZette, a New York judge rules that mail-in voting done in response to the coronavirus is unconstitutional.

From Red Voice Media, according to right-wing commentator Tucker Carlson, congresscritter Liz Cheney (R-WY) "loves wars" and is "completely unfazed" about the world being destroyed.  (via LifeZette)

From NewsBusters, the "big three" networks side with gubernatorial candidate Charlie Crist (D-FL) against incumbent Governor Ron DeSantis (R-FL).

From Canada Free Press, the collusion between Dr. Fauci and Facebook that sold the coronavirus as a worldwide pandemic.

From TeleSUR, social organizations in Ecuador plan to carry out protests.

From TCW Defending Freedom, the global(ist) parasites who want you to think like they think.

From EuroNews, new U.K. Prime Minister Rishi Sunak admits that "mistakes were made" during the short tenure of his predecessor Liz Truss.

From Free West Media, the mayor of Stuttgart, Germany has a tampon dispenser installed in a men's restroom.  (Stuttgart thus joins Portland, Oregon in such gender-bending.)

From ReMix, Rostock, Germany evicts construction job apprentices from their housing to make way for migrants.

From Russia Today, according to Bloomberg, record volumes of Russian energy have been going to China.  (The article does not link to anything at Bloomberg.)

From Sputnik International, what is a "dirty bomb" and why is the Russian government warning that Ukraine might use one?

From The Moscow Times, despite it attempt to modernize, the Russian air force it has difficulty attaining air superiority in Ukraine.

From Romania-Insider, Romania will host and train almost 200 Ukrainian paramedics under a NATO program designed to bring relief to Ukraine.

From Novinite, Bulgaria's caretaker cabinet proposes that this year's budget be applied next year.

From The Sofia Globe, President Roumen Radev will take an unhurried approach to bids to form a new Bulgarian government.  (I have seen articles in which his first name is spelled "Rumen".)

From Radio Bulgaria, two proposed resolutions on military aid for Ukraine are tabled in the Bulgarian parliament.

From the Greek Reporter, the House of Menander in the Italian archaeological site of Pompeii shows influence from ancient Greece.

From Ekathimerini, Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis expels a Greek parliamentcritter from his party.

From the Greek City Times, Turkish media complain that an Ottoman-era mosque built on top of a Byzantine church in the Greek city of Rhodes is now being used as a music school.

From Balkan Insight, Serbia ends visa-free entrance for travelers from Tunisia and Burundi.

From Total Croatia News, for the right bid, you can own a 19th century villa in the elite Tuškanec area of Zagreb, Croatia.  (If you read Croatian, read the story at Poslovni Dnevnik.)

From The Slovenia Times, the Slovenian newspaper Dnevnik wants the capital city of Ljubljana to turn off its Christmas light.  (The word dnevnik appears to be common to the Slavic languages Slovenian and Croatian, and resembles the Polish ward dziennik, which means "journal" or "daily".  If permitted an educated guess, I'd say that "journal" or "daily" might also be the English translation of dnevnik.)

From The Malta Independent, Maltese police arrest four people for allegedly drug trafficking and money laundering after finding 1.2 kilos of she-don't-lie.

From Malta Today, a look at Malta's 2023 budget.

From ANSA, new Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni to the Italian women who helped her break the glass ceiling.

From Euractiv, Meloni insists that Italy will be a "reliable" E.U. partner.

From SwissInfo, how some of Afghanistan's foreign assets found their way to a trust fund in Switzerland.

From France24, France plans to deploy 35,000 guards for the 2024 summer Olympics, which 600,000 people are expected to attend.

From RFI, the French government survives three no-confidence votes after forcing through a budget.

From El País, a Spanish boy living in Mexico is given 15 days to live if he doesn't get an operation to remove a brain tumor.

From The Portugal News, as of today, all pet dogs, cats and ferrets in Portugal must be microchipped.

From The North Africa Post, the city of Laayoune, in the disputed region of Sahara, signs a cooperative agreement with the French city of Metz.

From The New Arab, Morocco moves toward teaching scientific subjects in schools in English instead of French.  (When I was a Littlefoot, Papa Bigfoot told me that French, along with German and Russian, was a scientific language.)

From Al-Monitor, a Turkish court sentences a Syrian man for burning alive two Turkish citizens in 2016 while he was a member of ISIS.

From Sahara Reporters, Islamic police in the Nigerian state of Kano impound 5,800 bottles of beer.

From Gatestone Institute, how the West emboldens Turkish President Erdoğan's aggression.

From The Stream, Democrats finally talk about the economy.

From The Daily Signal, the New York state Supreme Court reinstates unvaccinated workers with back pay.

From Space War, according to analysts, Moscow's claim that Ukraine could use a "dirty bomb" is just a diversion.

From Space Daily, a former U.S. Marine Corps fighter pilot who worked in China is arrested in Australia.

From The American Conservative, "whatever happened to the anti-war left?"  (In my view, the "anti-war left" wasn't really anti-war", but opposed to any military action that would benefit U.S. interests.  While this group, as pointed out in the article, opposed the 2003 invasion of Iraq under President Bush the Younger, they had no apparent problem with either Mr. Bill's earlier bombing of Serbia or President Obama's later "kinetic military action" in Libya.  Both of these actions served various European interests rather than those of the U.S., which is what I think is the reason for the apparent inconsistency.  Back when the blog AndRightlySo still existed, I made a post explaining my position on this more fully, but like the rest of that blog, it has disappeared into Interwebs oblivion.)

From The Western Journal, Bidenflation make Halloween more expensive.

From BizPac Review, the radical Democrat agenda unites ordinary Americans.

From The Daily Wire, the Congressional Progressive Caucus withdraw its letter demanding that the Biden administration open diplomatic discussions between Ukraine and Russia.

From the Daily Caller, Democratic Senators backpedal on their threat to abolish the filibuster.

From the New York Post, prospective jurors in the civil fraud trial of the Trump Organization express their hate for former President Trump.  (What's this "right to an impartial jury" you speak of?)

From NewsmaxSenator Rick Scott (R-FL) calls for Homeland Security Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas to resign due to the all-time high of 2.37 million arrests made at the southern border during fiscal year 2022.

And from Breitbart, congresscritter and senatorial candidate Tim Ryan (D-OH) holds a rally with a "super excited" crowd of 19 people.


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