On a cool cloudy Tuesday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, Democrats get ready to ride or die with President Biden.
From FrontpageMag, how Christians became a minority in England and Wales, and how it can happen in the U.S.
From Townhall, a new front is opened in the fight against woke ESG standards.
From The Washington Free Beacon, Uyghur activists demand that the Biden administration gets answers from China about a fire that trapped people in a building.
From the Washington Examiner, Senator Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) and congresscritter Hank Johnson (D-GA) accuse the Supreme Court's counsel of dodging questions about an alleged 2014 leak. (Would I be correct in assuming that they have similar concerns about the leak of the draft decision in the Dobbs v. Jackson case? Yeah, I know. Whom am I trying to kid?)
From The Federalist, Republican Senators, you have one last chance to stop the Roe v. Wade of marriage.
From American Thinker, why a new voting system which gave Democrats a traditionally Republican congressional seat is dangerous.
From CNS News, Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) explains why Democrats hate senatorial candidate Herschel Walker (R-GA).
From Red Voice Media, the Chief Twit comes out with actual evidence of bias on Twitter against conservatives. (via LifeZette)
From NewsBusters, the Chief Twit calls free speech a "battle for the future of civilization".
From Canada Free Press, a serial killed leaves in his death note a claim that he was led by Satan.
From CBC News, according to a report, over 2,000 wild species in Canada face a high risk of being wiped out.
From TeleSUR, Brazilian President-elect Lula da Silva calls for the release of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange.
From TCW Defending Freedom, how the U.K. could get its own people back to work (if it wanted to).
From the (Irish) Independent, a man in an Irish prison accused of murder claims that the prison is "better than some hotels".
From the NL Times, a man is arrested at Amsterdam's Schiphol Airport after telling police that he had dangerous substances. (If you read Dutch, read the story at De Telegraaf.)
From ReMix, changes to German citizenship and immigration laws could turn 2 million migrants into German citizens overnight.
From Polskie Radio, the Three Seas Initiative is discussed at a conference in Warsaw, Poland.
From Free West Media, Poland hires two American PR companies for a pro-Ukraine campaign in the West.
From Hungary Today, Hungary shows the E.U. how to protect borders.
From Romania-Insider, Romania observes its National Day.
From Total Croatia News, ETF becomes the first Croatian airline to obtain permission to fly to the U.S.
From Balkan Insight, a Bosnian she-don't-lie "kingpin" is arrested in the UAE as part of an operation against a "super cartel".
From SwissInfo, meet Switzerland's elite army soldiers.
From RFI, France restarts a coal-fired power plant due to expected electricity demand during the coming winter.
From EuroNews, three African migrants travel to Spain's Canary Islands by sitting on a ship's rudder. (I'm no fan of illegal migration, but I have to give these guys the "badass" label for doing this and living to tell about it.)
From Euractiv, E.U. member states struggle to agree on a price cap for Russian oil.
From The North Africa Post, the Moroccan phosphate and fertilizer company OCP reports a record quarterly revenue.
From the Libyan Express, five Western countries issue warrants for the arrests of suspects allegedly involved in the deaths of migrants in Libya.
From North Press Agency, according to the Education Board of the Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria, shelling from Turkey has prevented 22,000 Syrian students from attending school.
From In-Cyprus, the first construction phase for the new hemodialysis ward of the Famagusta General Hospital is expected to be complete by the end of 2022.
From The New Arab, migrant workers in Lebanon demand protection from sexual harassment.
From the Saudi Gazette, Saudi technicians in the ski village of TROJENA successful make artificial snow in the Sarawat Mountains.
From Dawn, in the province of Balochistan, Pakistani security forces send 10 terrorists to their virgins.
From the Colombo Page, Sri Lankan President Ranil Wickremesinghe approves a bill that gives the Maha Sangha the power to discipline wayward Buddhist monks. (For more on Sri Lanka's Maha Sangha, go here.)
From AsiaNews, Muslims damage tents offered by Christians to earthquake victims in Cianjur, East Java, Indonesia.
From Free Malaysia Today, three Malaysian states are warned to brace for floods.
From Vietnam Plus, Vietnamese Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh gives in a speech in which he states "Buddhism upholds fine values".
From 5 Pillars, according the U.K. census, there are 3.9 million Muslims in England and Wales.
From Gatestone Institute, protesters in China call for an end to rule by the Chinese Communist Party.
From The Daily Signal, how someone turned her left-leaning college experience into a benefit.
From ITR Economics, what you need to know in order to plan for the next business cycle.
From Space War, the company Airbus Defence and Space produces its 2,000th target drone.
From The American Conservative, "listen to your elders, not the experts".
From The Western Journal, the chairman of the Mohave County, AZ Board of Supervisors claims that he was told that he would be arrested if he didn't vote to certify the results of the recent election.
From BizPac Review, congresscritter Kevin McCarthy (R-Cal) warns his fellow Republicans that if they "play games", the House Democrats could pick the next speaker.
From The Daily Wire, protesters in China destroy a coronavirus testing site.
From the Daily Caller, after meeting with President Biden, Senators Mitch McConnell (R-KY) and Chuck Schumer (D-NY) and Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Cal) agree to stop the possible rail strike.
From Breitbart, according to Florida Governor Ron DeSantis (R-FL), Apple's threat to remove Twitter from its app store could "merit a response" from Congress.
From Newsmax, several vehicles rented by Biden's Secret Service detail burn after being returned to the Nantucket, Massachusetts airport.
And from the New York Post, the U.S. defeats Iran in their World Cup match.
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