On a cool and partly sunny Monday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, antisemites vandalize the office of the Free Press.
From FrontpageMag, Hamas's enablers are very much in our midst.
From Townhall, guess which sort of location Hamas uses to fire rockets into Israel.
From The Washington Free Beacon, the Associated Press won't let its reporters call Hamas "terrorists".
From the Washington Examiner, Washington, D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser admits that masks contribute to criminal behavior.
From The Federalist, a record number of illegal aliens crossed the border from Mexico during September.
From American Thinker, the trap conservatives fall into when discussing immigration.
From MRCTV, a Colorado state judge blocks a ban on abortion pill reversal drugs.
From NewsBusters, the concept of beheading seems to be above the pay grade of New York magazine "intelligencer" Eric Levitz.
From Canada Free Press, the global virus of neo-communism.
From CBC News, Canada ends its evacuation flights out of Israel and starts considering such flights for Lebanon.
From Global News, what you need to know about the strike shutting down the Saint Lawrence Seaway.
From TeleSUR, one person is killed and three others injured in shooting at a school in São Paulo, Brazil.
From TCW Defending Freedom, is there a mental health crisis or just "another money maker for Big Pharma"?
From the Express, according to the U.K.'s Princess Eugenie, the late Queen Elizabeth II had a secret that left the entire royal family surprised.
From The Standard, a London Underground driver is suspended after leading a chant of "free, free Palestine" while driving his train. (The Standard was recently known as the Evening Standard.)
From the (U.K.) Independent, a record number of trials in the U.K. are delayed due to a staffing crisis. (What is this "right to a speedy trail" you speak of?)
From the (Irish) Independent, a senior Israeli diplomat based in Dublin suggests that Ireland is funding Hamas's tunnel in a post on the platform formerly known as Twitter, and then deletes it. (I remember an Irish terrorist organization called the Irish Republican Army, or IRA for short. I don't remember them digging any tunnels.)
From the Irish Examiner, Justice Ministers Helen McEntee (Ireland) and Abdullah Bin Sultan Bin Awad Al Nuaimi (UAE) discuss a possible extradition treaty between their countries.
From EuroNews, Milan, Italy considers banning cars from its center.
From Voice Of Europe, the right-wing Swiss People's Party gains more seats in Switzerland's parliament.
From ReMix, the Tunisian who killed two Swedish soccer fans in Brussels, Belgium was the subject of an extradition request from his home country, but Belgian authorities lost his file. (The article appears confused over whether he stabbed or shot his victims. If you read Flemish, read the story of De Standaard.)
From Balkan Insight, Bosnian authorities exhume the bodies of at least five people who disappeared in 1992 during the Balkan wars in the town of Višegrad. (Višegrad, Bosnia and Herzegovina should not be confused with Visegrád, Hungary.)
From The North Africa Post, at the instructions of King Mohammed VI, Morocco will send humanitarian aid to Palestinian populations.
From The New Arab, how the war between Israel and Hamas could impact Iraq.
From Arutz Sheva, a terror attack against the Israeli embassy in Brussels, Belgium is reportedly foiled.
From Gatestone Institute, does Hamas really not represent the Gazan Palestinians?
From The Stream, the movie Police State has a warning for America.
From The Daily Signal, the Southern Poverty Law Center stays silent on the Hamas-Israel war, but its union does not.
From BizPac Review, Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) sounds the alarm on alleged Iranian spies in the U.S. government. (Who does Cruz think he is, Whittaker Chambers?)
From The Daily Wire, according to Secretary of State Antony Blinken, "it would be good to hear the entire world" condemn Hamas.
From the Daily Caller, the Israeli army apologies after one of its tanks "accidentally fires" into Egypt.
From the New York Post, the FDA considers banning some black women's hair-straightening products because of a cancer risk.
From Newsmax, President Erdoğan submits to the Turkish parliament a protocol for Sweden to be admitted into NATO.
And from The Babylon Bee, the White House assures reporters that President Biden will be very concerned about the hostage situation in Gaza, once he finds out about it.
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