On a cool rainy Friday which is December 1st, other than the previously noted expulsion of now-former congresscritter George Santos (R-NY), here are some things going on:
From National Review, Governors Ron DeSantis (R-FL) and Gavin Newsom (D-Cal) give Americans a real debate.
From FrontpageMag, American Jews have not learned how to fight against left-wing antisemitism. (I've realized that antisemitism comes and has come from multiple directions, both right and left, both white and black, and both Christian and Muslim.)
From Townhall, look who put a stop to the aforementioned DeSantis-Newsom debate.
From The Washington Free Beacon, White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre keeps violating a federal ethics rule.
From the Washington Examiner, Republican congresscritters put one major condition on First Son Hunter Biden's offer to testify.
From The Federalist, the "felonies, feces and failure" in California should end Governor Newsom's political career, but they won't.
From American Thinker, were the tapes from January 6th edited?
From Politico, Argentina says "no thanks" to the BRICS. (via American Thinker)
From MRCTV, recording artist Lizzo shows that the laws of physics don't care about your feelings.
From NewsBusters, hosts Ana Navarro and Sunny Hostin of The View defend Senator Bob Menendez (D-NJ), but their guest Senator John Fetterman (D-PA) disagrees.
From Canada Free Press, the WHO sets its sights on what Americans eat.
From TCW Defending Freedom, a show about climate change on the U.K.'s Channel 4 makes some false claims.
From Snouts in the Trough, how long before the native British are a minority in their own country?
From EuroNews, winter comes to the war in Ukraine, bringing along some impressive rats.
From Voice Of Europe, Poland allows 600 tons of agrichemical waste from Belarus to pass through, on its way to France. (My spellchecker has no problems with "agrichemical". If you read Polish better than I do, read the story at RMF 24.)
From ReMix, the Astronomical Center of the Polish Academy of Sciences inaugurates an observatory in Chile's Atacama Desert. (MikoĊaj Kopernik, a.k.a. Nicholas Copernicus, would be proud.)
From Balkan Insight, an opposition candidate for a seat on the Belgrade, Serbia city assembly withdraws due to a leaked private video.
From The North Africa Post, the U.S. State Department praises Morocco's strategy against terrorism.
From The New Arab, Egyptian authorities detain four foreign activists who were protesting against Israel's war in the Gaza Strip.
From Arutz Sheva, an 85-year-old man who had co-founded a kibbutz was reportedly killed by Hamas terrorists, who are still holding his body.
From the Hungarian Conservative, "the ongoing Islamic dilemma".
From Gatestone Institute, the hate and corruption behind the curtain of Human Rights Watch.
From The Stream, Angel Studios releases The Shift, which combines faith and science fiction.
From The Daily Signal, Israel must finish the job against Hamas.
From The Western Journal, the aforementioned Karine Jean-Pierre ends a press briefing after an African reporter tries to ask a question.
From BizPac Review, a fiery exchange takes place between Republican congresscritters Max Miller (OH) and George Santos (NY) just before the latter gets expelled.
From The Daily Wire, Hamas terrorists violate the ceasefire with Israel with rocket attacks, to which Israel responds.
From the Daily Caller, after soon-to-be-former congresscritter Bill Johnson (R-OH) is hired as the new president of Youngstown State University, actor and Youngstown native Ed O'Neill promises to call it "Trump-U".
From Breitbart, congresscritter Brandon Williams (R-NY) goes on a tirade against a former staffer, with plenty of foul language.
From Newsmax, an Illinois appeals court upholds the convictions and sentence of hate crime hoaxer Jussie Smollett.
And from the New York Post, what it's like to ride the Beam at the Rockefeller Center's Top of the Rocks.
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