Monday, February 12, 2024

Monday Links

On a cool rainy Monday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, let's contemplate Vice President Harris running for president this year.

From FrontpageMag, a transgender Muslim immigrant opens fire at a church in Houston with a gun on which "Free Palestine" is written.

From Townhall, why Republicans should urge the DOJ to release the transcript of President Biden's interview.

From The Washington Free Beacon, a Chinese government-owned surveillance company complicit in the Uyghur genocide joins the U.N.'s "sustainability initiative".

From the Washington Examiner, former Domestic Policy Adviser Susan Rice calls Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra a [bleep] and an idiot.

From The Federalist, the aforementioned church shooter was stopped by two good guys with guns.

From American Thinker, fans at the Super Bowl show the appropriate disdain for the "Black National Anthem".

From MRCTV, a Massachusetts couple offers to house illegal aliens migrants and gets four of them within an hour.

From NewsBusters, MSNBC ignores evidence that the Houston church shooter was a pro-Hamas terrorist.

From Canada Free Press, Vice President Harris might be a better option than President Biden.

From TeleSUR, a Venezuelan plane is stolen in Argentina and flown to Miami, Florida, U.S.

From TCW Defending Freedom, what to do about the U.K.'s "racist and colonial" countryside.

From Snouts in the Trough, renewables are certain route to economic suicide.  (The article has yesterday's date, but is a "Monday-Wednesday blog", so I'll let the date slide.)

From EuroNews, a court orders the Netherlands to stop selling F-35 fighter jet parts to Israel.

From Voice Of Europe, Belgian farmers plan to stage a protest at the port of Antwerp.  (This blog's archives for May 2017 include a post about my visit to Antwerp, but none of my pictures show the port.)

From ReMix, Polish farmers start a 30-day blockade of Ukraine and take samples of Ukrainian grain to see if it meets E.U. standards.

From Balkan Insight, ethnic Serbs hold  a protest in North Mitrovica, Kosovo against a rule enforcing the euro as Kosovo's only currency.

From Morocco World News, recent rains slightly increase Morocco's dam filing rate.

From The North Africa Post, mass protests in Algeria result in piles of combustible material.

From Hürriyet Daily News, Türkiye's first astronaut, Alper Gezeravcı, arrives back home from the International Space Station.

From Turkish Minute, Türkey's top court rules against the construction of a "nation's garden" at the site of İstanbul's demolished former airport.

From Rûdaw, researchers blame the air pollution in and around Erbil, Iraq on low quality fuel.

From Armenpress, Armenian maps of minefields are transferred to Azerbaijan and to international partners.

From Public Radio Of Armenia, U.S. Defense Department officials attend a reception hosted by the Armenian Embassy on the 32nd anniversary of the formation of the Armenian military.

From Azərbaycan24, the volume of transit cargo shipped from Asia to Switzerland via Baku, Azerbaijan grows near for times in 2023 as compared to 2022.  (Baku is Azerbaijan's capital and is a port on the Caspian Sea.  My spellchecker has no problem with this site's name, even with the "ə".)

From AzerNews, an Armenian sniper allegedly shoots at Azerbaijani border guards.

From In-Cyprus, Turkish Cypriot leader Ersin Tatar reiterates his position on a two-state solution for Cyprus.

From The Syrian Observer, military units associated with the Syrian government and Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps detain dozens of Syrians associated with Iranian militias.

From North Press Agency, ISIS terrorists attack truffle hunters in the Syrian region of Deir ez-Zor.

From The New Arab, Qatar releases eight Indian former naval officers who had been sentenced to death.

From The Jerusalem Post, pro-HamasPalestinian protests are held at 40 locations in the U.K.  (TJP is one of four Israeli sources that I regularly link on a rotational basis.  Due to the war going on in the Gaza Strip, I will also link stories from these sources even when their turns have not yet come around, if and when I run across them on the day of their publication.)

From Gatestone Institute, the bolts lost from Boeing planes "reveal an even larger leadership crisis for America".

From The Stream, the sequel to The Origin of Species that Charles Darwin never finished.

From The Daily Signal, Democrats give illegal aliens valentines, but U.S. citizens take the arrows.

From The American Conservative, the Republican plot against former President Trump.

From The Western Journal, Biden makes a "cryptic" post on X after the Kansas City Chiefs win the Super Bowl.

From BizPac Review, Biden gets mocked for his Super Bowl message about "shrinkflation".

From The Daily Wire, Israel bars U.N. official Francesca Albanese for justifying Hamas's October 7th attack, but Harvard University doesn't.

From the Daily Caller, a doctor sounds the alarm on Biden's verbal missteps.

From the New York Post, this year's Super Bowl had one statistical oddity.

From Breitbart, according to a poll, Trump is America's "most respected" leader.

From Newsmax, Trump attends a closed hearing at a federal courthouse in Florida in his classified documents case.

And from The Babylon Bee, according to a "horrifying" study, more trans people have pretended to die under Florida's Ron DeSantis (R) than under any other governor in history.

No comments:

Post a Comment