Thursday, April 11, 2024

Thursday Things

On a day that's rather cool and rainy in southern Indiana, here are some things going on:

From National Review, Teh StoopidtTM is alive and well in America.

From FrontpageMag, how Democrats in Chicago tried to steal an election - in 1864.

From Townhall, former NFL Hall of Famer, actor, Hertz spokesman, and acquitted murder suspect O.J. Simpson has passed away from cancer.  (When his trial for the murder of his ex-wife Nicole and her friend Ron Goldman was starting up, I wondered what sort of people would constitute his peers, for the purpose of being on his jury.  I figured that his jury should have consisted of professional athletes worthy of Hall of Fame status, and mediocre actors.)

From The Washington Free Beacon, now that the coronavirus pandemic is over with, Harvard University brings back standard testing.

From the Washington Examiner, according to Senator Josh Hawley (R-MO), Code Pink "astroturf wackos" should be called out.

From The Federalist, eight ways to make sure that all legitimate votes are counted and no illegitimate votes get counted.

From American Thinker, a salute to two female authors.

From MRCTV, congresscritter Sheila Jackson Lee (D-TX) doesn't like people laughing at her laughable comment that the moon is mostly made of gasses.  (Would Buzz Aldrin care to comment?)

From NewsBusters, ABC, CBS and NBC ignore the victims killed allegedly by illegal aliens.

From Canada Free Press, Pope Benedict XVI's biographer blasts Pope Francis's description of him as being "transitional".

From TeleSUR, Mexico asks the International Court of Justice to suspend Ecuador from the U.N.

From TCW Defending Freedom, don't panic about all that water.

From EuroNews, Russian forces knock out a major power plant near Kyiv, Ukraine.

From Voice Of Europe, German parliamentcritters will reduce their use of electricity and travel.  (If you read German, read the story at Spiegel.)

From ReMix, French President Emmanuel Macron's actions toward Russia this year might just be seen as inconsistent.

From Balkan Insight, talks between Serbian political parties over conditions for elections fail again.

From The North Africa Post, Interpol arrests a wanted French citizen in Marrakech, Morocco.

From The New Arab, Russia advises its citizens to avoid traveling to the Middle East.

From Gatestone Institute, how to define "jihadism".

From The Stream, according to a "landmark" study, "transgender" kids really suffer from other mental health conditions.

From The Daily Signal, Miami Beach, Florida successfully breaks up with spring breakers.

From The American Conservative, is the Senate seat most likely to flip from Democrat to Republican one of those in my state?

From The Western Journal, President Biden is in danger of being left off the ballot in two states.

From BizPac Review, a British TV show host refuses to use "they/them" pronouns.

From The Daily Wire, Yale University students threaten to stage a hunger strike if their anti-Israel demands are not met.

From the Daily Caller, Donald Trump the Younger joins the board of the hunting advocacy group Hunter Nation.  (This group should not be confused with any fan club for Trump's successor as First Son.)

From Battleground Wisconsin, left-wing Wisconsin state Supreme Court Justice Ann Walsh Bradley (D) decides against running for reelection in 2025.  (via the Daily Caller)

From Breitbart, according to Senator Spartacus (D-NJ), former President Trump has created unimaginable "chaos and suffering" in the U.S.

From Newsmax, congresscritter Elise Stefanik (R-NY) blasts Harvard over its failure to discipline two students who allegedly assaulted and harassed an Israeli student.

And from the New York Post, a Dutch airplane pilot reveals why passengers "should not be scared" of turbulence.

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