Sunday, October 13, 2024

Sunday Stories

As the sunny and warm weather continues on a Sunday, here are some things going on:

From FrontpageMag, a city in California moves to allow non-citizens to vote.

From Townhall, Arizona will allow 218,000 people with "unconfirmed citizenship" to vote.

From The Washington Free Beacon, a review of a book by journalist Ta-Nehisi Coates.

From the Washington Examiner, former President Trump confirms that he will sit down for an interview with podcaster Joe Rogan.

From The Federalist, presidential candidate Vice President Harris's record shows that she will not be "tough on crime".

From American Thinker, the campaign ads which the Democrats won't make.

From NewsBusters, after years of media smears, illegal immigration is Trump's best issue.

From TCW Defending Freedom, as Winston Churchill said, never give in.

From EuroNews, watch a SpaceX launch pad catch a rocket booster as it returns to earth.

From The North Africa Post, Tangier, Morocco hosts the second edition of the Blue Africa Summit.

From The Sunday Times, a Moroccan journalist who was stabbed outside his home in the U.K. states that he feels safer in Israel.

From Gatestone Institute, the U.N. allegedly gave Hamas $1.3 billion in cash.

From The Daily Signal, what if journalist Bob Woodward wrote a book about Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff (which he won't)?

From The American Conservative, what I saw at Trump's October 5th rally in Butler, Pennsylvania.

From The Western Journal, UFC CEO Dana White shares a video of Vice President Harris that "should scare everyone".

From The Daily Wire, Trump explains why he had to return to Butler.

From the Daily Caller, vice presidential candidate Senator J.D. Vance (R-OH) is stunned after ABC host Martha Raddatz tries to downplay the takeover of apartment buildings by a Venezuelan gang.

From Breitbart, a UAW member calls Harris an "existential threat" to the auto industry.

From The Telegraph, DNA experts claim that the explorer Christopher Columbus was Jewish and came from Valencia, Spain rather than Genoa, Italy.  (via Breitbart)

From Newsmax, excerpts from a memoir written by the late Russian dissident Alexei Navalny reveal that he knew that he would die in prison.

And from the New York Post, an aircraft mechanic explains that what looks like duct tape on a plane really isn't.

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