Wednesday, October 16, 2024

Wednesday Whatnot

On a cool and cloudy Wednesday, after I gave myself a day off, here are some things going on:

From National Review, hey government, I thought that you were good at spending money.

From FrontpageMag, the FBI makes crime "drop" by leaving out 1,699 murders.

From Townhall, a pro-Hamas woman vandalizes a restaurant over its Israeli flags that weren't.

From The Washington Free Beacon, senatorial candidate Reuben Gallego (D-AZ) sues the Arizona Supreme Court to keep the records of his divorce sealed.

From the Washington Examiner, the Nebraska Supreme Court rules that felons who complete their sentences may register to vote.

From The Federalist, four years after covering up Hunter Biden's laptop, the media are committing election interference worse than ever.

From American Thinker, whether we realize it or not, the current election is about "war".

From MRCTV, the University of Nevada Reno throws their women's volleyball team under a bus after they forfeit to a team with a mile player.

From NewsBusters, Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas calls complaints about FEMA's hurricane response disinformation.

From Canada Free Press, so-called "experts" condemn Israel's military operations against Hezbollah.

From TeleSURColombian President Gustavo Petro signs a regulation giving indigenous people the power to sanction in environmental matters.

From TCW Defending Freedom, how many of the U.K.'s high-ranking government officials know Net Zero from their own elbows?

From Snouts in the Trough, do you believe in U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer's £63 billion conference success?

From EuroNews, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky claims that North Korea is aiding Russia in its invasion of Ukraine.

From ReMix, conservatives in Poland are leading in a new poll for presidential elections.  (If you read Polish, read the story at wPolityce(dot)pl.)

From Balkan Insight, Albanian environmentalists "see red" over the green sludge on the surface of Park Lake in the capital city of Tirana.

From The New Arab, why are the residents of Jabalia, Gaza refusing to leave their homes as the Israeli army closes in?

From Memri TV, Canadian teenagers salute Hamas and Hezbollah officials with a new song.

From RAIR Foundation USA, four years after the murder of French middle school teacher Samuel Paty, his sister, a nurse, recalls seeing his body at the morgue.

From Gatestone Institute, the Biden-Harris administration has a misguided policy about the Palestinians.

From The Stream, a father writes a letter to former President Trump.

From The Daily Signal, the FBI quietly revise the aforementioned violent crime data.

From The American Conservative, no more money should be allocated to FEMA for funding illegal aliens.

From The Western Journal, top Democrats in Pennsylvania are not happy with presidential candidate Vice President Harris's campaign.

From BizPac Review, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis announces charges against the man who allegedly tied a dog to a fence as the area was flooding.

From The Daily Wire, conservative lawyer Harmeet Dillon shreds Harris's record as San Francisco's district attorney.

From the Daily Caller, Harris hits Trump on alleged vulnerabilities which would be shared by President Biden.

From the New York Post, Disneyland and Disney World launch a new pass that will enable its holders to skip long lines - if they can pay for it.

From Breitbart, this year's election is making Americans of all political stripes more optimistic about the economy.

From Newsmax, according to a poll, 52 percent of American voters say that they'll vote early.  (Will any of them "vote early and often", as allegedly encouraged by mobster Al Capone or Mayor Richard Daley?)

And from News(dot)com(dot)au, the mysterious black balls that have been washing up on Coogee Beach in Sydney, Australia have been identified.  (via the New York Post)

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