On a cold and partly sunny Friday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, President-elect Trump is sentenced to an "unconditional discharge".
From FrontpageMag, the Los Angeles Fire Department is run by three lesbians who all have the same first name.
From The Washington Free Beacon, in trying to block Trump's return to the presidency, President Biden made it inevitable.
From the Washington Examiner, as fires rage in California, its Democrats call for a special legislative session to "Trump-proof" the state.
From The Federalist, California's DEI-obsessed tyrants threw money at everything, except for water and firefighters.
From American Thinker, the persistent cheering at the murder of United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson proves that we now live in an idiocracy.
From MRCTV, one of the two "Slender Man" stabbers has her sentenced reduced after she "identifies" as a trans-male. (At the time of the stabbing, the two perpetrators and the victim were all 12-year-old girls.)
From NewsBusters, Morning Joe hosts Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski credit recently the departed President Carter and Zbigniew Brzezinski (her dad) for the fall of the Soviet Union.
From TeleSUR, Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro is sworn in for his next term.
From TCW Defending Freedom, the U.K. has cause for hope - in the Chief Twit.
From Snouts in the Trough, the hypocrisy and lies from the U.K.'s Labour Party are beyond belief.
From EuroNews, an archive on suspected Dutch collaborators with the Nazis during World War II is made public for the first time.
From ReMix, according to Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, the person interfering with democracies is not the Chief Twit, but George Soros. (Of course, she did not use the term "Chief Twit", which I use to indicate billionaire Elon Musk. The term comes from Musk himself.)
From Balkan Insight, students block a major traffic interchange in Belgrade, Serbia in the continuing protest over the disaster at a railway station in Novi Sad.
From The North Africa Post, the Washington Institute for Near East Policy warns that the E.U.'s decision to annul fishery and agricultural deals with Morocco could push it into making deals with the U.S., Russia and China. (Since Morocco was the first country to officially recognize the newly independent United States, I'd have no problem with making deals with it.)
From The New Arab, during the first round of voting for Lebanon's next president, parliamentcritters Paula Yacoubian and Salim Aoun clash with each other.
From The Times Of Israel, a synagogue in Sydney, Australia is graffitied with swastikas.
From Jewish News Syndicate, 18,000 terrorist attacks were made in Israel in 2024.
From OpIndia, Pakistan International Airlines makes a media post about flights to Paris that contains some unsettling imagery.
From Allah's Willing Executioners, in Vitry-sur-Seine, France, two youths allegedly stab a man for refusing to say "long live Allah". (If you read French, read the story at Le Figaro and FDeSouche.)
From the Organiser, the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan kidnaps 18 Pakistani nuclear scientists. (The article says "16" in some places and "18" in others.)
From Radio Free Asia, an Uyghur woman in the Chinese region of Xinjiang is sentenced to 17 years in prison for teaching Islam. (Will CAIR or any similar organization protest in front of the Chinese embassy? Yeah, I know. I won't hold my breath.)
From Gatestone Institute, free speech the U.S. against censorship in Europe.
From The Stream, a message to the new congress from one of its millions of new bosses.
From The Daily Signal, President Carter's eulogists were tough on his immediate successor.
From The American Conservative, will former Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland be Canada's answer to former U.K. Prime Minister Rishi Sunak?
From The Western Journal, Trump explains his interaction with former President Obama at President Carter's funeral.
From BizPac Review, one of two "Super Scouper" firefighting aircraft sent from Canada to California is grounded when a drone strikes its wing.
From The Daily Wire, Trump promises to release a report about the drones seen flying above New Jersey and other states when he takes office.
From the Daily Caller, Chicago Democrats fight against the city's sanctuary laws.
From the New York Post, three tricks for iPhone users to double its battery life.
From Breitbart, you soon may be able to ride in a flying taxi.
From Newsmax, after being sentenced, Trump promises that he will appeal the verdict in his hush money case.
And from SFGate, the worst disaster related to college football happened in San Francisco on Thanksgiving Day in 1900.
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