Friday, April 25, 2025

Friday Fuss

On a cloudy and mild Friday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, ending lawsuits based on disparate impact would be a victory for equal opportunity.

From FrontpageMag, an op-ed by writer Larry David in The New York Times, compares President Trump to Hitler, but that newspaper fawned over Hitler back in 1933.

From Townhall, a crime against a 13-year-old boy in Punta Gorda, Florida is exactly why that state's law enforcement officials are working with ICE to apprehend illegal aliens.

From The Washington Free Beacon, internal documents show a pattern of racial discrimination at Harvard Law Review.

From the Washington Examiner, a judge in Wisconsin is arrested for allegedly obstructing ICE.

From The Federalist, gun control laws don't prevent shooting outside the U.S., which means they also won't stop it here.

From American Thinker, Trump's decision to unleash American energy won't be good for China, but night just save Europe.

From MRCTV, Democrats weren't so zealous for "due process" when then-President Obama deported illegal aliens, 83 percent of whom never saw a judge during their deportations.

From NewsBusters, the Trump White House tells the truth about the coronavirus, exposing then-President Biden's censorship regime.  (The Biden administration carried out censorship, but Trump is the fascist.  I defy anyone to make it make sense.)

From Canada Free Press, will Canada soon have its last breath of freedom?

From TeleSUR, Cuba recalls the recently departed Pope Francis's opposition to unilateral sanctions.

From TCW Defending Freedom, a no-nonsense way to stop migrants from crossing the English Channel into the U.K.

From EuroNews, a Russian brigadier general is killed in a suspected car bombing in the city of  Balashikha.

From Free West Media, how Norway and Sweden differently regulate gambling.

From ReMix, according to Polish President Andrzej Duda, only U.S. President Trump can bring peace to Ukraine.  (If you read Polish, read the story at wPolityce.)

From Balkan Insight, Montenegrin Parliament Speaker Andrija Mandić is urged to resign after his nephew allegedly shoots two people in the capital city of Podgorica.

From The North Africa PostFrench President Emmanuel Macron and international media welcome the launch of a high-speed rail network between the Moroccan cities of Kenitra and Marrakech.  (What about Graham Nash?  I'm pretty sure that he would welcome the Marrakesh Express becoming a reality.)

From The New Arab, a billboard in Damascus saying "Make Syria Great Again" doesn't go over very well.

From The Jerusalem Post, federal and state authorities raid the homes of suspected pro-Palestinians who allegedly vandalized Jewish homes and institutions.

From Arutz Sheva, 79 people have been killed in terror attacks since Israel's last Memorial Day.

From News Meter, a list of 15 Muslims killed in the terror attack in Pahalgam, Jammu and Kashmir, India is fake.

From Palestinian Media WatchPalestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas curses the U.S. twice during a televised speech.

From The College Fix, the group CAIR wants the hiring of two alumni of the Biden administration at Harvard University and the University of New Hampshire to be revoked.

From Gatestone Institute, the Chinese government is helping the Houthis in Yemen to attack U.S. naval vessels.

From Radio Free Asia, according to the rebel group Arakan Army, the Myanmar junta dropped 400 bombs during a "ceasefire".

From The Stream, the "messy" legacy of the aforementioned recently departed pope.

From The Daily Signal, the USDA makes it more difficult for illegal aliens to get food stamps.

From The American Conservative, an interview with Romanian presidential candidate George Simion.

From The Western Journal, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth gets fired up after leaning how many reserve troops are fat.

From BizPac Review, more than a dozen Jacksonville Good Samaritans help prevent the kidnapping of a woman and her two children.

From The Daily Wire, former congresscritter George Santos (R-NY) gets over seven years in prison.

From the Daily Caller, a federal judge appointed by Mr. Bill agrees with plaintiffs that Trump's order requiring proof of citizenship in order to vote would hurt Democrats.

From the New York Post, where U.S. President Trump, Ukrainian President Zelensky, and other dignitaries will sit at the funeral of the twice-aforementioned departed pope.

From Breitbart, congresscritter Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY) brags that his fellow Democrats have stopped efforts to ensure that only U.S. citizens can vote in U.S. elections.

From Newsmax, the alleged murderer of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson pleads not guilty.

And from SFGate, a short street in San Francisco will be renamed after the late Grateful Dead singer/guitarist Jerry Garcia, who once lived there.

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