Monday, April 28, 2025

Monday Mania

On a warm and sunny Monday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, beware the Democratic spin about a judge being arrested.

From FrontpageMag, congresscritter Jerrold Nadler (D-NY) goes after a rabbi for exposing antisemitism among his fellow Democrats.

From Townhall, Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzer goes after Republicans.

From The Washington Free Beacon, according to a foreign policy expert, Harvard University quietly trained members of a Chinese "paramilitary organization" sanctioned by the U.S government for its role in the Uyghur genocide.

From the Washington Examiner, the media headlines don't tell the full story of President Trump's 100 days back in office.

From The Federalist, getting rid of artificial food dyes is good, but healthy eating is ultimately our own responsibility.

From American Thinker, perhaps Trump should put former First Lady/Senator (D-NY)/Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in charge of immigration.

From MRCTV, the White House fence is lined with photos of criminal illegal aliens.

From NewsBusters, CBS fears for judges after Trump criticized them, but previously targeted Republican judges.

From Canada Free Press, celebrities and their hypocritical air travel.

From TeleSUR, deadly clashes in Port-au-Prince, Haiti leave dozens of people dead.

From TCW Defending Freedom, don't hold your breath waiting for the pharmaceutical company Moderna to get its comeuppance.

From Snouts in the Trough, how can U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer and Secretary of State for Energy Security and Net Zero Ed Miliband lie so brazenly?

From EuroNews, a massive blackout strikes Spain, Portugal, and parts of France.

From ReMix, the population of bees in Hungary is cut in half in one year, as cheap honey from Ukraine and China flood its market.

From Balkan Insight, a bill to overhaul rail safety is introduced to the Greek Council of Ministers, in response to the disaster in the municipality of Tempi.

From The North Africa Post, according to Nigerian Finance Minister Wale Edun, the U.S. is ready to invest in the gas pipeline that will link Nigeria to Morocco.

From The New Arab, what the reduction of U.S. military personnel will mean for post-Assad Syria.

From the Daily Sabah, a Frenchman who allegedly stabbed a Muslim from Mali to death at a mosque in La Grand-Combe, France surrenders to police in Pistoia, Italy.

From Jewish News Syndicate, the grave of a Jewish mystic is vandalized in Damascus, Syria.

From Arutz Sheva, the body of former Syrian President Hafez al-Assad is removed from his grave in Qardaha, Syria.

From Gatestone Institute, Palestinian leaders play musical chairs in an effort to deceive Western donors.

From Radio Free Asia, the North Korean government confirms that already open secret that its troops have been fighting alongside Russian troops against Ukrainian troops.

From The Stream, why the recently departed Pope Francis's silence on October 7th, 2024 will not be forgotten.

From The Daily Signalas Trump tries to make Columbus Day great again, why we should honor Christopher Columbus.

From The American Conservative, budget cuts at the State Department need to go farther.

From The Western Journal, running back Saquon Barkley of the Philadelphia Eagles schools critics who fault him for golfing with Trump.

From BizPac Review, a second illegal alien is arrested in connection with the theft of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem's purse.

From The Daily Wire, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt blasts the legacy media for burying then-President Biden's decline.

From the Daily Caller, three months into President Trump's second term, the corporate media still hasn't learned how to deal with him.

From the New York Post, according to the lawyer who represented Virginia Giuffre, who recently committed suicide, in her lawsuit against the U.K.'s Prince Andrew, he should apologize and come clean.  (Whether she, like the late Jeffrey Epstein, actually did commit suicide as reported is another matter.)

From Breitbart, according to actress Jennifer Coolidge, gays and lesbians "are a superior group of people".

From Newsmax, the group who helped former bartender AOC become a congresscritter (D-NY) launches their first primary challenge of the 2026 election season.

And from the Babylon Bee, with no pope to oversee them, the College of Cardinals stay up at night playing Goldeneye 007 and building pillow forts.

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