Tuesday, May 27, 2025

Tuesday Tidings

On a cool and cloudy Tuesday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, President Trump (U.S.) starts to suspect that President Putin (Russia) isn't such a good guy.

From FrontpageMag, the prison break in New Orleans is a product of leftism.

From Townhall, an old Tweet from then-Vice President Harris shows why she could never win a presidential election.

From The Washington Free Beacon, meet the Northwest University professor hired as part of a deal with anti-Israel groups.

From the Washington Examiner, North Korea doesn't like Trump's proposed Golden Dome missile defense system.

From The Federalist, corporate media who question Trump's health after hiding then-President Biden's decline should be mocked.

From American Thinker, the disappearing flu cases of 2020.

From MRCTV, DOGE finally marks Social Security recipients whose birth dates show that they're at least 120 years old as deceased.

From NewsBusters, leftists at NPR sue Trump, claiming that removing their taxpayer-funded subsidies violates the 1st Amendment.

From Canada Free Press, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney throws an anti-Trump publicity stunt with help from King Charles III.

From TeleSUR, the National Electoral Council of Venezuela and Caracas city authorities award positions to winning candidates.

From TCW Defending Freedom, U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer is a direct threat to all that is British.

From Snouts in the Trough, cheers for "The Great British giveaway"!

From EuroNews, why nuclear power is making a comeback in Europe.

From ReMix, a Pakistani man kills a Bangladeshi man - in Vienna.  (If you read German, read the story at Kronen Zeitung, but it appears to be behind a paywall.)

From Balkan Insight, six people are injured in a shootout at a migrant center in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina.

From The North Africa Post, former Senegalese Community Development Minister Amadou Mansour Faye is indicted for alleged embezzlement, the fifth indictment for an official from the previous government.

From The New Arab, Saudi authorities arrest an Iranian cleric ahead of the Hajj pilgrimage over a video he had made criticizing Saudi Arabia's religious and cultural policies.

From Palestinian Media Watch, the Palestinian Authority honors a man who killed a nine-month-old baby.

From Gatestone Institute, "tyranny in disguise" threatens democracy in Europe.

From Radio Free Asia, Cambodian police seek the extradition from Thailand of a woman who criticized Cambodia's trade negotiators.  (What is this "freedom of speech" you speak of?)

From The Stream, the IDF's Operation Gideon's Chariots is an echo from biblical times.

From The Daily Signal, the Supreme Court gives Trump a quiet but possibly large victory against the deep state.

From The American Conservative, congresscritter Randy Fine (R-FL) should resign or be forced out.

From The Western Journal, the first would-be Trump assassin was reportedly ordering bomb material that according to an estimate could have taken down a building.

From BizPac Review, according to journalist and author Jake Tapper, the cover-up of Biden's cognitive decline was "maybe even worse" than Watergate.  (If so, it would have to get in line behind many other scandals that were "worse than Watergate".)

From The Daily WireDeputy Secretary of the Treasury Michael Faulkender explains how Trump is choking off the flow of money to foreign drug cartels.

From the Daily Caller, Federal Communications Commission Commissioner Nathan Simington warns that Chinese technology is still "phoning home" to the Chinese government.

From the New York Post, the SpaceX Starship is set for its latest launch today.

From Breitbart, a Mexican singer with suspected ties to a drug cartel is denied a visa to enter the U.S.

From Newsmax, the Trump administration hails a 96 percent drop in illegal border crossings in the San Diego sector and closes a "migrant processing facility".

And from SFGate, the Los Angeles County coroner's office found a "morbid" way to solve its financial problems.

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