Wednesday, May 7, 2025

Wednesday Wanderings

On a sunny but cool Wednesday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, self-deportations need more than just money.

From FrontpageMag, in honor of the recently departed Virginia Giuffre, the Epstein files should be released now.

From Townhall, former President Biden makes a "stunning" admission about the 2024 presidential election.

From The Washington Free Beacon, Fulton County, Georgia District Attorney Fani Willis claims that a whistleblower posed a violent threat to her office, but audio recordings say otherwise.

From the Washington Examiner, according to Vice President Vance, Russia is "asking for too much" to end its invasion of Ukraine.

From The Federalist, President Trump faces growing calls to ditch U.S. Semi-Quincentennial Commission chairperson Rosie Rios, who once called Mexico "My country, just like the United States".

From American Thinker, DOGE is doing the clean-up that the left can't stand.

From MRCTV, CNN reporter Jemele Hill compares the effort to have men compete in women's sports to the civil rights movement under Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

From NewsBusters, co-host Alicia Menendez of the new MSNBC show Weeknight asks if Trump defunded PBS because he thinks that the Muppet character Elmo is black.

From Canada Free Press, Trump gets blamed for everything, which now includes Canadian stupidity.

From TeleSUR, Presidents Maduro (Venezuela) and Putin (Russia) meet on Victory Day and agree on strategic cooperation.

From TCW Defending Freedom, the time bomb set by then-Prime Minister Tony Blair is still wrecking the U.K. today.

From Snouts in the Trough, should more money be put into the pockets of Indian workers?

From EuroNews, Bucharest, Romania Mayor and presidential candidate Nicuşor Dan wants Ukraine to enter the E.U.

From ReMix, seven people are charged with allegedly honor killing a woman in Eskilstuna, Sweden, including a man who was the victim's husband.  (If you read Swedish, read the story at Aftenbladet.)

From Balkan Insight, police in Thessaloniki, Greece arrest 25 alleged members of a "far-right" youth group.

From The North Africa Post, the Moroccan region of Sahara reportedly becomes a magnet for investors.

From The Syrian Observer, the appointment of Maher Marwan as governor of Damascus, Syria and rising lawlessness raise some alarming questions.

From Arutz Sheva, according to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, it's certain that 21 hostages held by Hamas are still alive.

From The Times Of Israel, families of the hostages demand answer after U.S. President Trump states that only 21 of them are still alive.

From The Jerusalem Post, three IDF soldiers are injured in two suspected terror attacks in the West Bank.

From YNetNews, in a plan being discussed in Israel and the U.S., the U.S. could administer the Gaza Strip.

From the Egypt Independent, several Egyptian parliamentcritters slam their government over complaints about adulterated octane at gasoline stations.

From Egypt Today, Egyptian President Abdel El-Sisi denies rumors about alleged "negative" plans against Saint Catherine's Monastery in the Sinai region.

From the Sudan Tribune, the Sudanese army uses anti-aircraft defenses to repel drones in the city of Port Sudan.

From the Saudi Gazette, the number of patent applications filed with the Saudi Intellectual Property Authority increased by 13 percent in 2024.

From Doha News, a new round of negotiations between the Democratic Republic of the Congo and the March 23 Movement begin in Doha, Qatar.

From The New Arab, Jordanian security officials arrest DBS activist Hamza Khader.

From Gatestone Institute, Trump is right in wanting to make VE Day a national holiday.

From Radio Free Asia, the Karen in Myanmar face food shortages amid cuts of aid to their camps on the Thai border.

From The Stream, Christians in Gaza suffer as Hamas hides behind churches.

From The Daily Signal, "the purely progressive Pulitzer Prize parade".

From The American Conservative, the term "woke right" is useless.

From The Western Journal, Ford CEO Jim Farley drops the truth about tariffs that the Democrats will hate.

From BizPac Review, another federal judge reverses a deportation.

From The Daily Wire, as the papal conclave begins, conservative Catholics try to make sense of the recently departed Pope Francis.

From the Daily Caller, Attorney General Pam Bondi reveals the holdup in releasing the aforementioned Epstein files.

From the New York Post, the floating pier placed in Gaza under then-President Biden reportedly injured 62 U.S. service personnel and caused $31 million in damages.

From Breitbart, Russia launches a ballistic missile and 28 drones into Kyiv, Ukraine, killing two people in apartment buildings.

From Newsmax, India fires dozens of missiles into Pakistan.

And from the Genesius Times, Trump plans to rename the San Andreas Fault to "Joe Biden's Fault".

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