Friday, July 25, 2025

Friday Phenomena

On a hot and sunny (at my undisclosed location) Friday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, according to the U.N., we're already dead.

From FrontpageMag, Iran blames Israel's victory in their 12-day war on the Jinn.

From Townhall, what does Border Czar Tom Homan think about using ankle monitors to track illegal aliens?

From The Washington Free Beacon, George Mason University's president implemented hiring policies based on race, and later claimed to have done nothing wrong.

From the Washington Examiner, President Trump responds to a South Park episode that mocks his presidency.

From The Federalist, five lies from John Brennan from then-CIA Director John Brennan that set the Russiagate hoax in motion.

From American Thinker, so-called sanctuary cities are really slavery cities.

From MRCTV, former Cleveland Guardians manager Terry Francona faults Trump and white people for wanting the team to revert to being the Cleveland Indians.

From NewsBusters, why Democrats rail against the upcoming cancellation of late-night TV host Stephen Colbert.

From Canada Free Press, there's no reason for CBS to keep Colbert on the air until next May.

From TeleSUR, the People's Summit for Peace and Against War starts off in Caracas, Venezuela.

From TCW Defending Freedom, how Christianity shaped every fiber of U.K. politician Winston Churchill's being.

From Snouts in the Trough, according to the U.K. government, mass migration is not a threat, you are.

From EuroNews, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen will meet with U.S. President Trump in Scotland to discuss trade.

From ReMix, a Ukrainian border guard, having had enough with President Zelensky, defects to Hungary.

From Balkan Insight, a Bosnian court upholds the prison sentences given to seven combatants and military policemen from crimes against civilian prisoners in 1992.

From The North Africa Post, Algerian President Abdelmedjid Tebboune meets with Pope Leo XIV in an "attempt to polish his image".

From The New Arab, could El Fasher, Sudan fall to the rebel Rapid Support Forces?

From AMU, according to a U.N. report, the Taliban are torturing and detaining former migrants who return to Afghanistan.

From Gatestone Institute, how Bangladeshi expatriate workers are powering the global jihad.

From Radio Free Asia, thousands of people evacuate from the border between Cambodia and Thailand in order to seek safety.

From The Stream, will the patron saint of Spain ever ride again?

From The Daily Signal, Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro (D) attacks lawmakers attempting to protect women's sports.

From The American Conservative, going behind the curtain on Trump's "Big Beautiful Bill".

From The Western Journal, a report claims to have found a message from Mr. Bill to the recently departed Jeffrey Epstein placed in a book in 2003 for the latter's 50th birthday.  (You could say that both men give this story the "sex offender" label.)

From BizPac Review, a Kenyan-born ethnic Somali who serves in the Maine state legislature calls moving to the U.S. a "bootcamp".

From The Daily Wire, federal money earmarked for training diplomats bankrolled the activities of New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani's (D) father.

From the Daily Caller, fans of the aforementioned Stephen Colbert seem unaware how much CBS was losing on his show.

From Breitbart, Trump tells the media to talk about former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers and the aforementioned Mr. Bill when discussing the aforementioned Jeffrey Epstein.

From Newsmax, Democrats post a graph on X in an attempt to blame Trump for high grocery prices, then delete it when they realize that it shows increases for prices under then-President Biden.

And from the New York Post, a real-life RoboCop directs traffic in Shanghai, China.

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