Tuesday, July 29, 2025

Tuesday Tidings

As the hot and sunny weather continues on a Tuesday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, the illegal alien who became a policeman.

From FrontpageMag, what a victory by mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani (D) will mean for New York City's Jews.

From Townhall, Border Czar Tom Homan wrecks one of my Senators over a pro-criminal stunt.

From The Washington Free Beacon, the EPA moves to rescind the legal basis, put in place by then-President Obama, for emissions regulations on gas-powered cars.

From the Washington Examiner, the "extraordinary" surge of migrants under then-President Biden.

From The Federalist, Russiagate would not have been possible without complicity from the media.

From American Thinker, those phantom nooses just keep popping up.

From MRCTV, pro-abortion activist Lena Dunham returns to TV with her new rom-com Too Much.

From NewsBusters, NewsNation anchor Chris Cuomo blames a shooting in New York City on speech.

From Canada Free Press, solar power plants are disappearing.

From TeleSUR, Colombia strengthens security for a judge who convicted former President Alvaro Uribe of fraud and bribery.

From TCW Defending Freedom, how the U.K. left obscured the truth about the grooming gangs.

From Snouts in the Trough, when the media reports on Israel, "the truth is irrelevant".

From the NL Times, for one third of Dutch households who installed solar panels, the panels have payed for themselves.

From Dutch News, fewer Europeans and Indians are relocating to the Netherlands.

From VRT NWS, a woman in Essen, Belgium risks getting a Darwin Award nomination, and endangers her two children as well.

From The Brussels Times, an area in Brussels, Belgium is reopened after a bomb threat.

From Deutsche Welle, the Nuremburg Zoo kills 12 baboons, causing an outcry in Germany.

From ReMix, Berlin's special visa program that allows Syrians, Iraqis and Afghans to sponsor their relatives is terminated by German Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt.

From Polskie Radio, according to Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk, 32 people have been detained over alleged ties to Russian intelligence.  (Looks like Poland has its own "Russian collusion" problem.)

From Radio Prague, according to Czech transgender activist Lenka Králová, Prague Pride is "more important than Christmas".

From The Slovak Spectator, the Slovak electric vehicle start-up Patak Motors falters under mounting debt, legal disputes, and production delays.

From EuroNews, a pro-HamasPalestine group protests the arrival of an Israeli cruise ship on the Greek island of Crete.

From Balkan Insight, the U.S. again postpones placing sanctions on the majority-Russian-owned Serbian oil firm NIS.

From The North Africa Post, how Tunisian President Kais Saied turned his country into an "open air prison".

From The New Arab, Morocco's cycle of droughts and floods gives rise to cloud seeding conspiracy theories.

From Arutz Sheva, Hamas is caught on camera looting humanitarian aid and blocking its distribution to Gazans.

From The Jerusalem Post, according to Iranian-born Belgian parliamentcritter Darya Safai, Iranian forces were planning to kidnap her when she visited Turkey.

From Jewish News Syndicate, two coaches for Israel's national soccer team are attacked in Athens, Greece.

From Gatestone Institute, the Muslim Brotherhood deserved to be designated by the U.S. as a terrorist organization.

From Radio Free Asia, the Thai and Cambodian militaries chart their paths forward.

From The Stream, let's build a new Tower of Babel, but on sand.

From The Daily Signal, Poland benefits from climate realism.

From The American Conservative, some Afghan men come to Europe because of "blonde women and money from the wall".

From The Western Journal, a top executive at the investment firm Blackstone was among the victims of the shooting in New York City.

From BizPac Review, a ruling by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals allows Californians to buy ammo online.

From The Daily Wire, the U.K. threatens to recognize the "state of Palestine" if Israel does not agree to a ceasefire in Gaza.

From the Daily Caller, a WNBA game is brought to a temporary halt when a player loses her wig.

From the New York Post, almost 2 million illegal aliens with deportation orders or criminal histories are still at large in the U.S.

From Breitbart, the perpetrator of the aforementioned New York City shooting claimed to have chronic traumatic encephalopathy, for which he blamed the NFL.

From Newsmax, according to retired NYPD Detective Bo Dietl, New York City would not be protected from violent crime or terrorism under the policies of the aforementioned Zohran Mamdani.

And from SFGate, former Speaker Pelosi (D-Cal) is spotted at a Lady Gaga concert in San Francisco.

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