Wednesday, August 27, 2025

Wednesday Whatnot

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

From National Review, the question of whether President Trump can fire Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook is somewhat complicated.

From FrontpageMag, then-Vice President Harris's horrible presidential campaign.

From Townhall, a gunmen kills two children and injures at least 14 others, and three adults, at a Catholic school in Minneapolis, and anti-gunners waste no time in exploiting the victims.

From The Washington Free Beacon, a Palestinian activist hailed as a "hero" by the media claims that she is "fighting the Jews, not Zionism".

From the Washington Examiner, more on the shooting in Minneapolis.

From The Federalist, a Wisconsin county judge will face trial for allegedly helping an illegal alien flee from ICE.

From American Thinker, the climate won't cooperate with dire predictions, so the dire predictions will keep coming.

From MRCTV, employees of Vanity Fair threaten to "walk out the [bleepity-bleep] door" if the magazine puts First Lady Melania Trump on its cover.

From NewsBusters, The View is set to start its 29th season hosting left-wing Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, with no right-wing guests.

From Canada Free Press, the only signals needed at crosswalks are "walk" and "don't walk".

From TeleSUR, will the relationship between the Sheinbaum administration in Mexico and the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration start a new era or bring on a clash?

From TCW Defending Freedom, Reform UK party leader Nigel Farage's plans to stem the tide on illegal immigration.

From Snouts in the Trough, it looks like SitT will soon be taken down.

From EuroNews, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen is reportedly not interested in becoming the president of Germany.

From ReMix, the American man who saved a woman from a Syrian migrant, who was then knifed in the face, speaks out against Germany's mass immigration policies.

From Balkan Insight, Serbian police confront students manning a blockade at the University of Novi Sad.

From The North Africa Post, members of the Algerian-backed group Polisario have fled to Syria, with some being detained by Syrian authorities.

From The New Arab, protests over a proposed disarmament of Hezbollah cause U.S. envoy Tom Barrack to cut short his visit to Lebanon.

From The Jerusalem Post, two Arab teenagers are arrested in Paris for allegedly plotting an attack against the Eiffel Tower and some synagogues.

From Jewish News Syndicate, exposing the liars who allege a "genocide" in Gaza one fact at a time.

From Gatestone Institute, will U.S. President Trump let Russian President Putin win?

From Radio Free Asia, according to satellite images, a damaged Chinese coast guard ship is under repair at the Chinese island of Hainan.

From The Stream, what's really dangerous about progressive Christianity.

From The Daily Signal, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy celebrates the inaugural ride of a new high-speed train between Union Station in Washington, D.C. and Penn Station in New York City.

From The American Conservative, Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu wants Trump to attack Iran again.

From The Western Journal, still more on the aforementioned shooting in Minneapolis, and information about the shooter.

From BizPac Review, during a cabinet meeting, Trump compliments Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg for his new AI data center, currently under construction in Richland Parish, Louisiana.

From The Daily Wire, after a transgender person killed six people at a Christian school in Tennessee in 2023, leaders of independent and Catholic schools in Minnesota begged Governor Tim Walz (D) for help, but he did nothing.

From the Daily Caller, still more on the aforementioned Minneapolis school shooter.

From the New York Post, mom-and-pop New York City landlords fear that their rental properties will become unsellable if mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani (D) wins.

From Breitbart, severe winds destroy the "orgy dome" at the Burning Man festival.

From Newsmax, a Trump administration plan would place some limits on visas for foreign students, cultural exchange visitors and media personnel.

And from SFGate, a zip code in California has just 38 residents, but gets almost 10 million visitors each year.

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