Monday, October 20, 2025

Monday Mania

On a sunny and cool Monday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, a brazen heist of jewels from the Louvre embarrasses France.

From FrontpageMag, New York City gets its last warning about mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani (D).

From Townhall, the question that stumped people at CBS.

From The Washington Free Beacon, goodbye, MSNBC.

From the Washington Examiner, the Supreme Court agrees to take a case in which an issue is whether illegal drug users can be forbidden to own guns.

From The Federalist, the Democrats have become the party of grumpy old people.

From American Thinker, some family background on the aforementioned Zohran Mamdani.

From MRCTV, a video showing "No Kings" protesters being unable to explain how President Trump is a fascist dictator.

From NewsBusters, CBS slams former White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre for defending former President Biden and claiming to be independent.

From Canada Free Press, where where the "No Kings" protesters during the Biden presidency?  (It seems that when people complain about "authoritarianism", they give a free pass to the authoritarianism that they agree with.)

From TeleSUR, 228 earthquakes strike in Guatemala in 24 hours.  (I hope this doesn't mean that Vice President Vance is trying to operate the Dick Cheney Earthquake Machine.)

From TCW Defending Freedom, banning Israeli soccer fans is both cowardly and stupid.

From Snouts in the Trough, more criticism of the banning of Israeli soccer fans.

From EuroNews, a road connecting Poland to the Baltic states opens amid tensions with Russia.

From ReMix, Portuguese Leader of the Opposition André Ventura tells Muslims that they can "catch a flight home" is they don't like a recently passed ban on burqas.

From Balkan Insight, North Macedonia's governing party celebrates wins in local elections.

From The North Africa Post, Libya has a strong voter turnout in its local elections.

From The New Arab, now that there's a ceasefire in Gaza, what's next for the war in Yemen?

From the Daily Mail, a Moroccan migrant allegedly steals £3,000 worth of items and damages "extremely rare" plants at Magdalen College, part of Oxford University.

From The JCA, an Islamist preacher banned from the U.K. arrives in Canada.

From Gatestone Institute, the implications of Hamas executing Gazans and the world going Sergeant Schultz about them.

From Radio Free Asia, the junta that rules Myanmar claims to have seized 30 Starlink satellite dishes in a raid on a cyberscam center.

From The Stream, "No Kings" protesters virtue-signal nationwide, and Trump poo-poos them.

From The Daily Signal, according to Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, the department has arrested about 480,000 criminal illegal aliens.

From The American Conservative, how Secretary of State and former Senator (R-FL) Marco Rubio became Trump's main hawk on Latin America.

From The Western Journal, a liberal woman from Los Angeles has second thoughts after moving to Costa Rica to escape from Trump.

From BizPac Review, Trump warns Democrats that he could use "unquestioned power" with the Insurrection Act.

From the Daily Caller, actress Kim Kardashian departs from wearing her usual amount of makeup.  (Although the Kardashians may be a bit odd, they should not be confused with the Cardassians.)

From the New York Post, demolition starts on the East Wing of the White House to make way for Trump's $250 million ballroom.

From Breitbart, Trump signs a rare earths and critical minerals deal with Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese.

From Newsmax, Pope Leo XIV proclaims the canonization of seven new saints at a Mass in St. Peter's Square at Vatican City.

And from The Babylon Bee, Trump completes his renovations to the White House throne room.

No comments:

Post a Comment