Monday, January 19, 2026

Monday Links

On sunny but cold Monday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, pro-lifers still need to make themselves heard in Washington, D.C.

From FrontpageMag, left-wingers live by lies.

From Townhall, accurately understanding Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., whose life is remembered on today's holiday.

From The Washington Free Beacon, how former CNN host Don Lemon helped anti-Ice activists storm a church.

From the Washington Examiner, against President Trump's intention of taking Greenland.

From The Federalist, "ICE Watch" activists are not "legal observers", but criminal obstructors.

From American Thinker, a visit to Dr. King's birthplace.

From NewsBusters, the media's 20 worst quotes about Trump during his first year back in office.

From Canada Free Press, Karens are angry that right-wingers know how A.W.F.U.L. they are.  (Having known some very nice females named "Karen" over my lifetime, I get dismayed that their name has been used to describe such very obnoxious females.)

From TeleSUR, conflict between FARC dissident groups in Colombia leaves fighters 26 dead.

From TCW Defending Freedom, U.K. Leader of the Opposition Kemi Badenoch needs to get out more.

From Snouts in the Trough, whom the U.K. allows in and whom it doesn't.

From EuroNews, according to German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, Europe wants to "avoid any escalation" with the U.S. over Greenland.

From Free West Media, leftists in Minnesota declare insurrection against the U.S. government.

From ReMix, foreigners are identified as suspects in sexual assaults and knife attacks at a thermal bath in Werder, Germany.  (If you read German, read a related story at Berliner Zeitung.)

From Balkan Insight, Bulgarian President Rumen Radev announces his resignation, which leads to speculation that he might form a new party.

From The North Africa, Morocco is reportedly considering acquiring K2 Black Panther tanks and Cheongung air defense systems from South Korea.

From The New Arab, what to know about the truce between the Syrian government and the Syrian Democratic Forces.

From The Jerusalem Post, according to the France-based Kurdistan Human Rights Network, two protesters, one of them a child, were sexually assaulted by security forces in Kermanshah, Iran.

From the NL Times, after Morocco's national soccer team loses in the final match of the Africa Cup of Nations, Moroccans riot - in The Netherlands.  (If you read Dutch, read the story at NOS and a related story at AT5.)

From Gatestone Institute, if Iran's regime continues, U.S. President Trump's Gaza "peace" plan will fail.

From The Daily Signal, Ohio state Attorney General Dave Yost explains how a major women's sports case at the Supreme Court could impact Ohio.

From The American Conservative, what pro-lifers and people who call for restraint on foreign policy can learn from Venezuelan opposition leader MarĂ­a Corina Machado.

From The Western Journal, the Department of Justice confirms that the aforementioned Don Lemon and anti-ICE activists who invaded a church will be facing charges.

From BizPac Review, Fox News host Greg Gutfeld writes a tribute to the recently departed Scott Adams.

From the Daily Caller, only one 2028 Democratic presidential contender is willing to tell the truth about transgenders.

From the New York Post, here comes New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani's (D) property tax hike.

From Breitbart, an illegal alien allegedly sells counterfeit pills laced with fentanyl at a farmers market in Forest Park, Georgia.

From Newsmax, according to Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro (D), when vetted by then-Vice President Harris's presidential campaign, he was asked if he had been a double agent for Israel.  (The story links to an article in The New York Times, to which you'll have to create an account if you want to read.)

And from The Babylon Bee, Attorney General Pam Bondi promises to prosecute the Minnesota rioters when she finishes releasing all those Epstein files.

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