On a cold and cloudy Tuesday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, a lesson for New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani (D) from Minnesota Governor Tim Walz (D).
From FrontpageMag, President Trump's most important achievement, for which all Americans should be thankful.
From Townhall, the aforementioned Mayor Mamdani finds another thing that he thinks he can make "affordable".
From The Washington Free Beacon, senatorial candidate Abdul El-Sayed (D-Mich) claims that Oklahoma's ban on Sharia is similar to the Trail of Tears suffered by the Cherokee.
From the Washington Examiner, the Department of Justice asks a federal appeals court to strike down a California law requiring background checks for buying ammunition.
From The Federalist, according to Secretary of War Pete Hegseth, the military is "already surpassing" the recruiting numbers from the surge a year ago.
From American Thinker, Republicans should be careful about which polls and pundits they trust this year.
From NewsBusters, a man uses a hammer to break windows at Vice President Vance's home in Ohio, which ABC and CBS ignore.
From Canada Free Press, Ukrainian President Zelensky appoints Canadian parliamentcritter Chrystia Freeland as his economic development advisor. (She still is in the Canadian parliament. Apparently, some people are allowed to work for the governments of two countries at the same time. Her mother was Ukrainian, and unlike former First Son Hunter Biden, actually speaks Ukrainian.)
From TeleSUR, Venezuelan Attorney General Tarek William Saab demands the release of President Nicolás Maduro.
From TCW Defending Freedom, the U.K.'s "safeguarding" policy protects ideology, not children.
From EuroNews, at least six people in Europe die in cold weather-related accidents. (The cold weather will soon be blamed, of course, on man-made global warming.)
From ReMix, police in Barcelona, Spain arrest 15 international bus drivers for allegedly accepting money from illegal migrants to transport them into France. (If you read Spanish, read the story at El País. If you read French, read the story at Le Parisien.)
From Balkan Insight, several municipalities in Kosovo are struck by floods. (These, too, might get blamed on man-made global warming.)
From The North Africa Post, Morocco hosted a record 19.8 million tourists in 2025.
From The New Arab, five people are killed in Aleppo, Syria in clashes between Syrian government troops and Syrian Democratic Forces personnel.
From The Times Of Israel, violence surrounding protests in Iran claim the lives of 35 people, including four children.
From Arutz Sheva, according to an opinion column, "when sanctuaries change hands, civilizations speak".
From Gatestone Institute, it's time to prepare for a regional conflict before boatloads of Iranians attempt to reach the UAE.
From The Daily Signal, Hilton removes from its "system" the hotel in the Minneapolis area that refused to accommodate federal immigration enforcement agents.
From The American Conservative, with Maduro out, what comes next for Venezuela.
From The Western Journal, the CDC revises the childhood vaccination schedule after an "exhaustive review of the evidence".
From BizPac Review, the Capitol police officer who shot and killed January 6th protester Ashli Babbitt has an "alarming side gig".
From the Daily Caller, California Governor Gavin Newsom (D) blames deportations for the slow reconstruction of areas hit by fires in Altadena and the Los Angeles neighborhood of Pacific Palisades.
From the New York Post, ♪ICE ICE baby♪.
From Breitbart, congresscritter Jasmine Crockett (D-TX) screams "[bleep] you!" at the Supreme Court for not blocking redistricting in Texas.
And from SFGate, the richest people in the U.S. shop at a 137-year-old grocery store in Woodside, California.
