On a cool and cloudy Monday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, President Trump announces tariffs on any country which buys oil from Venezuela.
From FrontpageMag, even Senator Socialism (I-VT) won't endorse congresscritter AOC (D-NY) for Senator.
From Townhall, another "transgender"-identifying activist is charged with allegedly vandalizing a Tesla service center near Chicago.
From The Washington Free Beacon, inside the largest coronavirus-related fraud in the U.S.
From the Washington Examiner, Greenlandic leaders don't appreciate their island being visited by U.S. National Security Advisor Mike Waltz and Second Lady Usha Vance. (If you read Danish, read a related story at Sermitsiaq.)
From The Federalist, red states are paying for California giving health care to illegal aliens.
From American Thinker, how birthright citizenship works, in the U.S. and elsewhere.
From MRCTV, Disney's remake of Snow White flops on its opening weekend.
From NewsBusters, the website Twitchy shreds San Diego-area ABC affiliate KGTV for lamenting the new razor wire at the southern border wall.
From Canada Free Press, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney starts off this year's election campaign.
From TeleSUR, Panamanians oppose a proposed open-pit copper mining project.
From TCW Defending Freedom, yes, there should be disagreement in the U.K.'s pubs, because that's why they exist.
From EuroNews, 24 people are detained for allegedly helping French drug lord Mohamed Amra escape from prison.
From ReMix, to what extent is a ceasefire in Ukraine realistic? (If you read Hungarian, read a related story at Portfolio.)
From Balkan Insight, Turkish police detain journalists covering opposition protests in İstanbul, whose mayor Ekrem İmamoğlu was recently arrested. (What is this "freedom of the press" you speak of?)
From The North Africa Post, recent rainfall improves Morocco's dam filling rate.
From the Libyan Express, authorities in Imsaad, Libya discover and seize military equipment washed up on the shores of the nearby port of Bardiyah.
From Hürriyet Daily News, the steamboat Kartal, once used by Türkiye founder Gazi Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, goes on display at the Çanakkale Naval Museum.
From Turkish Minute, according to an opinion column, the aforementioned arrest of Mayor İmamoğlu signals that Turkey is becoming a Russian-style autocracy.
From Rûdaw, according to a Syrian Kurdish official, the division of Syria is not on the Kurds' agenda.
From Armenpress, Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan talks with his counterparts from Iran, Hungary, and Russia.
From Public Radio Of Armenia, according to Armenian Deputy Foreign Minister Paruyr Hovhannsiayn, visa liberalization talks between Armenia and the E.U. will enter their next phase in April.
From Azərbaycan24, Azerbaijan becomes a full member of the Developing-8 Organization for Economic Cooperation.
From The Syrian Observer, vehicle-born people promoting Islam in Christian neighborhoods in Syria disturb Muslims even more than they disturb Christians.
From North Press Agency, an unexploded missile found in a structurally compromise mosque is relocated and detonated.
From In-Cyprus, doctors in Cyprus raise the alarm over understaffing at the Famagusta General Hospital.
From The New Arab, according to the Iraqi government, reports of Yemeni Houthis being present in Baghdad have been greatly exaggerated.
From Jewish News Syndicate, a sewer worker in the U.K. is fired for condemning Hamas and its October 7th, 2023 attack on Israel.
From Arutz Sheva, a Syrian commander tells his troops to not leave any Alawites alive.
From Gatestone Institute, Syrian terrorists wear suits and ties.
From Radio Free Asia, the Myanmar junta bombs a medical clinic in the region of Magway, killing 11 people.
From The Stream, evil exposes itself in attacks against Teslas and the Constitution.
From The Daily Signal, the president of the Heritage Foundation warns that the lack of U.S. presence in Panama has allowed China to step into the resulting "vacuum".
From The American Conservative, how the war with Russia has taken a toll on Ukraine's "City of Lions". (During the late 1800s, one of my great-grandmothers left the then-Austro-Hungarian city of Lemberg and emigrated to the United States. Today, it is the Ukrainian city of Lviv. Because she was Polish, she would most likely have called the place Lwów. The Polish word for "lion" is lew, in the nominative singular. In the genitive plural, it becomes lwów. This means that the city's name literally means "of lions".)
From The Western Journal, a data expert claims that many attendees at a rally for the aforementioned Senator Socialism and congresscritter AOC also attended many other rallies.
From BizPac Review, ICE and the IRS are reportedly ready to sign a deal giving ICE access to the tax information of illegal aliens.
From The Daily Wire, following the collapse of ceasefire talks, Israel has sent over a dozen Hamas leaders to their virgins.
From the Daily Caller, former President Biden reappears on X.
From the New York Post, if you've got $6.95 million lying around, you can former NFL player Mike Pouncey's home in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, which comes with its own football field.
From Breitbart, according to congresscritter Jasmine Crockett (D-TX), Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) "has to be knocked over the head".
From Newsmax, Trump names his former defense attorney and current White House counsellor Alina Habba to be the U.S. attorney for New Jersey.
And from The Babylon Bee, the Chief Twit disguises an IRS building as a Tesla dealership in hopes that Democrats will burn it down.