On a warm cloudy Tuesday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, Vice President Harris makes a useless speech in Guatemala.
From FrontpageMag, Florida state legislator Randy Fine (R) dares to tell the truth about terrorists.
From Townhall, Senator Marsha Blackburn (R-TN) dares to Tweet the truth about Dr. Fauci.
From The Washington Free Beacon, affording to several Republican Senators, President Biden's plan to reopen Palestinian missions would be illegal.
From the Washington Examiner, the solitary confinement imposed on accused participants in the Capitol riot draws criticism from Democratic Senators and the ACLU.
From The Federalist, in Dr. Fauci's cost-benefits calculation, you paid the cost and he benefitted.
From American Thinker, what if fraud in the 2020 presidential election were to be proven?
From LifeZette, former President Trump and journalist Bill O'Reilly announce a speaking tour for this coming December.
From NewsBusters, Harris has a Mexican cousin, who shares her Asian Indian heritage.
From Canada Free Press, South Dakota Governor Kristi Noem promises to fight critical race theory.
From Global News, residents of the Canadian province of Manitoba who are fully vaccinated against the coronavirus will get secure immunization cards.
From TeleSUR, four indigenous Mexicans are shot to death while votes were counted at a place in the state of Chiapas.
From The Conservative Woman, history should be taken seriously.
From the Evening Standard, Prince Charles is happy to become a grandfather for the fifth time.
From the Irish Examiner, amendments to a climate bill fail in committee in the Irish Dáil.
From The Brussels Times, the Irish commune of Wallonia wants more swimming pools.
From Dutch News, an encrypted communications network set up by the U.S.'s FBI results in 49 arrests in the Netherlands.
From Free West Media, Germany sees an "alarming" number of bankruptcies due to its coronavirus lockdown.
From Allah's Willing Executioners, according to a survey, Germans are worried about radical Islam.
From Gatestone Institute, Denmark discovers that mass migration doesn't work.
From Hungary Today, Hungary's national soccer team refuses to kneel.
From Euractiv, President Alexander Lukashenko signs legislation making Belarusian protest laws tougher.
From Sputnik International, two teenagers are shot in the Russian region of Volgograd. (The city of Volgograd was once named Stalingrad, and was the site of a major battle in World War II between the Soviet and German armies.)
From ReMix, Russia plans to deploy its hypersonic missiles in the exclave of Kaliningrad, which borders Poland.
From EuroNews, why did Romania's coronavirus vaccination campaign derail after having a good start?
From The Sofia Globe, caretaker Interior Minister Boiko Rashkov removes Bulgaria's national police chief and designates a replacement.
From Ekathimerini, due to the coronavirus, it's the "right time" to improve road infrastructure in the Greek region of Attica.
From Independent Balkan News Agency, according to German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas, E.U. membership negotiations with Albania and North Macedonia will begin this year.
From Balkan Insight, a U.N. court in The Hague confirms a life sentence for former Bosnian Serb military leader Ratko Mladić.
From Malta Today, Maltese customs authorities seize a record amount of she-don't-lie.
From Italy24News, Catania is the province of Italy most affected by the coronavirus. (The province and its namesake city are on the island of Sicily.)
From RFI, when in France, don't slap their president.
From The North Africa Post, Tunisian politician Nabil Karoui is admitted to a hospital after a hunger strike.
From Turkish Minute, Turkish police detain 26 former military cadets for alleged Gülen links.
From The Times Of Israel, the inauguration of Israel's new government is set for this coming Sunday.
From Egypt Today, what did the Financial Times get wrong about Egypt's New Administrative Capital?
From the Ethiopian Monitor, Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta starts his official visit to Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
From The New Arab, Iraqi authorities release a militia leader previously arrested on suspicion of being involved in the murder of a pro-democracy activist.
From IranWire, a look at 5,000 years of Iranian art.
From The Express Tribune, the Pakistani party PML-Q will not back the governing party PTI until its demands are met.
From the Afghanistan Times, Afghan security forces send 91 Taliban terrorists to their virgins.
From the Daily Mirror, according to Army Commander General Shavendra Silva, there is no plan to lift travel restrictions and impose a curfew in Sri Lanka.
From The Straits Times, the ruling junta in Myanmar defends its plan for restoring democracy.
From the Borneo Post, according to Home Minister Datuk Seri Hamzah Zainudin, a human trafficking ring attempting to smuggle Rohingya into Malaysia will be tracked down.
From Vietnam Plus, Foreign Ministers Bui Thanh Son (Vietnam) and Wang Yi (China) hold talks in Beijing.
From The Stream, yes, there is news about election fraud, if you know where to find it.
From The Daily Signal, Republicans win mayoral races in Texas due to increased Latino support.
From The American Conservative, America's apparently inevitable war with China.
From The Western Journal, congresscritter Lauren Bobert (R-CO) finds a way to bring Vice President Harris to the Mexican border.
From the Daily Caller, gun control supporters howl and gnash their teeth after California's assault weapons ban is struck down by a court.
From The Daily Wire, President Biden's proposed budget refers to women as "birthing people".
From Breitbart, in a speech to North Carolina Republicans, former President Trump discusses the "witch hunt" against him.
And from the New York Post, it's the peacock posse from Pasadena.
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