On a sunny but cool Monday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, former President Trump gets a break, and a reprieve.
From FrontpageMag, President John Quincy Adams and his "essay" about the Ottoman Turks.
From Townhall, Fulton County, Georgia District Attorney Fani Willis shows that she hasn't learned her lesson.
From The Washington Free Beacon, one part of President Biden's political origin story is almost certainly fake news, and could get him into legal trouble.
From the Washington Examiner, retired Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer would be "amazed" if the draft decision in the Dobbs v. Jackson case was leaked by a justice.
From The Federalist, Indiana state Attorney General Todd Rokita (R) admits that coronavirus-related data from four years ago was inflated.
From American Thinker, (D)enying election results is (D)ifferent when (D)one by the other si(D)e.
From MRCTV, no, birds do not change their sex.
From NewsBusters, The Washington Times exposes pro-trans earmarks in the recent federal omnibus spending bill.
From Canada Free Press, it's time to stand up for Trump and for America.
From TeleSUR, Venezuelan President Maduro registers his bid for reelection.
From TCW Defending Freedom, virtue signaling doesn't help minorities and merely makes everybody else even more cranky.
From EuroNews, a new sleeper train goes from Brussels, Belgium to Prague, Czech Republic.
From Voice Of Europe, talks to form a new government for Bulgaria collapse as former E.U. commissioner Mariya Gabriel withdraws her bid to become prime minister.
From ReMix, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán explains why Ukrainian grain exports harm European farmers.
From Balkan Insight, a closed border crossing condemns an area in North Macedonia to decline.
From The North Africa Post, Algerian President Tebboune shortens his term without giving any explanation.
From The961, Lebanese olive oil wins two global awards.
From Arutz Sheva, according to Israeli Ambassador to the United Nations Gilad Erdan, Israeli blood is cheap to the U.N. Security Council.
From The Times Of Israel, the controversial "United Purim" parade in Jerusalem, Israel draws a lowered turnout after protests.
From The Jerusalem Post, the Israeli security agency Shin Bet seizes Iranian weapons intended for terrorists residing in the West Bank, and Hamas admits firing mortars at IDF troops near the Al-Shifa hospital.
From YNetNews, the Lebanese media is surprise by the IDF re-entering the Al-Shifa hospital, which is the largest in Gaza.
From the Egypt Independent, Egyptian President Abdel al-Sisi calls on the U.N. Security Council to end the war in Gaza.
From Egypt Today, the Egyptian Air Force continues to conduct airdrops of humanitarian aid into Gaza.
From the Ethiopian Monitor, the GirlsTech Project equips young female students digital skills and helps to empower them in STEM education.
From the Saudi Gazette, golf carts are made available to the elderly and people with special needs who wish to circumambulate the Kaaba at the Grand Mosque in Mecca, Saudi Arabia.
From Doha News, the Qatar Red Crescent Society supplies food for 234,000 Muslims in 18 countries for those who need food as they observe Ramadan.
From The New Arab, 101 Jordanians are arrested while allegedly attempting to "besiege" the Israeli embassy in Ammon, Jordan.
From RAIR Foundation USA, Austria bolsters its Easter security due to a high threat level from Islamic terrorism.
From The Jewish Chronicle, racist fans threaten to boycott the latest James Bond film if the title character is portrayed by a Jewish actor.
From Gatestone Institute, the U.N. is called to respond to sharia-linked violence against women.
From The Stream, rudderless Republican congresscritters funds the deep state and gets nothing in return.
From The Daily Signal, some U.S. Army retirees are urged to return to work due to manpower shortages. (Wait a second, I just got a message from Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau objecting to the term "manpower". He wants me to instead say "peoplepower", with which my spellchecker has no problem.)
From The American Conservative, Biden's abuse of humanitarian parole is driving the migration crisis.
From The Western Journal, Vice President Harris accidentally tells the truth about the war in Gaza.
From BizPac Review, the Biden administration is already trying to bring "pride" flags back to U.S. diplomatic facilities.
From The Daily Wire, right-wing commentator Ben Shapiro shows how Biden has made the fentanyl crisis worse.
From the Daily Caller, Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador blames the fentanyl crisis on the United States. (I'd say that he's partly right, for reasons explained just above in TDW. However, the drug cartels which smuggle fentanyl into the U.S. are based in Mexico, so AMLO and his country have to take part of the blame.)
From the New York Post, what is "iPhone finger"?
From Breitbart, actor Forrie J. Smith of the show Yellowstone is kicked off a plane for refusing to sit next to a passenger wearing a mask.
And from The Babylon Bee, Boeing's board of directors forces CEO Dave Calhoun to resign after evidence surfaces indicating that he's a white male.
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