On a sunny and mild Tuesday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, our new media gatekeepers are just a little bit better than the old ones.
From FrontpageMag, Democrats offer lame excuses for why they did not clap for anything in President Trump's address to Congress.
From Townhall, Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lee Zeldin announces major taxpayer savings in the fourth round of DOGE cuts to his agency.
From The Washington Free Beacon, professors at Columbia University cancel classes in solidarity with a pro-Hamas activist now facing deportation.
From the Washington Examiner, according to Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins, egg prices have dropped by $1.85 per dozen since Trump took office.
From The Federalist, according to Vice President Vance, unchecked immigration makes the American dream much more difficult.
From American Thinker, Syria is becoming a graveyard for Christianity, and the West is complicit.
From MRCTV, a (probably incomplete) list of contracts canceled by DOGE.
From NewsBusters, PBS falsely claims that there's no evidence that the aforementioned pro-Hamas activist was pro-Hamas.
From Canada Free Press, three Canadian WEF'er politicians and their staged leadership convention.
From TeleSUR, Argentine congresscritters file a criminal complaint against President Javier Milei over a deal with the International Monetary Fund.
From TCW Defending Freedom, some inconvenient truths for the U.K.'s new pensions minister.
From EuroNews, the European Commission proposes a program to enable E.U. countries to transfer rejected asylum seekers to countries outside the E.U.
From Free West Media, say goodbye to woke globalist Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and say hello to his successor woke globalist Mark Carney.
From Balkan Insight, students blockade the buildings of Serbia's two main public broadcasters in the cities of Belgrade and Novi Sad.
From The North Africa Post, Maroc Telecom's subsidiary in Gabon avoids being nationalized.
From The New Arab, the Druze in Syria are caught between local and regional power struggles.
From IranWire, a court in Tehran, Iran sentences to Christian converts to prison.
From Iran International, Iran cracks down on female singers by imposing social media bans.
From Khaama Press, India donates 32 tons of humanitarian aid, including medicines, equipment and winter coats, to support drug treatment centers in Afghanistan.
From AMU, the Taliban flog five men and a woman in the Afghani province of Kapisa, and Afghanistan's female judges remain barred from their jobs during International Women's Day.
From the Afghanistan Times, the Taliban allow a private Dari-language television channel to resume operations.
From The Express Tribune, more on the terrorist attack on a train in Pakistan.
From Pakistan Today, former Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan files a request with the Lahore High Court seeking early hearings in his bail cases.
From the Daily Mail, still on the aforementioned terrorist attack on a train in Pakistan.
From Gatestone Institute, is the movement to combat "climate change" the "grift of the century"?
From Radio Free Asia, the Independent Vietnamese Writers' Association awards a poetry prize, but will not name its recipient for safety reasons.
From The Stream, the E.U. spends big euros to stifle free speech while the U.K. moves toward banning Islamophobia. (The article uses the terms "dollars" and "bucks", but the E.U. uses euros and some national currencies.)
From The Daily Signal, yes, the U.S. can deport green card holders who support terrorism.
From The American Conservative, reports of European opposition to U.S. President Trump have been greatly exaggerated.
From The Western Journal, customers of Southwest Airlines are furious after it scraps its "bags fly free" policy.
From BizPac Review, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard revokes the security clearances of some Biden administration officials and cancels former President Biden's daily briefing.
From The Daily Wire, Irish police used a secret court order in an attempt to extract information from journalists, which the platform X shut down.
From the Daily Caller, a win by a radical left-wing judge in Wisconsin could doom Republican chances of keeping the House of Representatives in 2026.
From the New York Post, Ukraine agrees to a 30-day cease fire with Russia proposed by the U.S., which will resume sharing intelligence with Ukraine.
From Breitbart, congresscritter Michael Cloud (R-TX) introduces a bill to protect gun rights during national emergencies.
From Newsmax, Trump announces that he will buy a new Tesla car to show his support for the Chief Twit.
And from Clickhole, Trump has been haunted by the ghost of Gilbert Gottfried as punishment for firing him from The Apprentice.
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