On a partly sunny and mild Tuesday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, a report from Syria.
From FrontpageMag, Hamas murdered a peace activist who helped Gazans seek medical treatment in Israeli hospitals.
From Townhall, look who has connections to USAID.
From The Washington Free Beacon, a Columbia University instructor cancels his class for an anti-Israel protest, one day after radicals storm a building at Bernard College.
From the Washington Examiner, American conservatives need to understand the truth about the European version of "conservatism".
From The Federalist, who then-President Biden's blank check for Ukraine bounced.
From American Thinker, how to speak like a leftist.
From MRCTV, in a high school track meet, a gender-deluded boy wins the triple jump for girls by eight feet.
From NewsBusters, panelists on MSNBC find it "very painful" that Republicans are defending women's sports.
From Canada Free Press, what were the people of Boston thinking when they elected Michelle Wu as their mayor?
From TeleSUR, the Peruvian Supreme Court starts its trial of former President Pedro Castillo.
From TCW Defending Freedom, the U.K. has one law for eco-nut-jobs, and another for little old ladies who just want to pray.
From Snouts in the Trough, why black people are superior to whites in every way possible. (In case you're wondering, this assertion is meant to be understood sarcastically.)
From the NL Times, police uncover a lab for making she-don't-lie in The Hague, Netherlands and arrest four men from Colombia in connection with it.
From Dutch News, sunlight reflecting from solar panels is reportedly a problem for pilots flying into and out of Schiphol Airport in the Netherlands. (If you read Dutch, read the story at NU.)
From VRT NWS, over 58 kilos of ketamine was seized in January and February of this year at Belgium's Brussels and Liège airports.
From The Brussels Times, Prime Minister Bart De Wever wants to increase Belgium's defense spending to 2 percent of its GDP "by this summer".
From Deutsche Welle, the German parties CDU and SPD agree on a spending package.
From Polskie Radio, according to Eurostat, the Polish unemployment rate is at 2.6 percent, which ties the Czech Republic for lowest in the E.U.
From Radio Prague, leaders of the Czech governing coalition criticize U.S. President Trump for cutting off military aid to Ukraine.
From The Slovak Spectator, a mine in Slovakia has a name which refers to bears, but none have ever been found in it. (If you read Slovak, read the story at My Východ.)
From Daily News Hungary, why is American singer Elvis Presley honored in Budapest, Hungary, a city he never visited?
From Hungary Today, Hungarian soccer player Dominik Szoboszlai is a huge motivator for upcoming athletes.
From About Hungary, Hungarian European Affairs Minister János Bóka calls on the E.U. to withdraw its lawsuit against Hungary.
From EuroNews, Serbian opposition parliamentcritters show how not to participate in a parliamentary session.
From Balkan Insight, more on what happened at the Serbian parliament.
From Free West Media, Russian President Putin agrees to mediate nuclear talks after a request from U.S. President Trump. (The article refers to a story in Bloomberg, to which you'll have to subscribe in order to read.)
From The North Africa Post, Morocco receives six AH-64E Apache helicopters, the first batch of an order of 36 such helicopters.
From The New Arab, gum arabic is smuggled from rebel-controlled areas of Sudan.
From AMU, the Taliban flog at least 72 people in 11 days.
From Gatestone Institute, the disastrous involvement of South Africa troops in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
From Radio Free Asia, China retaliates against U.S. tariffs.
From The Stream, the political storms in the U.S., Europe, Russia and Ukraine.
From The Daily Signal, First Lady Melania Trump advocates for a bill that would fight against "revenge porn".
From The American Conservative, to really make America healthy again, first make the SNAP program healthy.
From The Western Journal, a "humiliating" problem is found with anti-Trump videos from Senators Chuck Schumer (D-NY), Cory Booker (D-NJ) and Fake Cherokee (D-MA).
From BizPac Review, actor and comedian Bill Murray thinks that President Nixon was framed.
From The Daily Wire, a female volleyball player injured by trans-identifying male opponent will be one of Trump's guests at his address to a joint session of Congress.
From the Daily Caller, the Department of Justice supports using the abortion lobby's favorite law against people accused of harassing Jews.
From Breitbart, Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum blames drug-addicted Americans for the tariffs her country is facing, not the drug lords whom he government protects.
From Newsmax, the White House releases a list of the Trump administration's accomplishments ahead of his aforementioned speech to Congress.
And from the New York Post, a woman finds her doppelgänger in a 1909 painting by Russian artist Zinaida Serebriakov.
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