As the sunny and mild weather continues on a Wednesday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, Russian President Putin is playing U.S. President Trump.
From FrontpageMag, could former Chicago Mayor and White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel save the Democratic Party?
From Townhall, Democrats are choosing some stupid hills to die on.
From The Washington Free Beacon, in its internal documents, Columbia University's Graduate Student Union list demands including a "sanctuary campus".
From the Washington Examiner, the Department of Energy approves a "massive" liquefied natural gas facility held up by the Biden administration's pause on such exports.
From The Federalist, the judge appointed by then-President Biden who blocked the military's new "trans" policy has donated thousands of dollars to Democrat candidates and causes.
From American Thinker, selective media outrage over a doctor and a funeral for a terrorist.
From NewsBusters, the grilling of Senator Chuck Schumer (D-NY) on CBS Mornings was really a left-wing group therapy session.
From Canada Free Press, flushing new Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney out of the shadows.
From TeleSUR, Nicaragua withdraws from the Central American Court of Justice.
From TCW Defending Freedom, the migrant crime wave which the U.K. government tries its hardest to conceal.
From the NL Times, Dutch health officials find four measles clusters among primary school children in the cities of Amsterdam, Rotterdam, The Hague and Eindhoven.
From Dutch News, according to a survey, 16 percent of Dutch voters have confidence in the country's cabinet. (If you read Dutch, read the story at RTL Nieuws.)
From VRT NWS, almost 1.5 million Belgian phone users have put themselves on a don't-call-me list.
From The Brussels Times, Belgian Prime Minister Bart De Wever warns that the E.U.'s rearmament plan contains "no free money".
From Deutsche Welle, China's grip is growing on Germany's car industry and on other sectors.
From Polskie Radio, Poland grants extended parental leave to the parents of premature babies.
From Radio Prague, according to Czech Foreign Minister Jan Lipavský, "Russia wants Czechia under its control".
From The Slovak Spectator, a small Slovak satellite contributes bigly to astrophysics.
From Daily News Hungary, the district of Csúcshegy could secede from Budapest, Hungary.
From Hungary Today, more victims of a fire at a nightclub in North Macedonia arrive at hospitals in Hungary.
From About Hungary, according to Hungarian Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó, Hungary's government was Trump before Trump.
From EuroNews, North Macedonian officials close down dozens of illegal nightclubs after the aforementioned fire.
From Free West Media, have the aforementioned Presidents Putin and Trump checkmated the globalists?
From ReMix, 71.4 percent of all new jobs in Spain in the last five years went to foreigners. (If you read Spanish, read a related story at El Debate.)
From Balkan Insight, as dissent grows in Serbia, time is no longer on the side of President Aleksandar Vučić.
From The North Africa Post, the Economic Community of West African States calls for urgent action to address the food crisis in Western Africa.
From The New Arab, who was Palestinian Islamic Jihad spokesman Abu Hamza, recently killed in an Israeli offensive?
From Allah's Willing Executioners, a primary school in Hamburg, Germany lists only Islamic holidays in addition to its normal events. (If you read German, read the story at Apollo News.)
From The Jerusalem Post, Turkish police detain İstanbul Mayor Ekrem İmamoğlu on a variety of charges.
Form Gatestone Institute, is Germany moving "toward a new domination of Europe"?
From Radio Free Asia, according to South Korea's foreign ministry, Chinese authorities prevented South Korean authorities from investigating a steel structure in the Yellow Sea.
From The Stream, President John F. Kennedy didn't kill himself, and other things learned from the JFK assassination files.
From The Daily Signal, Trump pauses $175 million in federal funding to the alma mater of trans swimmer Lia Thomas.
From The American Conservative, the Chief Twit should defund the Legal Services Corporation.
From The Western Journal, according to two studies, marijuana use can lead to heart attacks and strokes in healthy young people.
From BizPac Review, Fox News host Greg Gutfeld tells Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts to "shut the [bleep] up".
From The Daily Wire, Israeli Christians gather at the Israel-Syria border in the Golan Heights to demand that world leaders protect Syrian Christians.
From the Daily Caller, Republican strategist Scott Jennings reminds former Biden administration official Neera Tanden that her former boss "let" Tren de Aragua gang members into the U.S.
From the New York Post, Ukraine plans to send robots armed with machine guns against Russian troops.
From Breitbart, Attorney General Pam Bondi issues a rule reversing the ATF's decades-long ban on restoring gun rights.
From Newsmax, Trump announces more tariffs to take effect on April 2nd, which he calls "liberating day".
And from SFGate, an unlikely doughnut is at the center of San Francisco's new pastry boom. (Don't tell Homer Simpson.)
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