On a mild and cloudy Friday on the fourth day of the fourth month, here are some things going on:
From National Review, the first suit against President Trump's authority to impose tariffs comes from a conservative legal group.
From FrontpageMag, California institutes systemic racism in its traffic offense policies.
From The Washington Free Beacon, the Trump administration announces its first offshore lease sale in the Gulf of America.
From the Washington Examiner, Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) hopes that Trump's tariffs are "short-lived".
From The Federalist, how the media are currently lying about Trump's tariffs.
From American Thinker, to cut your own personal tariffs, buy American.
From MRCTV, a pro-abortion advocate beats up a pro-life influencer in New York City.
From NewsBusters, co-host Sunny Hostin of The View claims that people who want immigration laws to be enforced have a "lack of empathy". (Does she have any empathy for the late Laken Riley or other victims of crimes committed by illegal aliens?)
From TeleSUR, an armed attack on two public transport vehicles in Port-au-Prince, Haiti leaves one person dead and several others injured.
From TCW Defending Freedom, global warming should be blamed on......Christopher Columbus.
From Snouts in the Trough, Trump's tariffs, oh noooooo!
From EuroNews, who are the frontrunners in Romania's new round of presidential elections?
From Radio Free Europe, Trump's tariffs are not reciprocal and amount to a large tax hike on Americans.
From Balkan Insight, Serbian students ride their bikes into Hungary on their way to Strasbourg, France.
From The North Africa Post, Libyan politician Samir Shegwara is arrested on national security charges after he publishes documents alleging a connection between Libyan intelligence services and the 1988 Lockerbie bombing.
From The New Arab, the Israeli Air Force sends a Hamas commander in Sidon, Lebanon to his virgins.
From The Times Of Israel, Iran starts pulling its forces out of Yemen amid U.S. airstrikes on the Houthis.
From Gatestone Institute, the crisis for Jews in Canada.
From Radio Free Asia, human rights groups protest the visit by Myanmar junta leader Min Aung Hlaing to Bangkok, Thailand as his military continues to bomb areas affected by the recent earthquake.
From The Stream, the ugly truth behind Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth's kafir tattoo.
From The Daily Signal, according to the group Judicial Watch, about 5 million ineligible names have been removed from voter rolls across the U.S. since 2019.
From The American Conservative, what Congress can do to solve the immigration crisis.
From The Western Journal, Trump celebrates a major win as the March jobs report easily surpasses expectation.
From BizPac Review, New York City Mayor Eric Adams (D) announces that he will run for reelection as an independent, and claims that Trump Derangement Syndrome is "real".
From The Daily Wire, the platform Facebook announces the end of its fact-checking program.
From the Daily Caller, why some government officials use the group chat app Signal.
From the New York Post, a doctor shows how to use colors to boost your dopamine levels.
From Breitbart, according to Trump, Vietnam has offered to lower its tariffs on U.S. goods to zero if a trade deal can be reached.
From Newsmax, a transgender college student goes to the Florida state Capitol building in Tallahassee, [bleep]s around and finds out.
And from The Hard Times, Trump gets bored and pardons convicted child molester Jared Fogle just for the [bleep] of it.
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