On a sunny but cool Tuesday falling on the first of April, here are some things going on, but which might require the proverbial grain of salt:
From National Review, President Trump has a point about U.S. goods being tariffed by other countries.
From FrontpageMag, congresscritter AOC (D-NY) and Senator Socialism (I-VT) sing the same old Marxist song.
From Townhall, Fulton County, Georgia District Attorney Fani Willis is seen with her boyfriend Nathan Wade after she claimed that their affair was over.
From The Washington Free Beacon, a Cornell University graduate student who had his visa revoked after lauding the "armed resistance in Palestine" self-deports and drops his suit against Trump.
From the Washington Examiner, no, the recently deported Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia was not in the U.S. legally.
From The Federalist, the FBI gagged its agents in 2020 to prevent voters from learning about then-First Son Hunter Biden's laptop.
From American Thinker, DOGE recovers a terabyte of data deleted by employees of the United States Institute for Peace.
From MRCTV, a "trans" ACLU lawyer claims that Trump is "lying" by claiming that men are participating in women's sports. (Have you ever noticed that the words "lawyer" and "liar" sound similar to each other?)
From NewsBusters, five networks give ten times more time on the arrest of a Turkish student than on the capture of an MS-13 member.
From Canada Free Press, Jew hatred at Harvard University is not a matter of free speech or academic freedom.
From TeleSUR, the right-wing opposition in Honduras is accused of altering primary election results.
From TCW Defending Freedom, a U.K. submarine gets sunk - by politicians.
From Snouts in the Trough, we must ban democracy in order to save it.
From EuroNews, the body of the fourth U.S. soldier who went missing in Lithuania is found.
From Free West Media, should German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock become the President of the U.N. General Assembly?
From ReMix, the European Parliament lifts the immunities of Polish europarliamentcritters Mariusz Kamiński and Maciej Wąsik. (Jeżeli czytasz po polsku, I mean, if you read Polish, read the story at Salon24.)
From Balkan Insight, a court in Niš, Serbia detains a woman for 30 days for allegedly attacking a Niš University dean with a knife.
From The North Africa Post, Libya makes a modest increase in its oil and condensate production.
From The New Arab, Iraq will limit the activity of Houthis in the country to only civilian activities, allegedly due to pressure from the U.S.
From Struggle or Hindu Existence, a Hindu man is shot dead after refusing to convert to Islam in Peshawar, Pakistan.
From Gatestone Institute, does the U.S. government have the right to place conditions on its funding of universities.
From Radio Free Asia, China silences online debate about construction after a Chinese-built office building in Bangkok, Thailand collapses from the earthquake centered in Myanmar.
From The Stream, six Catholic cardinals are accused of covering up clerical sexual abuse, including three who considered as candidates to be the next pope.
From The Daily Signal, the Trump administration has carried out over 100,000 deportations since it began on January 20th.
From The American Conservative, a review of a book about the downside of "body positivity".
From The Western Journal, Nike runs a pro-life ad - from 2008.
From Axios, Senator Cory Booker (D-NJ) puts on a real filibuster. (via The Western Journal)
From BizPac Review, singer/songwriter Kid Rock makes headlines with his flashy outfit in Trump's Oval Office.
From The Daily Wire, Israel drops all of its tariffs on imported U.S. goods.
From the Daily Caller, federal prosecutors decide to seek the death penalty for the alleged murderer of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson.
From the New York Post, according to the makers of the "torpedo" baseball bat, it's "here to stay".
From Breitbart, congresscritter Jamie Raskin (D-MD) demands that Trump brings back deported illegal alien suspected gang members.
From Newsmax, Trump urges Wisconsin citizens to vote for Judge Brad Schimel for the state's Supreme Court.
And from the Genesius Times, the aforementioned Senator Booker's filibuster ends in an April Fool's joke.
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