On a mild and partly sunny Wednesday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, why the Trump administration is offering a bailout to Argentina. (We don't usually do that sort of thing, do we?)
From FrontpageMag, the courage of right-wing activist Charlie Kirk.
From Townhall, will Hamas soon find out?
From The Washington Free Beacon, congresscritter Elise Stefanik (R-NY) and Senator Tom Cotton (R-Ark) call for the Treasury Department to investigate CAIR for alleged "financial links to Hamas".
From the Washington Examiner, against Secretary of War Pete Hegseth's "swamptastic" rules for the press.
From The Federalist, President Trump deserves a Nobel Peace Prize for something that has nothing to do with the ceasefire in Gaza.
From American Thinker, how digital IDs make the American Dream impossible.
From MRCTV, MSNBC host Nicolle Wallace and reporter Jacob Soboroff spin for the Democrats so badly that a Democrat corrects them.
From NewsBusters, actor Bradley Whitford claims that Trump has "internment camps". (This actor should not be confused with the Aerosmith guitarist.)
From Canada Free Press, Western elites continue to fearmonger about practicing Christians.
From TeleSUR, Colombia decides to skip the Summit of the Americas because Cuba, Nicaragua and Venezuela have been excluded.
From TCW Defending Freedom, the elites who run communist China.
From Snouts in the Trough, shall we do the math on "genocide"?
From EuroNews, according to leaked information, the E.U. plans on having a "drone wall" against Russia by the end of 2027.
From Free West Media, rumors of drones overflying Denmark appear to have been greatly exaggerated.
From ReMix, according to presidential aide Marcin Przydacz, Poland accepted its limit of refugees from Ukraine. (If you read Polish, read the story at RMF24.)
From Balkan Insight, according to Croatian historian Ivo Goldstein, Croatian anti-fascists "were on the right side" during World War II.
From The North Africa Post, the Chinese tire maker Shandong Yongsheng Rubber Group Co., Ltd. starts building a plant in Morocco's Betoya Free Zone.
From The New Arab, according to a Reuters investigation, the Assad regime in Syria moved a mass grave containing thousands of bodies, the process taking two years.
From the Daily Mail, a British woman in Turkey is blackmailed into donating her dying father's kidney.
From Iran International, an Iranian Kurdish Sunni cleric is shot and killed outside his home in İstanbul, Turkey.
From Arutz Sheva, Hamas transfers a body to Israel, which was not that of an Israeli hostage, but of a Gazan wearing an IDF uniform.
From Jewish News Syndicate, the Democratic Socialists of America issue a combative statement about Israel.
From Afghanistan International, Pakistan reaps the Taliban problem that they sowed.
From Gatestone Institute, it's time to seize China's companies.
From The Stream, two French authors claim that science points to God, and scientists listen.
From The Daily Signal, Republican congresscritters join Trump's war against ProFa.
From The American Conservative, Nobel Peace Prize winner María Corina Machado has not been much of a peacemaker or lover of democracy.
From The Western Journal, celebrating the death of the aforementioned Charlie Kirk costs several foreigners their visas.
From BizPac Review, Trump asserts that Hamas will disarm or be disarmed.
From the Daily Caller, half of the people arrested over an alleged operation to steal donated clothes from charity bins are illegal aliens.
From Breitbart, Republican congresscritters draft a bill that would allow states to issue commercial drivers licenses to migrants who have a lawful immigration status.
From Newsmax, the Republican National Committee accuses Democrats of using "service members as political leverage".
And from the New York Post, actress and writer Miriam Katz goes on a mission to interview every person with whom she has had any sort of romantic relationship.
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