On a cold and cloudy Monday, with some melting snow, here are some things going on:
From National Review, Mexico kills a drug kingpin, and his cartel sets the state of Jalisco ablaze.
From FrontpageMag, Jews are now allowed to pray on the Temple Mount in Jerusalem.
From Townhall, a record number of congresscritters are calling it a day, so what's next?
From The Washington Free Beacon, congresscritter Marie Gluesenkamp Perez (D-WA) seems inconsistent about whether her father helped her financially.
From the Washington Examiner, former U.K. Ambassador to the U.S. Peter Mandelson is arrested for alleged misconduct related to the late Jeffrey Epstein. (This is the second such arrest in the U.K., the first being that of former Prince Andrew. As for Epstein-related arrests on my side of the Pond, I'm still waiting.)
From The Federalist, the State Department intends to revoke the visas of five people who censored Americans.
From American Thinker, Chinese agents establish "police stations" in the U.S. and other Western countries.
From NewsBusters, MS NOW host Ali Velshi faults President Trump for criticizing the Supreme Court, but omits even harsher criticism from the left.
From Canada Free Press, money talks, but "gold shines".
From TeleSUR, the Panamanian government assumes control of the ports at Balboa and Cristobal.
From TCW Defending Freedom, White Flight from London to Scotland to the county of Cumbria, and where to go next?
From Snouts in the Trough, what shall we do to her?
From EuroNews, the E.U. accuses Hungary of being disloyal for vetoing a €90 billion loan to Ukraine.
From Free West Media, the Dutch parliament considers what critics call a "capital destruction tax".
From the Daily Mail, an Afghan man attacks people with a knife at a Jehovah's Witness stand in a railroad station in Würzburg, Germany.
From ReMix, Polish border police arrest a Moldovan migrant who allegedly kept a disabled Russian man as a slave for five years.
From Balkan Insight, Croatian President Zoran Milanović and his government wrangle over selling weapons to Israel.
From The North Africa Post, electronic payments in Libya exceeded 313 billion dinars in 2025.
From The New Arab, the rise domestic violence against women in Iraq results in a call for new laws.
From Arutz Sheva, Hamas's new way to smuggle materials into the Gaza Strip is discovered.
From The Times Of Israel, a mosque near Nablus, West Bank is set on fire, apparently by Israeli settlers.
From The Jerusalem Post, about 20 IDF lone soldiers bar mitzvah and bat mitzvah ceremonies at the Western Wall in Jerusalem. (The term "lone soldier" is defined in the article.)
From YNetNews, gender gaps reportedly persist in Israel.
From the Egypt Independent, according to Awqaf Ministry Spokesperson Osama Raslan, Egypt's moderate religious discourse enlightens the world.
From Egypt Today, a tour guide is arrested and questioned for allegedly drawing on the wall of the Pyramid of Pharaoh Unas in Giza.
From the Sudan Tribune, 80 cases of dengue fever are reported in Sudan's Northern State.
From the Saudi Gazette, Saudi Arabia's Ministry of Foreign Affairs rejects Iraq's maritime claims near the Saudi-Kuwaiti divided zone.
From DohaNews, Qatar supports Kuwait against the aforementioned Iraqi maritime claims.
From RadioFreeEurope/Radio Liberty, exiled Iranian Kurdish groups announce a new coalition against the Iranian government.
From IranWire, Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian calls protesters "terrorists".
From Iran International, a protester dies after being tortured by the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps.
From Gatestone Institute, the biggest beneficiary of the billions of dollars to be invested in the Gaza Strip will be Hamas.
From The Daily Signal, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s efforts to "Make America Healthy Again" is moving faster than expected.
From The American Conservative, the recently departed Jesse Jackson was a populist, for good or bad.
From The Western Journal, how even dummies can get their birth certificates.
From BizPac Review, conservatives volunteering for shovel in New York City run into "Jim SNOW 2.0".
From the Daily Caller, the Department of Homeland Security kills a $58 million marketing deal with the Coast Guard for having LGBTQ and DEI ideology.
From the New York Post, CNN host Fareed Zakaria blasts "blue cities" for "out of control" budgets and "spending more" but "delivering less".
From Breitbart, Trump declares "National Angel Family Day" to honor the families who lost loved ones to crime committed by illegal aliens.
From Newsmax, rocket launchers capable of shooting down aircraft are seized in the Mexican operation that killed cartel leader Nemesio Oseguera.
And from The Babylon Bee, the U.S. Olympic hockey team melts down their gold medals to replace all their missing teeth.