From The American Conservative, how to brighten up January.
From Philly(dot)com, President Trump suggests a "two-phase" immigration deal.
From The Daily Caller, Trump regards the wall as "non-negotiable".
From the Washington Examiner, former sheriff Joe Arpaio will run for the Senate from Arizona.
From The Federalist, coming out as a Republican was more difficult than coming out as gay.
From The Telegraph, according to Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu, his country's intelligence services have helped stop terror attacks involving airplanes.
From the Express, France gets a record number of asylum requests.
From La Stampa, Italians have intolerance for migrants.
From Breitbart London, young Italians support Eurosceptic parties.
From Voice Of Europe, "how a German children's channel promotes child marriages with migrants".
From Politico, in the scandal over Sudanese migrants, Belgium's government won't fall, for now.
From The European Post, the Teatro del Maggio in Florence re-writes the ending of the opera Carmen.
From Politics Home, E.U. Commission President Junker says that there will be no second referendum on Brexit.
From the Derby Telegraph, a would-be terrorist in Derby was a "strict Muslim". (Unlike other stories I've found from this site, this one is not about things left behind in public accommodations.)
From American Thinker, the "strange bedfellows": leftists and Islamists.
From Gatestone Institute, the war against firefighters and police in France.
From the New York Post, Representative Steve Scalise (R-Lou) will undergo another surgery tomorrow.
And from Scientific American, the weird tubular structures on Mars are probably not caused by any sort of life.
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