Today is #WorldTurtleDay on Twitter, so while you watch these turtles or listen to these other turtles, or if you just like turtles, here are some things things going on:
From Philly(dot)com, an associate of President Trump's lawyer Michael Cohen pleads guilty to tax fraud.
From Fox News, Trump's son in law gets his full security clearance back.
From NewsBusters, Trump's pro-life speech at a Susan B. Anthony List gala is largely ignored by the media.
From LifeNews, at the same gala, Trump's former campaign manager receives an award.
From Breitbart's Big Government, "Spygate" revelations appear to vindicate Trump, radio host Mark Levin, and Brietbart itself.
From Breitbart Sports, the NFL votes to fine teams that tolerate anthem kneeling.
From the Express, the E.U. risks "chaos" by including the U.K. in their 2019 budget.
From Voice Of Europe, after 10 years of allowing women-only swimming, Beckum, Germany now also has men-only swimming.
From Radio Poland, fewer Poles want to leave Poland to find work. (Some of my ancestors did that sort of thing, except for Poland not being independent back then. The story comes via Voice Of Europe.)
From ANSA, European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker says that the E.U. will be "vigilant" on the rights of African migrants in Italy. (If you read Italian, a related article in that language is also on ANSA, and was linked by The European Post.)
From Deutsche Welle, France's interior minister orders Paris to evacuate its migrant camps.
From The Local ES, the Catalan crisis could derail Spain's 2018 budget.
From Flanders News, Belgians have sent about €200,000 to jihadis in Iraq and Syria.
From the NL Times, the Netherlands does not recognize the results of the Venezuelan election.
From Russia Today, the media's most hysterical takes on the new Italian government.
From Reuters, people in Velika Kladusa, Bosnia "help migrants but worry about security".
From Breitbart London, 76 percent of polled U.K. voters think that the peers in the House of Lords are "out of touch" with the people.
From The Slovak Spectator, the number of foreigners in Slovakia is increasing, but more slowly than in other E.U. countries. (Most of my ancestors, except for those who left what is now Poland to find work, left what is now Slovakia to find work.)
From Sputnik International, Swedish conservatives propose legislation to deal with the "moral police" and "honor-related oppression".
From The Times Of India, according to Amnesty International, Rohingya fighters killed Hindu villagers in Myanmar last August.
From Arutz Sheva, researchers claim to have discovered Iran's secret ICBM facility. (H/T Gadi Adelman for the Tweet)
From FrontpageMag, in Western cities, the bollards are popping up.
From National Review, how the investigations into Hillary Clinton's emails and Donald Trump's alleged Russia collusion are intertwined.
From Townhall, the Democrats roll out the second version of their "better deal".
From BBC News, a German candy company removes an image depicting Meghan Markel as a piece of chocolate. (The company thus gets the "stupid people" label, for using the pic in the first place. The story comes via the New York Post.)
From the New York Post, former New York Met Lenny Dykstra gets busted for drugs.
And from The Verge, being a Whovian just got a lot easier.
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