From National Review, Planned
From The Washington Free Beacon, after the March For Life, pro-life leaders gather at Georgetown University.
From NewsBusters, three major TV networks spend 19 times as much time "smearing" pro-life teenagers than covering the March For Life.
From Townhall, these stories from a border special prosecutor "will make you want to build the wall yourself".
From FrontpageMag, no proposal from President Trump will suffice for Democrats who want an unsecure border.
From The Federalist, does Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez have any evidence for her claim that there's anti-Semitism in the Trump administration? (Are moving the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem and visiting the Western Wall with a kippah on your head any way act like an anti-Semite?)
From American Thinker, the toxic masculinity which Gillette conveniently overlooked.
From the Washington Examiner, according a senior official, Russia did not discuss any real estate deal with then-candidate Trump or anyone on his team.
From Voice Of Europe, U.K. Prime Minister May has no concern about the recent rise in transgenderism in young children. (Yes, I found a story about May that has nothing to do with Brexit.)
From the Express, Brexiteer Jacob Rees-Mogg outlines a way for May to make the E.U. more willing to renegotiate the Brexit deal. (On the other hand, there is still some Brexit-related news out there.)
From the Evening Standard, May scraps a ₤65 fee for E.U. nationals who wish to stay in the U.K.
From the Daily Mail, a British couple attempts transracialism. (via The Blaze)
From BBC News, an Egyptian TV host is jailed for interviewing a gay man.
From the (U.K.) Independent, the cocaine used in London is "probably not" getting fish in the Thames high.
From the (Irish) Independent, the E.U.'s solidarity with Ireland over the backstop shows its "first cracks".
From the Irish Examiner, according to Irish Tánaiste Simon Coveney, the E.U. is still behind Ireland's backstop stance.
From CBC News, according to Ontario Premier Doug Ford, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's carbon tax will cause a recession.
From RFI, Oxfam notes the rising number of billionaires while the poor get poorer.
From El País, Spain and the U.K. sign a deal guaranteeing the voting rights of each country's citizens living in the other.
From ANSA, according to Italian Interior Minister Matteo Salvini, closing ports will save lives.
From the Malta Independent, the Sea-Watch 3, carrying dozens of migrants, is looking for port at which to dock.
From Malta Today, finding a seat at Malta's Ta' Qali National Stadium might be a bit difficult, and if you try to smuggle money out of Malta, you'll have a dog of a time.
From Ekathimerini, the Greek parliament will vote on the Prespes name deal this Thursday.
From the Greek Reporter, a Greek start-up is acquired by a large Chinese company.
From Independent Balkan News Agency, according to the patriarch of the Bulgarian Orthodox Church, the name of the Macedonian church must await the settlement on FYROM's name.
From Novinite, a Canadian cannabis company acquires land in Bulgaria to grow the crop.
From Russia Today, archaeologists in Uzbekistan find a treasure which had belonged to a controversial member of the Russian royal family.
From Sputnik International, at least 11 people have been killed in a fire which broke out on two ships carrying LNG.
From the Hungary Journal, according to Hungarian Foreign Minister Szijjarto, the E.U. is trying to bring back its failed migration policy.
From Daily News Hungary, the case of a violent migrant held in Hungary shows the network supporting migration. (In other words, they've figured out what I've been saying. Migrants are not merely migrating, but are being trafficked.)
From About Hungary, the International Investment Bank will move its headquarters to Hungary.
From The Slovak Spectator, Roman coins are found during the construction of a bypass near Bratislava, Slovakia.
From Radio Poland, Polish President Andrzej Duda will attend the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.
From Deutsche Welle, in 2018, Germany deported a record number of refugees to other E.U. countries.
From the NL Times, the Netherlands will deport a family from Armenia.
From Dutch News, despite some parties calling for reconsideration of amnesty rules, child deportations will continue.
From Hürriyet Daily News, according to Romania's foreign minister, the E.U. and Turkey are planning to hold a summit in March.
From Turkish Minute, Presidents Trump and Erdoğan discuss a "negotiated solution" for Syria.
From Arutz Sheva, Dr. King was a Zionist.
From The Times Of Israel, Israel opens a new international airport near Eilat.
From Morocco World News, Moroccan fisherman caught over 1.31 million tons of fish in 2018.
From Rûdaw, two Trinidadian boys abducted by their father when he joined ISIS have been reunited with their mother.
From Radio Farda, an Iranian general threatens Israel.
From Dawn, why Pakistani authorities should support the women's bicycle rally.
From Pakistan Today, a Hindu girl is "forcibly" converted to Islam and married.
From Citizen Digital, the humble beginnings of a terrorist who blew himself up in Nairobi, Kenya.
From Clarion Project, the fatality of the West's embrace of political Islam.
From LifeZette, some Democrats might be willing to fund the wall.
From CNS News, President Trump tells Speaker Pelosi that he will veto any bill that encourages the destruction of innocent human life.
From The Daily Caller, Jenna Bush Hager relates a conversation she had with her grandfather.
From the New York Post, if you're ever in Suining City, China, you can get your hair done by a very young stylist.
From WWL, in response to a controversial non-call in the NFC title game, a Louisiana eye doctor offers from exams to NFL referees.
And from The Babylon Bee, Chip and Joanna Gaines have been hired to install shiplap on the southern border wall.
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