From National Review, the Mueller report discusses ten "incidents" in which President Trump tried to affect the direction of the investigation.
From Townhall, there was no collusion, and attempts at obstruction were aborted.
From The Washington Free Beacon, Brian Williams gives Attorney General Barr a new nickname. (Brian Williams? Oh yeah, the guy who got suspended a few years back.)
From the Washington Examiner, according to the report, Michael Flynn reached out to a GOP activist who is no longer with us to find Trump's rival's emails.
From The Federalist, the mainstream media are not taking "no collusion" well.
From American Thinker, "Democrats move the goalposts (again)".
From AOL, when Trump found out that Mueller would be the special counsel, he said "This is the end of my presidency. I'm [bleep]ed". (Some sources I've perused use this Trump statement as a headline, as if it was something he said in reaction to the release of the report. This is something he said about two years ago when the investigation was just starting.)
From CNS News, according to the report, there were no apparent "pre-existing contacts" between the Trump campaign and Russian officials.
From LifeZette, according to Barr, no Russians had the cooperation of candidate Trump or his associates.
From The Daily Caller, here's what Mueller found or did not find.
From FrontpageMag, raise taxes on everyone except Senator Bernie Sanders (I-VT).
From CTV News, Montreal Mayor Valerie Plante receives online threats over her stance on Quebec's secularism bill.
From The Conservative Woman, the Extinction Rebellion protesters are bullies.
From Snouts in the Trough, the world's worst disease might be "Crazy Lefty Syndrome".
From the Express, British businessman Richard Branson "pleads" for a second Brexit vote.
From the Evening Standard, Extinction Rebellion threatens to shut down Heathrow Airport.
From the Independent, more the activities and alleged plans of Extinction Rebellion.
From the Irish Examiner, a guy in Navan, Ireland messes with the wrong lassie.
From France24, France pays tribute to the Notre Dame firefighters.
From El País, Spain celebrates the arrival of Easter.
From Morocco World News, a court in Casablanca, Morocco dissolves the NGO organization Racines. (The French word racine means "root".)
From the Malta Independent, three youths charged with piracy are denied bail.
From SwissInfo, what should be done about ISIS children?
From VRT NWS, Antwerp will celebrate the 75th anniversary of its liberation from the Nazis with a parade.
From the NL Times, police find that many Dutch jihadists have "problematic backgrounds".
From Dutch News, asylum requests in the Netherlands still face delays.
From Radio Poland, Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki tells Americans that his country is not full of anti-Semitism.
From Radio Praha, according to the group Reporters Without Borders, the Czech Republic has lost some of its freedom of the press.
From The Slovak Spectator, a look at Slovak Easter customs.
From the Hungary Journal, according to Hungarian Foreign Minister Szijjarto, the E.U. should stop organizing migration.
From Daily News Hungary, according to the Hungarian cabinet, the E.U. should spend money on border control instead of supporting migrants.
From Hungary Today, Hungarian Prime Minister Orban meets with a Brazilian congresscritter, who just happens to be the son of Brazil's president.
From About Hungary, the European border protection force Frontex doesn't have enough personnel to halt the inflow of migrants.
From Russia Today, Russian President Putin expresses his sadness over the Notre Dame fire.
From Sputnik International, about 100 organizations which advocate sharia are registered in Belgium.
From The Moscow Times, Russia bans exports of coal and oil to Ukraine.
From Novinite, a vulture tagged in Bulgaria is accused of spying in Yemen.
From Total Croatia News, a stone masonry school in Brač, Croatia offers to help restore Notre Dame.
From Independent Balkan News Agency, the Democratic Party plans to boycott an upcoming election. (The Democratic Party of Albania, that is.)
From Ekathimerini, a Greek team is digitizing Christian manuscripts at St. Catherine's Monastery in the Sinai.
From the Greek Reporter, police in Athens, Greece crack down on illegal squatters.
From Hürriyet Daily News, Turkey's president asks his country to set aside its differences. (In other words, he asks everyone to do what he wants, which is by no means unique to him or his country.)
From Turkish Minute, according to Greece's Deputy Foreign Minister, the number of illegal irregular migrants from Turkey to Greece increased by 37 percent in 2018.
From Arutz Sheva, a former Nazi guard is charged with being an accessory to 5,230 murders at the Stutthof concentration camp.
From The Times Of Israel, the Passover food haroset is supposed to be sour, not sweet.
From The Jerusalem Post, Israel closes its border crossings with the West Bank and Gaza for Passover.
From YNetNews, Sudanese refugees in Israel don't feel safe to return, even with president Bashir out of power.
From Egypt Today, a statue of Ramses II is unveiled at the Luxor Temple.
From Radio Farda, Iran celebrates Army Day.
From The Express Tribune, India suspends trade across the Line of Control in Kashmir, due to alleged drug and weapons smuggling.
From Pakistan Today, India's foreign minister admits that no Pakistanis died in the Balakot airstrike.
From Khaama Press, two alleged drug smugglers are arrested at Kabul's Hamid Karzai Airport.
From The Hans India, an election concludes in Jammu and Kashmir, mostly without incident.
From Accuracy in Media, a Democrat pleads with Congress to secure the border.
From the Los Angeles Times, UCLA record keepers claim that they will need 103 to turn over emails between soccer coaches and indicted conspirators. (Did Hillary Clinton ever make such a claim?)
And from The Babylon Bee, archaeologists in Israel discover the Apostle Peter's concealed carry permit.
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