From The College Fix, Middlebury College apologizes to students for inviting a Polish conservative to speak. (via Breitbart)
From NewsBusters, the Democrats have only just begun.
From the New York Post, rising sea levels could submerge Waikiki Beach in Hawaii. (I'm still waiting for the Maldives to be submerged.)
From Red River Radio, Louisiana voters may get to decide if their constitution doesn't protect abortion rights. (via LifeNews)
From The Federalist, a man who fought in Mogadishu explains what Representative Ilhan Oman (D-MN) gets wrong.
From American Thinker, "old conspiracy theories never die".
From the Chicago Sun-Times, the two Nigerian brothers considered as suspects in the Jussie Smollett case sue his attorneys. (via Legal Insurrection)
From CNS News, Senator and presidential candidate Bernie Sanders (I-VT) wants to give felons the right to vote - while they are still in prison.
From LifeZette, if he runs for president, former Vice President Joe Biden will not get a vote from one of his accusers.
From National Review, the Sri Lanka bombings were "a calculated attack on Christianity".
From Townhall, why former President Obama and former First Lady/Senator/Secretary of State Hillary Clinton used the term "Easter worshippers".
From The Washington Free Beacon, New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy (D) faces a recall petition.
From the Washington Examiner, Mexico claims to have deported 15,000 illegal migrants, but thousands are still heading northward.
From FrontpageMag, terrorism enters the U.S. from the north.
From CBC News, U.S. hockey fans are angry with a man's head.
From Global News, the president of the Philippines tells Canada to take back its garbage.
From CTV News, voting at one Prince Edward Island polling station pauses due to an "unspecified threat".
From The Conservative Woman, some inconvenient truths, such as the mother pay gap, for the left.
From Snouts in the Trough, how "sore losers" on both sides of the Pond trash democracy.
From the Daily Mail, the wife of one of the Sri Lanka suicide bombers blew up herself and her two children when police raided their house.
From the Evening Standard, Extinction Rebellion targets Parliament Square again as MPs return from recess.
From the Independent, British politician Nigel Farage claims that his new Brexit Party could prevent a second referendum.
From the Irish Examiner, a lecturer who made controversial comments about FGM wins his unfair dismissal case.
From VRT NWS, Belgium's first "trambus" appears at the Brussels Airport.
From the NL Times, Amsterdam's enforcement officers plan to strike for three hours on King's Day.
From Dutch News, does anyone check where Dutch MPs live?
From Deutsche Welle, German politicians denounce the increasing violence against Christians.
From Radio Poland, Poland will give a bit more cash to its pensioners.
From Radio Praha, Prague will host a benefit concert for Notre Dame.
From The Slovak Spectator, a Slovak drugstore is "approaching zero waste".
From Daily News Hungary, Europe needs new leaders, says Hungarian Foreign Minister Szijjarto.
From Hungary Today, a Hungarian Socialist MEP calls on the EU to fund "affordable" housing.
From Russia Today, Russia launches a submarine equipped with nuclear underwater drones.
From Sputnik International, did North Korean leader Kim Jong Un's limo drive in Vladivostok, Russia?
From The Moscow Times, Kim will meet Russian President Putin on April 25th.
From Morocco World News, Morocco's education minister wants French to be used in the country's schools.
From El País, a pastry shop in Cádiz, Spain has to explain that figurines of hooded penitents are not klansmen.
From SwissInfo, "why Switzerland and China are courting each other".
From ANSA, a Moroccan allegedly stabs a Georgian man wearing a crucifix in Rome's main railroad station.
From Total Croatia News, a Croatian NGO wants to ban an anti-abortion march.
From Independent Balkan News Agency, Albanian opposition parties plan to boycott an upcoming election.
From Ekathimerini, a man on the Greek island of Evia is arrested for allegedly possessing illegal antiquities.
From the Greek Reporter, the world's largest cruise ship reaches the port of Piraeus, Greece.
From Hürriyet Daily News, Turkey’s Supreme Election Board declines a request to deny dismissed civil servants their right to vote.
From Turkish Minute, Turkish prosecutors order another 120 detentions of suspected Gülen followers.
From Arutz Sheva, Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu pledges to name a town in the Golan Heights after U.S. President Trump. (Poland has already decided to name a new military base "Fort Trump". Israel must have told Poland to trzymać moje piwo.)
From The Times Of Israel, Lebanon is reportedly ready to demarcate its maritime border with Israel.
From The Jerusalem Post, a woman born in Jerusalem admits to planning terror attacks in the U.S.
From YNetNews, Trump's son-in-law says that the "deal of the century" will require "painful concessions" from both sides.
From Egypt Today, Egypt's constitutional amendments pass with 88 percent of the vote.
From Radio Farda, Israel used a "new missile" against Iranian targets in Syria.
From Dawn, Saudi Arabia sends 37 heads rolling.
From The Express Tribune, Pakistan's navy successfully tests a missile developed in country.
From Pakistan Today, Pakistan's Council of Islamic Ideology rules that using Bint-e-Pakistan ("daughter of Pakistan") instead of a father's name is against sharia.
From Khaama Press, Afghan security forces thwart a terror attack by seizing 1.5 tons of explosives.
From The Hans India, ISIS claims responsibility for the Sri Lanka terror attacks.
From Channel News Asia, at least 45 of the victims in Sri Lanka were children.
From Gatestone Institute, the persecution of Palestinians that no one wants to talk about.
From USA Today, Egyptians vote to keep President al-Sisi in power until 2030.
From 247 Sports, the NCAA modifies its rules about targeting in football.
And from The Babylon Bee, Bernie Sanders promises to round up all remaining ISIS members, so they can vote.
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