From National Review, President Trump's impeachment defense team includes some old familiar faces.
From FrontpageMag, why the left blames anti-Semitic attacks by blacks on white supremacy.
From Townhall, congresscritter Elise Stefanik's (R-NY) opponent just can't get herself to call the late terrorist leader Suleymani a terrorist.
From The Washington Free Beacon, while violent crime surged during his time as South Bend, Indiana mayor, Pete Buttigieg lectured his cops on "sizeism" and "languageism".
From the Washington Examiner, one of Trump's choices is a "public relations nightmare".
From The Federalist, how Trump can triple his support among blacks in this coming election.
From American Thinker, some history of the movement that calls itself "Antifa".
From CNS News, Trump moves to protect the right to pray in schools. (As some have noted, as long as there are exams in schools, there will be also prayer.)
From LifeZette, in the Oval Office, Trump gets a mediacritter to shut up.
From NewsBusters, media networks join Democrats in calling gun rights advocates terrorists. (If you think that Second Amendment supporters are terrorists, but Suleymani wasn't, you might be a liberal.)
From Canada Free Press, what a "hit piece" by the GAO against Trump gets wrong.
From Global News, a civil rights group files an appeal with Canada's Supreme Court after Quebec's top court rejects its challenge to the the provincial ban on religious symbols. (If I understand the law correctly, it applies to government workers on the job, not to the general public.)
From CTV News, the Canadian government suspends the deportation to France of a woman who has been in Canada for 18 "without status".
From The Conservative Woman, the U.K. media which normally obsesses over race are silent when white girls are the victims of rape.
From the Express, Queen Elizabeth doesn't wear a seatbelt.
From the Evening Standard, parliamentcritter Florence Eshalomi (Labour-Vauxhall) fears that Londoners are getting desensitized to knife crime. (Vauxhall is an section of London.)
From the Independent, a British Orthodox Jew stands up for the Uighur Muslims in China.
From the Irish Examiner, nacro-terrorism endangers young people in Ireland.
From VRT NWS, supermarkets in Belgium will stop importing kangaroo meat.
From the NL Times, Dutch people donate 2.4 million euros to help Australia with its bushfires.
From Dutch News, a Holocaust memorial is unveiled in Rotterdam.
From Deutsche Welle, thousands of German farmers head toward Berlin to protest environmental regulations.
From the CPH Post, more births in Denmark are being recorded on phones.
From Free West Media, human trafficking in Finland reaches a record high.
From Polskie Radio, according to Polish Deputy Foreign Minister Paweł Jabłoński, the Soviet Union did not liberate Warsaw in 1945, but brought "communist slavery".
From Radio Prague, the number of foreign workers in the Czech Republic doubles in 10 years.
From the Hungary Journal, according to Hungarian Prime Minister Orban, his Fidesz party was very close to leaving the European People's Party.
From Daily News Hungary, according to a survey, 61 percent of Hungarians want pro-migration NGOs to be banned.
From Hungary Today, politicians, Jewish leaders, and survivors mark the 75th anniversary of the liberation of the Budapest ghetto.
From About Hungary, according to Fidesz MEP Balázs Hidvéghi, the EP's resolution against Hungary and Poland is just another was for pro-migration forces to pressure Hungary.
From Russia Today, an airplane lands by mistake on an unfinished runway at Moscow's Domodedovo Airport.
From Sputnik International, Russia starts making S-400 missile defense systems for India.
From The Moscow Times, Moscow's Sheremetyevo Airport opens a new terminal.
From Romania-Insider, the Romanian government makes new rules for riding electric scooters.
From Novinite, the Bulgarian Orthodox Church honors Saint Anthony.
From The Sofia Globe, the Organization of the Jews in Bulgaria Shalom criticizes a round table on labor camps for Bulgarian Jewish men during World War II.
From Radio Bulgaria, the Bulgarian prosecutor's office starts an investigation of the Bulgarian National Union over this year's planned Lukov March.
From Ekathimerini, police investigate explosions in the Athens suburbs of Agia Paraskevi and Piraeus.
From the Greek Reporter, anarchists vandalize two newspapers in Athens and the Austrian consulate in Thessaloniki.
From Independent Balkan News Agency, Bosnia and Hercegovina House Speaker Dragan Čović expects continuity in relations between his country and Croatia.
From Total Croatia News, Croatia's Constitutional Court will not change the president-elect's decision on the location of his inauguration.
From Total Slovenia News, NBA player Luka Dončić is named an ambassador for Slovenian tourism.
From the Malta Independent, according to Maltese Prime Minister Robert Abela, his appointment of parliamentary backbenchers to Cabinet posts does not buy their silence.
From Malta Today, Maltese opposition leader Adrian Delia will reshuffle his shadow cabinet.
From EuroNews, a missing painting by Gustav Klimt is found inside the walls of an art gallery in Piacenza, Italy.
From SwissInfo, about 10,000 people including Swedish activist Greta Thunberg attend a climate strike in Lausanne, Switzerland.
From France24, a strike over France's planned pension reforms closes the Louvre.
From The Portugal News, Portuguese government workers go on strike.
From The Stream, here's what President Trump should do next with Iran.
From Fox News, the leader of the NYPD union sides with ICE against Mayor Bill de Blasio about a sanctuary-tied murder.
From Breitbart, Vice President Mike Pence explains the "Trump doctrine".
From The Pilot, bishops in Massachusetts call on parishoners to oppose a proposed law expanding the availability of abortions. (via LifeNews)
From the New York Post, New York's JFK Airport will start screening passengers for a new virus from China.
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