From National Review, the coronavirus pandemic should put politics into perspective.
From FrontpageMag, "a sober look at the facts" about the coronavirus.
From TownHall, after a local news outlet asks congresscritter Elise Stefanik (R-NY) a "ridiculous" question about China, she lets them have it.
From The Washington Free Beacon, a Las Vegas TV station is registered to lobby for Chinese corporation.
From the Washington Examiner, according to two doctors in California who administered over 5,000 coronavirus tests, it's time to life the stay-at-home orders.
From The Federalist, Texans are still permitted to hunt feral hogs despite coronavirus lockdowns.
From American Thinker, the left's inner tyrants have been let out.
From CNS News, Reverend Franklin Graham invites Donna Brazile to join him at the next March For Life.
From LifeZette, #MeToo activist Rose McGowan calls on former Vice President Biden to drop out of the 2020 presidential race.
From NewsBusters, CBS touts Biden's list of possible running mates and ignores the sexual abuse allegations against him.
From Canada Free Press, how humanity is being "fundamentally transformed" right under our noses.
From CBC News, Canada starts its $73 billion wage subsidy program.
From Global News, elementary schools in the Canadian province of Quebec will gradually reopen in May.
From CTV News, a petition is launched calling for the renaming of a high school after a police officer killed in the Nova Scotia mass shooting.
From TeleSUR, Peruvians leave large cities in a "massive exodus" due to the coronavirus.
From The Mainichi, starting this coming Wednesday, Japan will deny entry to people from Russia and 13 other countries.
From the Borneo Post, the Movement Control Order is not an excuse to run red lights in Malaysia.
From Free Malaysia Today, despite no new coronavirus cases for three days, people in the Malaysian state of Sabah are warned not to let their guard down.
From The Straits Times, students in Beijing and Shanghai, China go back to school.
From The Jakarta Post, the Indonesian province of Papua faces a difficult fight against the coronavirus due to its limited health facilities.
From Maldives Insider, Egypt and Russia evacuate their citizens from the Maldive Islands.
From the Daily Mirror, Sri Lanka sets up a Presidential Task Force to study health security at military camps.
From the Colombo Page, Sri Lankan opposition leaders ask President Gotabaya Rajapaksa to reconvene parliament in order to better fight the coronavirus.
From the Dhaka Tribune, the Bangladeshi government looks to ease its coronavirus lockdown.
From The Hans India, the Andhra Pradesh government relaxes its coronavirus lockdown in Green Zones, but not in Red and Orange Zones.
From the Hindustan Times, according to its chief minister, the Indian state of Telangana may soon become coronavirus-free, but its lockdown will continue until May 7th.
From ANI, coronavirus patients in Delhi, India make a "steady surge" in recoveries.
From India Today, a company in Bengaluru, India develops a drone useful for surveillance and doorstep delivery.
From OpIndia, a family in Ranchi, India is harassed for declining to distribute copies of the Koran.
From Khaama Press, the Afghan Presidential Palace lambastes the Taliban for rejecting calls for ceasefire.
From Dawn, the city of Peshawar records the highest coronavirus mortality rate in Pakistan.
From The Express Tribune, Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan replaces his information aide.
From Pakistan Today, Pakistani politicians argue over the country's 18th Amendment.
From Radio Farda, as business reopens in Iran, 60 cities are designated coronavirus Red Zones.
From IranWire, Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps used Ayatollah Khamenei's audience as a human shield.
From The New Arab, people in Lebanon protest the country's poor economy by blocking roads.
From the Saudi Gazette, iftar meal baskets are given out in Mecca and Medina, Saudi Arabia.
From the Ethiopian Monitor, Chinese billionaire Jack Ma gives African countries a total of 300 ventilators, delivered via Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
From the Egypt Independent, Nestle Egypt suspends its operations due to the coronavirus.
From Egypt Today, the Egyptian military hands out face masks to civilians, to combat the coronavirus.
From Arutz Sheva, a ceremony to open Israel's Memorial Day is conducted at the Western Wall in Jerusalem.
From The Times Of Israel, according to an opinion column, "Israel's Labor Party is finished".
From The Jerusalem Post, schools and kindergartens in Israel will gradually reopen starting next Sunday.
From YNetNews, Israel remembers its fallen, but not in its cemeteries.
From The Syrian Observer, Turkish-backed fighters clash near Aleppo, Syria.
From In-Cyprus, divers clean up the sea bed at a fishing shelter in Ayia Napa, Cyprus.
From Rûdaw, according to the Dutch general consul in Erbil, Iraq, "there is more we can do together".
From Hürriyet Daily News, Turkish authorities restrict travel from Istanbul to provinces on the Black Sea coast.
From Morocco World News, Morocco reports 102 recoveries from the coronavirus in 24 hours.
From BBC News, Saudi Arabia reportedly ends the death penalty for minors.
From RAIR Foundation USA, Muslims are allowed to break quarantine and blast their call to prayer from the top of Seo Vieja Cathedral in Lleida, Spain.
From Gatestone Institute, combating the propaganda in Latin America coming from China, Cuba and Venezuela.
From The Stream, what does Generation Z need to hear from Christians?
From LifeNews, a Planned
From the New York Post, according to Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY), the Senate will reconvene on May 4th.
From Spectrum News, the New York state board of elections cancels the presidential primary and removes Senator Socialism (I-VT) from the ballot. (via Legal Insurrection)
From Reason, does a dissent by a Supreme Court justice have the "force of law"?
From Fox News, Governor Andrew Cuomo (D) claims that New York has bailed out other states for decades.
From Twitchy, CNN finds that Joe Biden's "invisible campaign is winning", but alternate headlines are more accurate.
And from The Babylon Bee, a church uses drones to make sure that people worshiping at home sit, stand and raise their hands when instructed.
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