As the cold weather continues on "another manic Monday", here are some things going on:
From National Review, President Biden's immigration is amnesty first and enforcement never.
From FrontpageMag, if alleged incitement to violence is good enough to impeach one former president, it's good enough to impeach another.
From the Washington Examiner, Chief Justice Roberts declines to preside over former President Trump's second impeachment trial.
From The Federalist, conservatives should stop trying to justify Trump's second impeachment.
From American Thinker, "right on schedule", the coronavirus pivots for the new president.
From CNS News, the director of the CDC can't say how much coronavirus vaccine the U.S. has.
From LifeZette, congresscritter Maxine Waters (D-Cal) unleashes her Trump paranoia.
From NewsBusters, White House secretary Jen Psaki wants more questions about ice cream and cats. (To anyone accusing me of missing Kayleigh McEnany, I most assuredly plead guilty.)
From Canada Free Press, Biden's new plans will greatly harm minorities.
From Global News, a proposal to ban fossil fuel advertising in Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada draws a backlash.
From TeleSUR, Trinidad and Tobago holds elections.
From The Conservative Woman, which of two men was killed by the coronavirus?
From the (U.K.) Independent, the U.K. extends its deadline for self-assessment taxpayers to file their online returns.
From Free West Media, riots break out in 10 Dutch cities after a coronavirus curfew is imposed.
From the CPH Post, Denmark holds a virtual meeting with U.S. climate czar John Kerry, and other news.
From About Hungary, the Hungarian governing group Fidesz-KDNP abstains from voting on a gender equality report.
From The Moscow Times, Russian President Putin denies owning a seaside palace worth $1.3 billion.
From Euractiv, the E.U. decides against sanctioning Russia for the arrest for dissident Alexey Navalny, for the time being.
From Radio Bulgaria, Health Minister Kostadin Angelov opposes reopening restaurants in Bulgaria.
From ANSA, Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte studies his next move.
From EuroNews, Austrian customs authorities seize 74 chameleons from a traveler at the Vienna airport.
From The Jerusalem Post, coronavirus-inspired riots in Bnei Brak, Israel are not an intifada.
From The New Arab, did Egypt's revolution, which took place 10 years ago today, fail?
From Dawn, police in the Pakistani province of Punjab allegedly injure protesting students with their batons.
From the Hindustan Times, Indian farmers claim that their tractors are prevented from reaching Delhi.
From the Blitz, Pakistan threatens to imprison two Ahmadi Muslims who are based in the U.S.
From The Guardian, one of the two men convicted of murdering British soldier Fusilier Lee Rigby has contracted the coronavirus. (This site is the Nigerian Guardian, not the British one.)
From Human Rights Watch, the Malaysian government attempts to strengthen its criminal penalties against LGBT people.
From Gatestone Institute, the swamp is still afraid of former President Trump, and of you. (As Trump himself pointed out, they're really after you. He's just in the way.)
From The Stream, President Biden's mask comes off.
From the eponymous site of Steve Gruber, Biden has been busy, which is precisely the problem. (via LifeZette)
From The Daily Signal, National School Choice Week is a chance to reexamine children's education.
From Fox News, The New York Times ignores Jacob Blake's admission that he had a knife when he was shot by police.
From Newsmax, Biden reportedly wants to accelerate the process of putting abolitionist Harriet Tubman on the $20 bill.
From Breitbart, actor Sacha Baron Cohen admits that Borat 2 was an anti-Trump movie.
From AP News, lawmakers are reportedly threatened ahead of Trump's second impeachment trial. (via The Daily Wire)
From Politico, the Supreme Court shuts down two cases accusing then-President Trump of violating the constitution's emolument clause. (via The Daily Wire)
From The Daily Wire, Biden's immigration plan may already be "dead on arrival".
From the New York Post, these memes about Senator Socialism (I-VT) and his mittens might be going too far.
And from The Babylon Bee, the earnings from all those mittens memes enable Senator Socialism to buy his fourth house.
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