As a Sunday at the end of February turns into Rainday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, the ghost of President Theodore Roosevelt.
From Townhall, congresscritter Peter Meijer (R-Mich) offers an alternative coronavirus relief bill.
From The Washington Free Beacon, for Elon Musk and SpaceX, failure is indeed and option.
From the Washington Examiner, ProFa rioters reportedly vandalize businesses in Portland, Oregon in protest of President Biden's immigration policies.
From American Thinker, Biden gets lost while giving a speech.
From LifeZette, a teacher in Utah wants Republicans to die.
From NewsBusters, even NPR noticed that Senator Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY) won't talk about Governor Andrew Cuomo's (D-NY) "#MeToo moment".
From Canada Free Press, why is leftism so horribly destructive?
From CBC News, Inuit midwives in the Canadian territory of Nunavut quit after years of alleged mistreatment.
From TeleSUR, over 5.4 million citizens of El Salvador are expected to vote today.
From The Conservative Woman, we trust in God, not scientists.
From the Express, the Brazil variant of the coronavirus is found in the U.K.
From the (Irish) Independent, a monkey escapes from its enclosure at the Dublin Zoo.
From VRT NWS, about 100 people protest China's treatment of the Uyghurs in front of the Chinese embassy in Brussels, Belgium. (Hopefully, the next time someone wants to put on a climate protest, they will likewise do so in front of the Chinese embassy, since China is the world's largest emitter of carbon dioxide.)
From the NL Times, a bird chopper in Germany kills an eagle tagged in De Biesbosch, Netherlands.
From Deutsche Welle, German ministers demand that the AstraZeneca coronavirus vaccine be used on all adults.
From Polskie Radio, Poland names 45 athletes to its European Indoor Athletics Championship team.
From Radio Prague, Prime Minister Andrej Babiš refuses to resign over the Czech Republic's worsening coronavirus situation.
From The Slovak Spectator, Slovakia reports 1,815 new coronavirus cases.
From Daily News Hungary, will there be a mass demonstration against coronavirus lockdowns in Budapest, Hungary on March 15th?
From Sputnik International, the Russian space agency Roscosmos launches its first Arktika-M satellite.
From The Sofia Globe, Bulgaria conditionally reopens its "green corridors".
From the Greek Reporter, the oldest photograph taken of the Acropolis in Athens, Greece.
From Total Croatia News, people ask Google how expensive Croatia is.
From Total Slovenia News, the Slovenian olive oil Vanja is named best in the northern hemisphere.
From the Malta Independent, according to Maltese opposition leader Bernard Grech, Prime Minister Robert Abela is trying to "wash his hands" of Malta's previous government.
From EuroNews, archaeologists find an intact ceremonial chariot near the ancient site of Pompeii.
From ReMix, ProFa demonstrators in Austria try to block the deportation of criminal migrants, including convicted rapists.
From SwissInfo, according to a Swiss researcher, the coronavirus pandemic should not be blamed on urban density.
From France24, why French people are suing their government to get social change.
From Free West Media, Muslim youths allegedly lynch a news photographer in Reims, France.
From The Portugal News, a park and ride is coming to Coimbra, Portugal.
From Morocco World News, Morocco's first radio telescope is established in the city of Marrakech.
From Hürriyet Daily News, vaccine teams set out for remote villages in Turkey.
From Rûdaw, Iraq will receive its first delivery of coronavirus vaccines this Monday.
From In-Cyprus, coronavirus measures will be relaxed in Turkish-occupied northern Cyprus starting tomorrow.
From Arutz Sheva, Israel does not plan to ease coronavirus restrictions after Purim.
From the Egypt Independent, according to President Abdel al-Sisi, relocating to a new capital marks a "new era" for Egypt's government.
From the Ethiopian Monitor, Ethiopian authorities investigate an alleged killing in the city of Axum.
From the Saudi Gazette, according to Saudi Arabian General Turki Al-Maliki, Iranian generals control the Houthi militia in Yemen.
From The New Arab, almost 100 migrants are rescued off the Libyan coast, but 20 others are still missing.
From RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty, Iran rules out any informal meeting with the E.U. or the U.S. on reviving the nuclear deal.
From The Express Tribune, the Pakistani province of Sindh will continue the 50 percent attendance policy in its schools.
From Khaama Press, U.S. envoy Zalmay Khalilzad embarks on another trip to Afghanistan and nearby countries.
From the Hindustan Times, police patrolling the Noida Expressway arrest a man transporting 300 kilograms of meat in his SUV.
From the Dhaka Tribune, a cargo ship carrying 800 tons of coal sinks in the Pashur Channel in Bangladesh.
From the Colombo Page, police in Sri Lanka arrest an "exorcist" in the beating death of a nine-year-old girl.
From Palestinian Media Watch, a Palestinian op-ed accuses Israeli of killing Palestinian prisoners with the coronavirus.
From Free Malaysia Today, the Malaysian state of Sabah plans to cull 3,000 pigs to prevent the spread of African swine fever.
From The Mainichi, Kengo Suzuki sets a new men's record in the Lake Biwa Mainichi Marathon.
From Gatestone Institute, Iran's "Cinderella province" of Sistan-Baluchistan is in a rebellious mood.
From The Stream, could an obscure law in Seattle, Washington be the undoing of Big Tech?
From The Daily Signal, why a pastor in Sacramento faithfully confronted Californian Governor Gavin Newsom (D) over the closing of churches.
From The Daily Wire, New York Attorney General Letitia James calls for an investigation of sexual harassment claims against Governor Andrew Cuomo (D).
From Breitbart, Governor Newsom posts a TikTok video of himself and celebrity chef George Lopez in an off-limits restaurant.
From Newsmax, the Senate considers changes to the coronavirus relief bill.
From the New York Post, a crowd in New York City protests a Saturday Night Live joke about Israeli coronavirus vaccine distribution as anti-Semitic.
And from WPVI-TV and the "don't you hate when that happens?" department, a man accidentally shoots himself in a Victoria's Secret store at a mall in King of Prussia, Pennsylvania.
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