On the second day of the second month of 2021, here are some things going on:
From National Review, former President Trump's legal team prepares its defense.
From FrontpageMag, the biggest White House liar ever is the man in there now.
From Townhall, congresscritter Steve Scalise (R-LA) blasts President Biden's plan to vaccinate illegal aliens against the coronavirus.
From The Washington Free Beacon, the anti-Trump organization Lincoln Project shares personnel with liberal election groups.
From the Washington Examiner, former South Bend, Indiana Mayor Pete Buttigieg is confirmed Secretary of Transportation, making him the first openly gay cabinet member.
From The Federalist, it was liberal Supreme Court justices who established that protest is not "sedition".
From American Thinker, why are the left so afraid of Trump?
From CNS News, one of Trump's impeachment defense attorneys considers calling Senators as witnesses.
From LifeZette, former San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer (R) decides to run for governor of California.
From NewsBusters, new Senator (and former college football coach) Tommy Tuberville (R-AL) gets the "idiot of the month" award from Deadspin.
From Canada Free Press, the fight that's between the status quo and succession.
From TeleSUR, a court in La Paz, Bolivia considers postponing local elections.
From The Conservative Woman, we're all guinea pigs in the largest experiment ever.
From Free West Media, Twitter suspends the Spanish party Vox for launching a campaign against immigration.
From EuroNews, a court in Moscow unsuspends the Russian dissident Alexey Navalny's suspended sentence.
From Euractiv, the E.U. "regrets" the decision by Kosovo to open an embassy in Jerusalem.
From ReMix, groups smuggling illegal migrants into Europe increase their prices. (If you read Hungarian, read the story at Magyar Nemzet.)
From The New Arab, eight Lebanese citizens are returned from the UAE.
From Sahara Reporters, the Hisbah Board of the Nigerian state of Bauchi seizes 260 crates of alcoholic beverages.
From Newsweek, the Pakistani Senate approves the compulsory teaching of Arabic in all public schools in the capital city of Islamabad.
From Al Arabiya, according to U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, Iran is close to having a nuclear bomb.
From Gatestone Institute, according to Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen, Denmark's goal is to have no asylum seekers.
From The Stream, how Republicans supported civil rights during the 1960s.
From The Daily Signal, an American visits Vietnam, which reconfirms his hatred of communism.
From Space War, Iran tests a new solid fuel rocket.
From The Daily Wire, read former President Trump's answer to the impeachment article.
From Newsmax, GameStop's rally comes to a screeching halt.
From the New York Post, Matt Groening draws a masked Homer Simpson in an effort to raise D'oh for his high school alma mater.
From Fox News, Fox News toots its own horn.
From CBS Philly, a billionaire from Pennsylvania's Lehigh Valley buys an entire SpaceX flight for himself and three "everyday" people.
From the Hindustan Times, an auction house in Chesapeake City, Maryland will take bids for a toilet seat once owned by der Führer.
And from The Babylon Bee, in an effort to shake off abuse accusations, noted musician Marylin Manson runs for public office as a Democrat.
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