On a sunny but cool Monday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, a murder in Washington, D.C. gets very little attention.
From FrontpageMag, the truth about the mass shooting in Boulder, Colorado.
From Townhall, the widespread false or misleading attacks on Georgia's new voting law.
From The Washington Free Beacon, Senate Democrats punt on gun control bills from the House.
From the Washington Examiner, according to a Border Patrol official, 861 criminal aliens, including 92 sex offenders, have been apprehended in the Rio Grande valley.
From The Federalist, President Biden has elevated a transgender person who supports child mutilation.
From American Thinker, the common threads between the rise of the Nazis and the tactics of the modern left.
From CNS News, according to Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX), over 16,000 migrant children are now in custody in Border Patrol facilities.
From LifeZette, Senator Tom Cotton (R-Ark) has a suggestion for fixing the failure of our immigration system.
From NewsBusters, in a shocking development, an Axios correspondent points out how stalling economic growth would not be good for the environment.
From Canada Free Press, reality gets relentlessly and often violently destroyed.
From Global News, according to Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, China must address the world's concerns about the abuse against the Uyghurs.
From TeleSUR, Peru's presidential debates will include 18 candidates.
From The Conservative Woman, the connection between the coronavirus vaccine and death on the Rock of Gibraltar.
From Snouts in the Trough, lies, more lies, and "global warming".
From the Evening Standard, as coronavirus restrictions are relaxed, more Britons can go on day trips. (Have they got good reasons for taking the easy way out?)
From the Irish Examiner, Ireland's oldest busker is busking again after receiving his coronavirus vaccination.
From The Brussels Times, Belgians in multiple sectors go on strike.
From Dutch News, now unstuck from the Suez Canal, the Ever Give heads toward Rotterdam, Netherlands.
From the CPH Post, Danes will participate in Waste Collecting Week in April, and other items.
From Hungary Today, Hungary starts vaccinating pregnant women against the coronavirus. (If you read Hungarian, read related stories at Telex and Semmelweis Hírek.)
From Sputnik International, according to Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov, Russia's ambassador to the U.S. has not yet briefed President Putin about the current state of the ties between the two countries.
From Romania-Insider, Romanian authorities intensify their checks as new coronavirus restrictions take effect. (If you read Romanian, read related stories, both at Digi24.)
From The Sofia Globe, two hospitals in Sofia, Bulgaria offer "green corridors" for people wanting coronavirus vaccinations.
From Ekathimerini, coronavirus vaccines gain ground in Greece.
From Independent Balkan News Agency, statements by Montenegro's justice minister about the 1995 genocide in Srebrenica, Bosnia spark an outcry.
From Balkan Insight, the Srpska Lista party sues Kosovo's government to get a second cabinet ministry.
From Malta Today, according to opposition leader Bernard Grech, Malta should cut all ties to the company Electrogas.
From ANSA, three more Italian regions become coronavirus red zones.
From RFI, France starts its first trial of medical marijuana.
From El País, despite the coronavirus, night life in Madrid "rages on".
From The North Africa Post, Morocco suspends air travel with France and Spain.
From Turkish Minute, Turkey's Human Rights Association calls for the release of a Kurdish woman from prison for medical reasons.
From Armenpress, according to the deputy mayor of Goris, Armenia, Azerbaijanis threw stones at a vehicle transporting the bodies of dead military personnel.
From The Syrian Observer, a Chinese delegation visits the region of Idleb in areas controlled by the Syrian government.
From The Jerusalem Post, is the rising water level in the Sea of Galilee dangerous?
From Egypt Today, the Suez Canal has reopened.
From the Ethiopian Monitor, Ethiopian launches a new safety net program that target 8 million vulnerable people.
From The New Arab, more on the Suez Canal being reopened.
From IranWire, Iran's criminal record in many countries.
From Pakistan Today, Pakistan gets a new finance minister.
From the Hindustan Times, India and the U.S. agree to revamp their energy partnership.
From the Daily Mirror, a Sri Lankan police officer is "heavily condemned" after being filmed assaulting a truck driver.
From the National, the Grand Mosque in Mecca, Saudi Arabia will be cleaned with 60,000 liters of sanitizer every day during Ramadan.
From MSN, the British charity Himmah kept Meghan Markle's $13,000 donation a secret.
From the National Accord, the Sudanese government signs a declaration that agrees to separate religion and state.
From BBC News, dozens of people are killed in a terrorist attack in Palma, Mozambique.
From The Straits Times, Singapore studies a travel bubble proposal from Hong Kong.
From the Borneo Post, the daily number of new coronavirus cases in Malaysia falls under 1,000 for the first time since last December 9th.
From Vietnam Plus, a trade deal between Vietnam and the U.K. will take effect on May 1st.
From Gatestone Institute, China's effort to grab the Whitsun Reef is like a slow-motion "Sudetenland".
From The Stream, do left-wing journalists ever engage in any introspection?
From Breitbart, Muslims in the U.K. demand that it must respect Islam or become "like France".
From The Daily Signal, according to a border expert, illegal immigration is linked to organized crime.
From The American Conservative, the things that the "lost generation" got right.
From HistoryNet, what happened in Vietnam at My Lai?
From The Daily Wire, a bill in Oregon defines "merit" as people who have received "anti-bias" training.
From Fox News, President Biden urges governors to reinstate coronavirus mask requirements.
From the New York Post, the U.S. suspends trade and investment with Myanmar after it cracks down on protesters.
From Military History Matters, if you're in Vilonia, Arkansas, you can stay in a former nuclear missile silo.
And from The Babylon Bee, business at the Capitol comes to a halt after Biden falls down and blocks its main hallway.
No comments:
Post a Comment