On a warm sunny Tuesday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, South Dakota Governor Kristi Noem will sign a bill that restricts female athletics to actual female athletes.
From FrontpageMag, an Australian commentator exposes the media's Biden protection racket.
From Townhall, the number of unaccompanied underage migrants entering the U.S. has "tripled in two weeks".
From The Washington Free Beacon, new Senator Mark Kelly (D-AZ) votes for the $15 minimum wage, after serving on the board of a company which opposed it.
From the Washington Examiner, former President and Twitter user Trump finds his new voice.
From The Federalist, for national security reasons, let's keep President Biden in his basement and off TV.
From American Thinker, Trump forced the Deep State to play its hand.
From CNS News, a Biden proposal calls for "equity" between the Afghan government and the Taliban.
From LifeZette, Biden can't seem to remember the name of the Secretary of Defense, whom he appointed.
From NewsBusters, right-wing journalist Ben Shapiro gives Morning Joe economic analyst Steve Rattner a lesson on taxes.
From Canada Free Press, treason triumphs as the Supreme Court does nothing.
From CBC News, Canada's Northwest Territories study alternatives to using the school curriculum of the province of Alberta.
From TeleSUR, 81 people are injured in a protest on International Women's Day.
From The Conservative Woman, companies which make billions from the coronavirus.
From the Express, Prime Minister Boris "the Spider" Johnson gets angry at accusations that the U.K. is refusing to export coronavirus vaccinations.
From the (Irish) Independent, the full scale of illegal adoptions in Ireland may never be known as a review of historic records is inconclusive.
From VRT NWS, Belgian police conduct drug raids at 200 properties.
From Euractiv, Brussels, Belgium will rename tram and bus stops after famous women.
From the NL Times, Dutch police take out the encrypted messaging service SkyECC and arrest 30 suspects.
From Deutsche Welle, a coronavirus corruption scandal hounds German Chancellor Angela Merkel's party.
From the CPH Post, fewer people are victims of violence in Denmark.
From Free West Media, a majority in the Swedish parliament want to ban participation in "racist" organizations.
From Polskie Radio, the Polish refiner PKN Orlen signs a deal to buy crude oil from the U.S. company Exxon Mobil.
From Radio Prague, the number of coronavirus in intensive care in the Czech Republic reaches a new high.
From The Slovak Spectator, Slovakia could be vaccinating people age 40 and up starting in May.
From Daily News Hungary, Hungary lifts its bird flu restrictions.
From Russia Today, the developers of Russia's first coronavirus vaccine demand an apology after the chairperson of the European Medicines Agency calls it "Russian roulette".
From Romania-Insider, Amazon plans to open three more offices in Romania.
From Novinite, according to Prime Minister Boyko Borissov, further coronavirus restrictions are imminent if hospitals become overloaded.
From the Greek Reporter, clashes break out between police and protesters in Athens.
From Independent Balkan News Agency, Kosovo Foreign Minister Meliza Haradinaj-Stubbla resigns.
From Balkan Insight, doctors in Bulgaria and Albania run for political office.
From Total Croatia News, the Croatian neurosurgical robot NERO will soon be performing brain surgeries.
From Total Slovenia News, Prime Minister Janez Janša asks the director of the Slovenian Press Agency to resign.
From the Malta Independent, these three Maltese athletes are not to be messed with.
From ANSA, police in Genoa, Italy arrest 15 Italians and 14 Albanians for allegedly smuggling drugs.
From EuroNews, Italy will become the first E.U. country to manufacture the first Russian coronavirus vaccine.
From SwissInfo, the U.N. disapproves of Switzerland's new burka ban.
From France24, France will speed up the declassification of its secret archives from Algeria's war for independence.
From El País, Spain's coronavirus incidence rate continues to fall, but authorities still urge caution.
From The Portugal News, local businesses in Lisbon, Portugal will be able to sell their products on a digital platform.
From Morocco World News, Morocco extends a sand berm in Western Sahara for 50 kilometers along the border with Algeria.
From Hürriyet Daily News, according to the Turkish defense ministry, Greece is deploying naval ships near the Turkish coast.
From Rûdaw, Kurdish forest police face difficulties fighting against illegal charcoal manufacture.
From Armenpress, opposition leader Vazgen Manukyan urges protesters to cut off all entrances to Armenia's National Assembly.
From In-Cyprus, Cyprus's interior ministry constructs a fence with barbed wire in the area of Astromeritis to keep out illegal migrants.
From The Syrian Observer, Syrian President Bashar and First Lady Asma al-Assad contract the coronavirus.
From Arutz Sheva, some beaches in Israel reopen after tar pollution dissipates.
From the Egypt Independent, according to President Abdel al-Sisi, "Egpyt is witnessing a rebirth" with the opening of its New Administrative Capital.
From the Ethiopian Monitor, Ethiopia allows the African Union's rights commission to investigate allegations in the region of Tigray.
From the Saudi Gazette, Saudi Arabian Crown Prince Muhammad Bin Salman and Sudanese Prime Minister Dr. Abdullah Hamadouk meet to discuss the relations between their two countries.
From The New Arab, women in the Middle East and North Africa protest against sexual harassment.
From Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, the U.S. urges Iran to provide "credible" information about an "abducted" former FBI agent.
From The Express Tribune, the annual Aurat March in Karachi, Pakistan returns with greater fury but fewer participants.
From Khaama Press, in the province of Herat, Afghan security and defense forces send 31 Taliban terrorists to their virgins.
From India Today, as India enters its election season, the prices of gasoline and diesel are frozen.
From the Dhaka Tribune, some large construction projects in Bangladesh will miss their deadlines.
From the Colombo Page, the Sri Lankan parliament's Women Parliamentarians' Caucus launches its official website.
From The Jakarta Post, alumni of a Catholic high school in Jakarta, Indonesia launch a coronavirus vaccine drive for the elderly.
From Free Malaysia Today, Malaysian tourism industry players are reminded to not neglect domestic tourism when the country's borders are reopened.
From The Mainichi, nearly 400 people are found to be infected with a Japanese variant of the coronavirus.
From Gatestone Institute, China is winning the 21st century tech war.
From The Stream, it's utterly absurd that the "pro-life evangelicals for Biden" now feel betrayed.
From The Daily Signal, the Supreme Court removes a barrier to protecting the First Amendment.
From Military History Matters, maps showing the defeat of the Spanish Armada are saved by a fundraising appeal.
From Vatican News, Pope Francis plans to visit Budapest, Hungary in September. (via Breitbart)
From Anadolu Agency, a bomb attack injures 10 Shiite pilgrims in Baghdad, Iraq. (via Breitbart)
From Newsmax, according to congresscritter Ralph Normal (R-SC), the coronavirus relief act is "an insult to the American people".
From Breitbart, congresscritter Joaquin Castro (D-TX) accuses Republicans of fear-mongering over the increased influx of migrants at the border.
From The Daily Wire, the first independent report on China's treatment of the Uyghurs finds the country in breach of the 1948 U.N. Genocide Convention.
From the New York Post, according to a survey, atheists are more likely to get vaccinated against the coronavirus.
And from the Genesius Times, Disney unveils the first oppressed Princess Meghan doll.
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