As the warm weather continues on a Wednesday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, President Biden is making it up as he goes along.
From FrontpageMag, the fallacy behind the fundamentalism of "follow the science".
From Townhall, a comparison of Georgia's new voting law with Delaware's voting law.
From The Washington Free Beacon, the solar industry's reliance on involuntary servitude in China threatens Biden's plans for a green economy.
From the Washington Examiner, former President Trump denies being asked for a pardon by congresscritter Matt Gaetz (R-FL).
From The Federalist, how to start fighting back against woke corporate America.
From American Thinker, coronavirus stats from Texas reveal Dr. Fauci's failure at the scientific method.
From CNS News, Missouri Governor Mike Parson (R) promises that his state will have no coronavirus vaccine passports.
From LifeZette, Hunter Biden will get away with what he has done.
From NewsBusters, are you ready for California governor Kaitlyn Jenner (R)?
From Canada Free Press, the Nazis were socialists just like the Marxist-Leninists, and before World War II, left-wingers supported both.
From Global News, according to its National Advisory Committee on Immunization, Canada could vaccinate 75 percent of its adults against the coronavirus by mid-June.
From TeleSUR, Nicaragua starts vaccinating its people against 16 diseases.
From The Conservative Woman, according to a former Pfizer chief science officer, we are being lied to about the coronavirus.
From Snouts in the Trough, is it just another two-week period of tolerance from the world's most tolerant people?
From the Evening Standard, British people aged 18 to 29 will be offered an alternative to the AstraZeneca coronavirus vaccine.
From the Irish Examiner, according to the Independent Scientific Advocacy Group, Ireland needs a "stronger suppression" strategy to avoid a fifth wave of the coronavirus.
From The Brussels Times, Belgium will give the AstraZeneca coronavirus vaccine only to people over 55, for the time being.
From Dutch News, Dutch ministers plan to allow restaurants to reopen their outdoor seating areas starting on April 21st. (If you read Dutch, read the story at NOS and/or RTL Nieuws.)
From ReMix, an agreement under which the U.S. will build nuclear power plans in Poland is possible within two years.
From Hungary Today, is Hungary ready to start reopening from its coronavirus measures?
From Euractiv, despite threats from China, Lithuania moves to recognize the Uighur genocide.
From Sputnik International, an advocacy group wants warning labels on fast food sold in Russia.
From The Sofia Globe, Bulgaria grants 46.4 million leva for more doses of the BioNTech-Pfizer coronavirus vaccine.
From Ekathimerini, Greece plans to reopen its schools on April 12th, using coronavirus self-test kits.
From Independent Balkan News Agency, according to a poll, 44 percent of people in Moldova want the country to unite with Romania.
From Balkan Insight, Kosovo parliamentcritter Xhavit Haliti urges Albania to open coronavirus vaccination centers to Kosovo citizens in Albania.
From Malta Today, Prime Minister Robert Abela announces plans to lift Malta's coronavirus measures, including staggered school reopening.
From Free West Media, four migrants invade the home of a pro-migration tycoon and wife and assault them in Combs-la-Ville, France.
From EuroNews, during a meeting with Turkish President Erdoğan, male E.U. leaders leave European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen without a chair.
From The North Africa Post, Morocco and Colombia agree to let each other's people visit without a visa.
From Turkish Minute, according to a report by Amnesty International, Turkey continued to punish dissent in 2020.
From The Times Of Israel, Israeli forces reportedly strike an Iranian spy ship in the Red Sea.
From The New Arab, Ethiopia plans to continue its dam filling.
From IranWire, about 850,000 have left Iran's labor market since Hassan Rouhani become the country's president.
From Pakistan Today, a suspect arrested during the Pakistani government's investigation of a sugar scandal turns out to be an employee of the Sindh provincial government.
From the Afghanistan Times, women in the Afghan province of Badakhshan suffer from increasing violence. (Please welcome my new source, the Afghanistan Times.)
From India Today, India and Saudi Arabia carry out a joint naval exercise in the Persian Gulf.
From the Daily Mirror, experts are concerned about earth tremors in and around Kandy, Sri Lanka.
From The Straits Times, experts warn that global warming could cause Indonesia to be hit by more tropical cyclones.
From the Borneo Post, the coronavirus hasn't stopped the "super-rich" in Malaysia from getting richer.
From Vietnam Plus, more congratulations come in for newly appointed Vietnamese leaders.
From Gatestone Institute, President Biden's plans will create jobs - in China.
From The Stream, LGBTQ college students file a class action lawsuit against the Department of Education.
From The Daily Signal, yes, traditional media help inspire the latest attack at the Capitol. (I find it interesting that while Noah Green was a Muslim and not a Trump supporter, it's wrong to blame his actions on Muslims but permissible to blame them on Trump supporters.)
From The American Conservative, Biden's mandate is non-existent.
From The Daily Wire, Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms (D) signs an executive order to "mitigate the impact" of Georgia's new voting law.
From Breitbart, a majority of polled Britons think that Prince Harry and Meghan Markle should be stripped of their titles.
From Fox News, Governor Kay Ivey (R) lifts the Alabama's coronavirus mask requirement and urges common sense.
From Newsmax, former President Trump endorses congresscritter Mo Brooks (R-AL) for U.S. Senator.
From the New York Post, the NASA helicopter Ingenuity survives a night on Mars. (As Elton John once pointed out, the place is "cold has hell".)
And from the Genesius Times, colleges dump the SAT for the more accurate intelligence test of smoking parmesan cheese.
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