On the last Wednesday of April, here are some things going on:
From National Review, Democrat "stimulus" spending will grow the government, not the economy.
From FrontpageMag, from his political beginnings, Senator (D-Del)/Vice President/President Biden was all about power and money. (When he was elected to the Senate in November of 1972, he was a few weeks shy of his 30th birthday, thus becoming a Senator at just above the constitutional age requirement. Today, he easily meets the presidential age requirement twice over, as did his immediate predecessor.)
From Townhall, according to a poll, the vast majority of voters believe that the border is less secure under Biden.
From The Washington Free Beacon, Biden's nominee for State Department human right chief wanted President Bush the Younger and Vice President Cheney prosecuted for war crimes.
From the Washington Examiner, Biden is expected to pitch a leftist agenda using centrist language in his first joint address to Congress.
From The Federalist, the CDC removes a scientist for stating his opinion on the Johnson & Johnson coronavirus vaccine, then effectively adopts it four days later.
From American Thinker, how to benefit from white privilege, even if you're not white.
From CNS News, according to Johns Hopkins University professor Dr. Marty Makary, more people in the U.S. have tuberculosis than the coronavirus.
From LifeZette, YouTube targets right-wing commentator Drew Berquist for his conservative views. (LifeZette has often republished articles from Berquist's eponymous site.)
From NewsBusters, MSNBC hails Biden's first set of judicial nominees for not being white men.
From Canada Free Press, the U.S. as a dual state.
From TeleSUR, the attorney for former Ecuadorian Vice President Jorge Glas is shot dead while driving a vehicle in Quito.
From The Conservative Woman, wokery comes for Isaac Newton.
From Free West Media, several European parliamentcritters from Germany's Green Party criticize Denmark's new migrant policy.
From EuroNews, a Belgian parliamentcritter shares a video of his being assaulted by young men in Brussels.
From Euractiv, Bulgarian prosecutors investigate possible Russian involvement in four explosions at military depots.
From ReMix, Poland says nie to the E.U.'s mandate for a third gender on ID cards.
From Independent Balkan News Agency, over 2,000 people will be deprived of their Montenegrin citizenship due to also holding citizenship in another country.
From Balkan Insight, North Macedonia passes a law to make its easier for transgenders to change their gender identities.
From The North Africa Post, Polisario leader Ghali reportedly used a false identity to enter Spain for medical treatment.
From The New Arab, Syria's parliament finalizes its list of presidential candidates.
From Allah's Willing Executioners, according to Austrian doctors, coronavirus infections rise during Ramadan. (If you read German, read the story at Unzensuriert.)
From Palestinian Media Watch, Palestinian Authority religious officials urge harsh action against anyone caught eating during Ramadan.
From Gatestone Institute, communist China want to dominate Antarctica.
From The Stream, the College of the Ozarks stands up to President Biden's transgender order.
From The Daily Signal, the CDC too often ignores science when giving advice on the coronavirus.
From The American Conservative, a book looks at Winston Churchill's relationships with his father and with his only son, both named Randolph.
From LifeNews, White House press secretary Jen Psaki defends selling parts from aborted babies as "investing in science".
From Fox Business, a shortage of truck drivers could bring on a shortage of gasoline this summer.
From the New York Post, the Biden administration will no longer federal agents to carry out immigration arrests at court houses.
And from The Daily Wire, Apollo 11 Command Module pilot Michael Collins passes away at age 90.
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