On a cloudy but mild Thursday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, Senator Kirsten Sinema (D-AZ) declares that she will not suspend the filibuster to pass two voting bills favored by her fellow Democrats.
From FrontpageMag, some dark thoughts from Mrs. Fauci.
From Townhall, President Biden boasts about government medical teams, but does not mention why they are necessary.
From The Washington Free Beacon, the media double standards about presidents and coronavirus-related deaths.
From the Washington Examiner, Oath Keepers leader Stewart Rhodes and 10 others are charged with "seditious conspiracy" in connection to the Capitol riot.
From The Federalist, the January 6th investigation that we really need.
From American Thinker, 10 unpleasant statistics "to ruin your day".
From CNS News, according to Senator Lindsey Graham (R-SC), Biden plays the race card because he is a failure as president.
From LifeZette, the solution to school closings is school choice.
From the eponymous site of Steve Gruber, how much "President Disaster" and the Democrats are costing us. (via LifeZette)
From the eponymous site of Drew Berquist, Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) lets the media have it over their hypocrisy. (via LifeZette)
From NewsBusters, in its latest coronavirus guidelines, the NCAA admits that natural immunity works.
From Canada Free Press, truckers with the race against the Canadian government on food delivery.
From TeleSUR, Haiti honors its 316,000 citizens who died in the 2010 earthquake.
From TCW Defending Freedom, after Prime Minister Boris Johnson, the U.K. will get more of the same.
From Snouts in the Trough, what's the difference between a "scientist" and a prostitute?
From Balkan Insight, how the earthquake that struck Petrinja, Croatia exposed the Croatian government's "rotten interior".
From Free West Media, mandatory coronavirus vaccination in Austria and Germany is postponed by technical difficulties.
From EuroNews, the U.K.'s Prince Andrew returns his military affiliations and royal patronages as the prepares to defend himself in a sexual assault lawsuit.
From Euractiv, Russian-led troops start pulling out of Kazakhstan.
From ReMix, illegal border crossings into E.U. territory increased by 57 percent in 2021.
From Morocco World News, Morocco's Administration of Customs and Indirect Taxes adjusts its control system.
From The North Africa Post, the Algerian government deals with signs of a boycott against the next Arab summit, scheduled for Algiers this coming March.
From Hürriyet Daily News, Turkey plans to mass produce the light attack aircraft Hürjet.
From Turkish Minute, 15 female inmates in a Turkish prison are disciplined for chanting Kurdish slogans and the name of a Kurdish woman found dead in her cell.
From Rûdaw, floods hit neighborhoods in Erbil, Iraq.
From Armenpress, according to the foreign minister of Artsakh, the government of Azerbaijan sanctions Armenophobia. (Artsakh is also known as Nagorno-Karabakh and is an Armenian-majority region within Azerbaijan.)
From In-Cyprus, a Sikh temple will be constructed in Lavadia, Cyprus.
From The Syrian Observer, ISIS attacks a medical area within the al-Hol refugee camp in Syria.
From The961, according to a report by Human Rights Watch, 80 percent of Lebanese people have no access to basic rights.
From Arutz Sheva, thousands of people rally at a right-wing protest outside the Israeli prime minister's office.
From The Times Of Israel, the bribery case against former Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu could end up in a plea deal.
From The Jerusalem Post, an omicron "sub variant" of the coronavirus is found in Israel.
From YNetNews, Bedouins and Israeli security forces clash over forestation in the country's Negev region.
From the Egypt Independent, the Suez Canal hopes to accommodate 15 percent of the world's energy trade in 2040.
From Egypt Today, Egyptian President Abdel al Sisi addresses the World Youth Forum and announces that 2022 will be the year of "civil society".
From the Ethiopian Monitor, Ethiopia's Ministry of Foreign Affairs files objections to alleged misconduct by WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom.
From The New Arab, Tunisia imposes a new curfew ahead of expected celebrations of the anniversary of the Arab Spring.
From BBC News, Afghans who had worked for the British Council are still hiding out from the Taliban.
From Gatestone Institute, the "Jewish state" and racism from Arabs.
From The Stream, the demand for "voter rights legislation" is really a demand for government-back voter disenfrancisement.
From The Daily Signal, California provides millions of dollars in loans to small businesses, allowing illegal aliens to qualify.
From The American Conservative, a suggested education agenda for Virginia Governor-elect Glenn Youngkin (R).
From The Western Journal, the Supreme Court stops the Biden administration's coronavirus vaccine rules for businesses, but allows the vaccine requirement for most health care workers.
From BizPac Review, Minnesota and Utah face lawsuits over their health care racial "scoring system".
From The Daily Wire, read the Supreme Court's decision against the Biden administration's vaccine mandate.
From the Daily Caller, thousands of federal workers plan to march against the vaccine mandates.
From the New York Post, Queen Elizabeth strips Prince Andrew of the title "His Royal Highness".
From Breitbart, more on the Supreme Court's decision on vaccination mandates.
From Newsmax, conservatives hail the Supreme Court's vaccine mandate decision.
From AL(dot)com, football player Kayvon Thibodeaux explains why he chose to play for Oregon instead of Alabama.
And from the Genesius Times, the omicron coronavirus variant surpasses actor Alex Baldwin in the leading causes of death in the U.S.
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