On a cloudy and relatively mild Tuesday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, the Los Angeles Unified School District gets strict on masks.
From FrontpageMag, another rape gang is found in the U.K.
From Townhall, the Biden administration's double standards on borders.
From The Washington Free Beacon, Bidenflation crushes fast food value meals. (Considering that fast food isn't all that healthy, this might be a positive development, at least in the nutritional sense.)
From the Washington Examiner, President Biden pretends that he wants to know what Republicans are for.
From The Federalist, Biden's border crisis gets worse as Customs and Border Protection apprehends a record-breaking number of illegal border crossers in December.
From American Thinker, do not forgive or forget the enablers of the coronavirus panic.
From LifeZette, liberals sell out inner city school children, who need school choice.
From NewsBusters, the networks make excuses for "swearing Joe".
From Canada Free Press, what we see in the current federal government is the disaster which happens when the far left gets full power.
From CBC News, as a convoy of anti-mandate truckers head toward Ottawa, Canada, the Canadian government doubles down on its coronavirus vaccine mandate.
From Global News, Canada orders its diplomats in Ukraine and their families to get out of there.
From TeleSUR, an indigenous leader is killed in Buenos Aires, Colombia. (This Buenos Aires is a small town in the Colombian department of Cauca, and should not be confused with the capital of Argentina.)
From TCW Defending Freedom, the real reason why Australia kicked out Serbian tennis player Novak Djoković.
From the Express, U.K. Health Secretary Sajid Javid warns that there night be another coronavirus mutation in the future.
From the Evening Standard, London's Metropolitan Police launch a criminal investigation into parties at the prime minister's residence on Downing Street.
From the (U.K.) Independent, Glasgow, Scotland makes a record £42 million in 2021 for allowing movies to be filmed there.
From the (Irish) Independent and the "boxing above your weight" department, Irish fishermen plan to "peacefully" disrupt Russian naval exercises off the south coast of Ireland.
From the Irish Examiner, according to a security expert, there is little that Ireland can do to stop the Russian naval exercises.
From VRT NWS, Belgian former basketball player Pieter Loridon deliberately infects himself with the coronavirus.
From The Brussels Times, how does Belgium's coronavirus barometer work?
From the NL Times, the full list of coronavirus restrictions in the Netherlands, as of tomorrow.
From Deutsche Welle, the German "far-right" party AfD names a member of the center-right party Christian Democratic Union as its presidential candidate. (According to one thing I once read, the term "far-right" includes anyone to the right of former German Prime Minister Angela Merkel.)
From the CPH Post, the Danish government outlines 15 initiatives against antisemitism.
From ReMix, according to Denmark's left-wing immigration minister, the country is having problems "with too much migration from the Middle East". (Yes, you read that right. The minister who said this is a member of a left-wing party.)
From Polskie Radio, Poland becomes a senior member of the Eurocorps military group.
From Radio Prague, a group of Czech Senators announces its support for a political boycott of the Winter Olympics in Beijing.
From The Slovak Spectator, the Slovak government prepares for a crisis but hopes for a diplomatic solution for Ukraine.
From Daily News Hungary, Budapest Airport cuts its carbon dioxide emissions to half of their level in 2011. (To my pleasant surprise, the article actually uses the word "dioxide".)
From Hungary Today, a court in Hungary sentences a Ukrainian to five years in prison for attempting to smuggle illegal migrants from Serbia into Hungary.
From About Hungary, according to State Secretary Zoltán Kovács, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban has delivered real results.
From Euractiv, the E.U. tells the U.S. to "stay calm" as Ukraine braces for the worst.
From Free West Media, according to French epidemiologist Didier Raoult, "the vaccinated end up more infected than the unvaccinated".
From EuroNews, the French parliament approves a law banning gay conversion therapy.
From The North Africa Post, the head of the junta ruling Guinea names the 81 members of a new National Transitional Council.
From The New Arab, an exhibit of cartoons portraying the late Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat in Ramallah, West Bank goes over like a lead balloon.
From The Jewish Press, was Jesus a Palestinian martyr, or even a terrorist?
From Gatestone Institute, Iran's proxy in the Gaza strip.
From The Stream, why there is disdain between the masked and unmasked.
From HistoryNet, the Samoan unit who fought in World War II barefoot.
From The Daily Signal, two women explain why they marched for life and against coronavirus vaccine mandates.
From The American Conservative, "the dependency trap".
From BizPac Review, the Supreme Court denies congresscritter Kevin McCarthy's (R-Cal) attempt to abolish proxy voting.
From The Western Journal, anti-mandate protesters roar as Dr. Robert Malone tells the truth about coronavirus vaccines.
From The Daily Wire, the SAT will soon become shorter, easier, and online.
From the Daily Caller, Delta Force veteran Chris VanSant gives his thoughts on the situation between Ukraine and Russia.
From Breitbart, how low can President Biden's ratings go?
From Newsmax, White House press secretary Jen Psaki points out that the 8,500 American troops being put on alert are not being sent to Ukraine.
And from the New York Post, Elton John becomes Captain Coronavirus, but is still standing.
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