On a warm partly sunny Tuesday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, America's horrible inflation numbers.
From FrontpageMag, President Biden's Iran deal is so bad that even some Democrats oppose it.
From Townhall, noted race hustler Al Sharpton "takes rich woke white liberals to the woodshed".
From The Washington Free Beacon, an employee as a contactor for USAID celebrates a terror attack against Israeli civilians.
From the Washington Examiner, more on the latest Bidenflation.
From The Federalist, Texas Governor Greg Abbott's (R) sending illegal aliens to D.C. won't secure the border, but here's what will.
From American Thinker, with Earth Day coming up, it's good to take a look at the predictions made back when it was first observed.
From CNS News, gasoline is 48 percent more expensive than it was a year ago.
Form LifeZette, the Democrats fear the midterm elections.
From NewsBusters, CNN Newsroom host Jim Sciutto blames a shooting in the New York City subway on gun laws in southern states.
From Canada Free Press, will the new coronavirus lockdowns in Shanghai, China influence government policies in the U.S. and Canada?
From TeleSUR, the U.N. Security Council will analyze a new wave of violence in Colombia.
From TCW Defending Freedom, the speech that U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson should make about the murder of Sir David Amess.
From the Daily Mail, the mother of the man who killed Amess suspected that he had joined ISIS a year before committing the murder, but was afraid to report him.
From Snouts in the Trough, China loves Russia's war in Ukraine and the supposed "sanctions" from the West.
From Free West Media, German and Austrian mayors, under 60 years of age, have been dying "unexpectedly".
From Euractiv, Ukraine refuses to welcome German President Frank-Walter Steinmeyer due to his ties to Russia.
From ReMix, Hungary works with the Russian company Gazprom to find a way to pay for its gas in rubles.
From Balkan Insight, a group led by Greek-Russian businessman Ivan Savvidis sends aid to pro-Russian separatists in eastern Ukraine. (If you read Russian, read the story at Donetskoye Agentstvo Novostey.)
From The North Africa Post, Libyan authorities release 24 Tunisian fishermen who were arrested last week.
From The New Arab, Algeria accuses Morocco of shelling commercial convoys on the Algerian-Mauritanian border.
From Dawn, Pakistani politicians and an "unidentified elderly" get into a fight at a hotel in Islamabad, Pakistan.
From The Express Tribune, according to former Prime Minister Imran Khan, democracy in Pakistan can be safeguarded, not by the military or by foreign countries, but by the people.
From Pakistan Today, new Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif convenes an urgent meeting of Pakistani economic experts.
From The Hans India, about 50 shanties in Delhi, India are "gutted" by a large fire.
From the Hindustan Times, the Indian government designates as a terrorist a commander of the Jaish-e-Mohammad organization who was a handler during an attack on the Pathankot Air Force Base.
From ANI, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi will inaugurate Pradhanmantri Sangrahalaya this coming Thursday. (The Pradhanmantri Sangrahalaya, which may also be spelled in three words as "Pradhan Mantri Sangrahalaya", is a museum that tells the stories of India's prime ministers.)
From India Today, Madhya Pradesh state Home Minister Narottam Mishra justifies the use of bulldozers against rioters in Khargone, India.
From the Dhaka Tribune, Bangladesh is paying heavily for the inefficiency and poor maintenance of local fertilizer production units.
From the Colombo Page, the Sri Lankan government suspends the servicing of the external public debt.
From the Daily Mirror, China claims to be doing the "utmost" to help to help debt-ridden Sri Lanka.
From Gatestone Institute, "why Palestinians celebrate the murder of Jews".
From Tempo(dot)Co, the Indonesian House of Representatives passes a bill against sexual violence.
From The Straits Times, the aforementioned city of Shanghai cautiously eases some of its coronavirus restrictions.
From Free Malaysia Today, Malaysia's High Court will rule on the anti-hopping law passed in the state of Penang.
From the Borneo Post, Malaysian high-hurdler Mohd Rizzua Haizad qualifies for the SEA Games in Hanoi, Vietnam.
From Vietnam Plus, Hanoi, Vietnam puts up decorations ahead of the SEA Games.
From the Taipei Times, according to Premier Su Tseng-chang, Taiwan has no plans to reopen its border to international tourists in May.
From The Mainichi, a Rohingya living in Tatebayashi, Japan calls for the Japanese government to recognize the attacks on his people as genocide.
From The Stream, the danger of creating a god in our image.
From The Daily Signal, who suffers the most when crime waves hit?
From The American Conservative, the art of learning nothing from past failures.
From The Western Journal, Senator Joe Manchin (D-WV) isn't buying President Biden's use of Russian President Putin as an excuse for inflation.
From BizPac Review, leftists are horrified as right-wing journalist Tucker Carlson reveals his coronavirus vaccination status.
From The Daily Wire, according to Clinton-era Secretary of Labor Robert Reich, Elon Musk's vision for the Internet is "dangerous nonsense".
From KHOU-11, a man tries to break into a house while disguised as a healthcare worker and runs into the 2nd Amendment. (via the Daily Caller)
From the Daily Caller, Biden is expected to announce the suspension of an environmental rule in order to slow the rise in gas prices.
From the New York Post, the streaming service CNN+ reportedly draws fewer than 10,000 daily viewers.
From Breitbart, according to the above-mentioned Tucker Carlson, China's rulers are using coronavirus restrictions to hold on to their power.
From Newsmax, the U.S. budget deficit in March is less than a third what is was a year earlier.
And from Variety, actor and comedian Gilbert Gottfried goes to the silver screen in the sky.
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