On a warm cloudy Monday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, the Biden administration "goes into recession denial".
From FrontpageMag, President Biden's coronavirus case and double standards.
From Townhall, the fiery death of a bird chopper in Texas.
From The Washington Free Beacon, left-wing activists try and fail to cancel a pro-life doctor.
From the Washington Examiner, NASA unveils a plan to discover life on exoplanets.
From The Federalist, Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer (D) shows that she is not pro-choice, but pro-abortion.
From American Thinker, the globalist effort to go after former President Trump is failing "bigly".
From CNS News, according to SBC Pro-Life America, the "Right to Contraception Act" should really be called the "payouts for Planned Parenthood Act".
From Red Voice Media, Governor Ron DeSantis (R-FL) and Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) make waves at a Turning Point event in Florida. (via LifeZette)
From NewsBusters, four controversies involving Squad members that the media buried.
From Canada Free Press, the obsession with the Capitol riot claims another victim.
From CBC News, Pope Francis visits Maskwacis, Alberta, Canada and is expected to deliver an apology for the abuses at Catholic residential schools in Canada.
From Global News, Canadian "Freedom Convoy" organizer Tamara Lich returns to court for a bail review.
From CTV News, a shortage of mustard seed sends mustard prices climbing.
From TeleSUR, the Liberal Party of Brazil makes official President Jair Bolsonaro's campaign for reelection.
From TCW Defending Freedom, the case of Archie Battersbee and why the U.K. has become a Poundland society.
From the Express, Meghan Markle and Prince Harry are slammed for their alleged fears over their daughter Lilibet's royal rank.
From the Evening Standard, railway workers in the U.K. plan strikes.
From the (Irish) Independent, an Irish cyclist is injured after riding into a "trap" made of rope.
From the Irish Examiner, did Ireland experience its highest ever temperature last week, or does a record from 1887 still stand?
From VRT NWS, when in Belgium, please do not moon the police.
From Brussels Times, virologist Marc Van Ranst predicts the return of mandatory face masks in Belgium.
From Allah's Willing Executioners, the Spanish Guardia Civil rescues a Spanish girl from the house of a jihadist in Verviers, Belgium. (I wonder how Spanish authorities are allowed to operate in Belgium. If you read Spanish, read the story at El País. If you read French, read the story at FDeSouche.)
From the NL Times, the Netherlands starts vaccinating people against monkeypox in the cities of Amsterdam and The Hague.
From Dutch News, almost half of the Dutch workforce have part-time jobs.
From Deutsche Welle, the number of young people in Germany falls to a record low.
From Free West Media, Germany's youngest bundestagcritter calls for a dramatic reduction in the voting age.
From the CPH Post, a roundup of news in Denmark.
From Polskie Radio, Polish PT-91 tanks arrive in Ukraine.
From Radio Prague, Czechs brace for an expected gas shortage by buying electric appliances.
From The Slovak Spectator, a monument to the Soviet Army in Košice, Slovakia is again spray-painted.
From Daily News Hungary, Hungary speeds up the revamp of its military.
From Hungary Today, the Hungarian women's saber team wins the World Fencing Championships for the first time.
From About Hungary, according to Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto, preserving the stability of areas surrounding Europe is important to Hungary.
From EuroNews, according to a defector, President Putin (Russia) would feel "humiliated" if he has to meet with President Zelenskyy (Ukraine).
From Euractiv, according to Ukrainian political activist Roman Rukomeda, there will be no peace in Ukraine on "Russian conditions".
From ReMix, Mediterranean crossings are up 50 percent over last year.
From Balkan Insight, Croatian Prime Minister Andrej Plenković supports changes to the election law in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
From The North Africa Post, Tunisians vote today on their new constitution.
From The New Arab, some Tunisians decline to vote on their new constitution.
From Jewish News Syndicate, Palestinian Authority leader Mahmoud Abbas is reportedly creating a dictatorship.
From OpIndia, a man in the Indian state of Madhya Pradesh is beaten up for supporting accused blasphemer Nupur Sharma on social media.
From Israel Hayom, the international terrorist known as Carlos the Jackal recalls being "the first-ever foreigner to join the Palestinian struggle". (The last three stories and the one for AWE above come via The Religion Of Peace.)
From Gatestone Institute, "Chinese government money speaks loudly".
From The Stream, the January 6th Inquisition Committee "openly defies the Constitution".
From The Daily Signal, an attempt to show a photo of a pre-born baby grasping the finger of a surgeon at a congressional hearing is aborted.
From Space Daily, U.S. Army Apache helicopters hold live-fire drills in South Korea.
From The American Conservative, the Biden administration is very much "full of it".
From The Western Journal, President Biden sends self-congratulatory Tweets as gas prices retreat but Americans still suffer at the pump. (Apparently he thinks that he deserves credit for gas prices decreasing from $5.00/gallon to $4.50/gallon, but had nothing do to with the preceding increases in price, which was only about $2.40/gallon when he took office.)
From BizPac Review, according to congresscritter Tony Gonzales (R-TX), almost 95 percent of migrants illegally entering the U.S. do not qualify for asylum.
From The Daily Wire, six House staffer are arrested for conducting a climate protest in the office of Senator Chuck Schumer (D-NY).
From the Daily Caller, Democrat hopes of getting former President Trump convicted of a crime in connection with the Capitol riot get a dose of reality from a CNN analyst.
From the New York Post, when in the Florida Keys, please do not transport deer in your car.
From Breitbart, Senator Lisa Murkowski (R-AK) is underwater among Republican voters.
From Newsmax, congresscritter AOC (D-NY) is accused of being "absent" from her district.
And from The Babylon Bee, in an attempt to get people to listen to him again, former Vice President Al Gore dresses up like a teenage Swedish girl.
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