On a sunny but cool Friday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, Georgia Governor Brian Kemp (R) mobilizes National Guard troops in response to left-wing violence.
From FrontpageMag, charging black policemen in the death of a black motorist is racist.
From Townhall, in "an inconvenient truth for environmentalists", bird choppers also endanger whales.
From The Washington Free Beacon, how former President Trump's 2024 campaign bounced back.
From the Washington Examiner, San Francisco police release body camera footage of the attack on Paul Pelosi.
From The Federalist, climate radicals want to put bird choppers in your back yard, but not their own.
From American Thinker, fentanyl tells its own story.
From CNS News, Senator James Lankford (R-OK) points out that the Constitution does not want D.C. to be a state. (It should be painfully obvious that if most residents of Washington, D.C. voted for Republicans, the Democrats would vehemently oppose any attempt to make D.C. into a state.)
From NewsBusters, body camera footage of the aforementioned attack on Paul Pelosi vindicates a reporter suspended by NBC.
From Canada Free Press, federal government agencies don't agree about what constitutes a federal government program.
From TeleSUR, Colombian President Gustavo Petro will promote pension, labor and health reforms.
From TCW Defending Freedom, is Scottish leader Nicola Sturgeon's "Gender Recognition Reform" bill grubby politics or an act of genuine principle?
From Snouts in the Trough, do have one or two spare rooms to house incoming migrants?
From Free West Media, the World Health Organization introduces a global patient file.
From EuroNews, the E.U. becomes more worried about the increase in asylum requests by migrants from safe countries.
From Euractiv, according to a judge, a Spanish man arrested for allegedly sending letter bombs wanted to end Spain's support for Ukraine.
From ReMix, Germany starts sending Patriot missiles to Poland.
From Balkan Insight, Albanian police find more surveillance cameras illegally erected by criminals.
From The North Africa Post, Morocco and Qatar negotiate on a free trade agreement.
From The New Arab, the Syrian Democratic Forces arrest about 200 suspected ISIS terrorists in a crackdown against sleeper cells.
From Gatestone Institute, a courageous Pakistani Christian woman stands up to blasphemy accusers.
From The Straits Times, the Singaporean retailer Mustafa's will open its first store in Malaysia.
From Tempo(dot)Co, according to Indonesian Finance Minister Sri Mulyani, incentives for electric vehicle ownership at the government level are being finalized.
From Free Malaysia Today, about 100 people march toward the Swedish embassy in Malaysia to protest the Swedish government's inaction after a Swedish politician burns a Koran.
From Borneo Post, the Malaysia state of Sarawak's Forestry Department plans to use drones to detect illegal activities in the state's denser forest regions.
From Vietnam Plus, Vietnamese hospitals perform 19,435 surgeries during the seven-day Tet holiday.
From the Taipei Times, Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-win appoints former Vice President Chen Chein-jen to be the Taiwan's next prime minister.
From The Korea Herald, South Korea's public pension reserve is estimated to run out in 2055, two years than previously estimated.
From The Mainichi, Japan comes closer to approving an abortion pill.
From The Stream, to remember the Holocaust, work to prevent the next one from happening.
From The Daily Signal, it's time to reign in the Federal Reserve for punishing Americans for the problems it created.
From The American Conservative, President Biden proposes that the federal government takes over rental markets.
From The Western Journal, author J.K. Rowling infuriates transgenders with a simple piece of advice.
From BizPac Review, The New York Times gets upset when a judge throws the hammer at two former attorneys convicted of torching a New York city police car.
From the Daily Caller, Ronna McDaniel wins her fourth term as chair of the Republican National Committee.
From Breitbart, the Treasury Department denies the House Oversight Committee's request to disclose 150 suspicious reports about Biden business transactions.
And from the New York Post, the Toms River, New Jersey home where the movie Amityville Horror was filmed sells for $1.46 million.
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