On a day when we remember the man who dreamed that America would "live out the true meaning of its creed", here are some things going on:
From National Review, the Biden White House offers an "absurd" defense on the discoveries of classified documents.
From FrontpageMag, seven facts which Dr. Fauci knew but still hid from the public.
From Townhall, President Biden uses Dr. King's address to attack Republicans, gun owners and police officers.
From The Washington Free Beacon, a look at the green energy group behind the calls to ban gas stoves.
From the Washington Examiner, Prince Harry's book Spare should be called Spare Us.
From The Federalist, why the Hunter Biden corruption story, despite NBC host Chuck Todd's opinion, is indeed worth investigating.
From American Thinker, what the woke crowd can learn from Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
From CNS News, congresscritter Jim Jordan (R-OH) asks why personal attorneys for Democrats are allowed to find and hand over classified documents.
From NewsBusters, a Democrat congresscritter misuses the Bible to justify abortion on demand.
From Canada Free Press, "where is America's next Abraham Lincoln?"
From CBC News, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau suggests that talks on health care with Canada's provinces could come soon.
From TeleSUR, former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro's decree allowing logging in the Amazon basin is revoked.
From TCW Defending Freedom, the coronavirus vaccine industry's dirty little secret.
From Snouts in the Trough, what going green really looks like.
From the Express, the U.K. faces a constitutional crisis as its parliament blocks a law passed by the Scottish parliament for the first time in history.
From the (Irish) Independent, a transgender advocacy group welcomes Sinn Féin leader Mary Lou McDonald's decision to speak publicly about her trans sibling.
From VRT NWS, photos and videos from the lair of the terrorists who attacked Brussels, Belgium in 2016 are released.
From the NL Times, Schiphol Airport in the Netherlands cuts 14,500 flight movements as it starts to contract its operations. (If you read Dutch, read the story at De Telegraaf.)
From Deutsche Welle, the final anti-coal activists are removed from their protest camp near Lützerath, Germany.
From Euractiv, Germany's second liquefied natural gas terminal opens in the small coastal town of Lubmin.
From ReMix, migrant gangs blew up 500 ATMs in Germany during 2022, a new record.
From the CPH Post, Denmark needs workers.
From Polskie Radio, Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki calls on Germany to supply weapons to Ukraine.
From Radio Prague, the Czech crown jewels are taken out of the St. Wenceslas chapel at the St. Vitus Cathedral for an upcoming exhibition.
From The Slovak Spectator, the Slovak government will compensate business owners for rising energy costs.
From Daily News Hungary, where to go in Hungary in seven days.
From Free West Media, the E.U. border agency Frontex saw an all-time high in illegal border crossings in 2022.
From Balkan Insight, teacher Xhyle Hoti Korpuzi become the village leader of Lijpan, Kosovo.
From The North Africa Post, a newly-opened jewelry museum in Rabat, Morocco sets records for numbers of visitors.
From The New Arab, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas goes to Cairo to meet with the leaders of Egypt and Jordan.
From FXEmpire, the death toll from an attack on a church in Kasindi, Democratic Republic of Congo, for which ISIS claims responsibility, rises to 14.
From Gatestone Institute, the Chinese app TikTok should be banned from the U.S. and the free world.
From The Stream, there are no visitor logs for President Biden's home in Wilmington, Delaware?
From The American Conservative, Title 42 and how it effects you.
From BizPac Review, according to congresscritter Tony Gonzales (R-TX), Vice President Harris might have "classified material sitting on her kitchen table.
From The Daily Wire, the creator of the 1619 Project made over $1 million speaking at colleges in 2022.
From the Daily Caller, according to the head of America's largest shale oil producer, the shale oil industry's golden age is "over".
From the New York Post, a drunk man in a New York City subway station is found have a "bizarre" homemade gun.
From Breitbart, emails on the aforementioned Hunter Biden's laptop show that he paid for repairs on his father's aforementioned house in 2010.
From Newsmax, Republican congresscritters allege a double standard in the Biden documents case.
And from The Babylon Bee, Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg defends his job performance by pointing out that he's "really, really gay".
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