On a mild and cloudy Tuesday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, President Biden's China shop has too much bull.
From FrontpageMag, former Director of National Intelligence James Clapper can't stop lying when it comes to the story of Hunter Biden's laptop.
From Townhall, something might be very wrong about the photo op with Presidents Biden (U.S.) and Zelensky (Ukraine).
From The Washington Free Beacon, Princeton University's "antiracism" apparently doesn't apply to racism against Jews.
From the Washington Examiner, while talking with Polish President Andrzej Duda in Warsaw, Biden comes up with his own Polish joke.
From The Federalist, the left-wing hypocrisy of left-wingers who accuse others of banning books.
From American Thinker, where are the toxicologists who could be headed for East Palestine, Ohio?
From CNS News, according to former Director of National Intelligence John Ratcliffe, Biden's policy is "Ukraine first, Ohio last". (Can I find any more ex-DNIs to pick on?)
From NewsBusters, TV host Stephen Colbert and Senator Socialism (I-VT) suggest that capitalism is to blame for the East Palestine train derailment.
From Canada Free Press, WEF advisor Yuval Noah Harari allegedly wants to abolish free will.
From TeleSUR, a wildfire explodes in the mountains of Cuba.
From TCW Defending Freedom, the censorship against author Roald Dahl "is an attack on reality itself".
From Free West Media, demonstrations against German support for Ukraine are staged in Munich, Germany.
From ReMix, poor and elderly tenants in Lörrach, Germany are forced from their apartments to make room for migrants.
From EuroNews, five major taboos broken by the E.U. during the year of war in Ukraine.
From Euractiv, integrated pest management, which uses biological products, gains ground in Poland.
From Balkan Insight, the Bulgarian Supreme Court votes 28-21 to prevent transgendered people from changing their documents. (Do I understand the numbers correctly, in that the court has 49 judges?)
From The North Africa Post, terrorists kill 51 soldiers in Burkina Faso.
From The New Arab, Hamas's Anti-Narcotics Police Department seizes 50,000 Captagon pills smuggled into the Gaza Strip and blames Israel.
From Organiser, the Indian Islamic seminary Darul Uloom Deoband issues a fatwa against shaving.
From UnHerd, "the acceptable face of radical Islam".
From Gatestone Institute, Palestinians celebrate the murder of Jews.
From the Colombo Page, Sri Lankan President Ranil Wickremesinghe asks for alternative proposals for economic growth to be presented to the IMF.
From the Daily Mirror, five people are arrested for allegedly breaking into the Indian visa application center in Colombo, Sri Lanka.
From Raajje, the Maldive Islands holds its first strategic dialogue with the U.K.
From The Straits Times, two teenagers are held under Singapore's Internal Security Act.
From Tempo(dot)Co, Russians and Ukrainians get along peacefully on the Indonesian island of Bali.
From Free Malaysia Today, two Malaysian parliamentcritters get into a shouting match over a speech from King Abdullah.
From the Borneo Post, electric vehicles gain popularity in the Malaysian state of Sabah.
From Vietnam Plus, the last functional internet cable connecting Vietnam to the rest of the world has some technical difficulties.
From the Taipei Times, according to President Tsai Ing-wen, Taiwan has plans for more military exchanges with the U.S.
From The Korea Herald, South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol approves a motion to arrest opposition leader Lee Jae-myung.
From The Mainichi, Japanese shoe repairers call an attached leather patch a "Charles patch" in honor of the U.K.'s new king.
From The Stream, a gun control strategy which is stupid, unless there's an ulterior motive.
From The Daily Signal, according to Florida Secretary of State Cord Byrd (R), election integrity is a major priority for the state.
From The American Conservative, it's about time for some serious populism.
From The Western Journal, after Air Force One lands at Warsaw's Chopin Airport, someone falls down the stairs, but it's not Biden.
From BizPac Review, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis (R) takes his own stand on Russia.
From The Daily Wire, an office manager in East Palestine recounts the train wreck and subsequent chemical burning.
From the Daily Caller, a nutrition product company recalls 145,000 cans of baby food over possible bacteria contamination.
From Breitbart, according to a rights watchdog based in Vienna, Austria, vandalism and arson against Christian churches in France and Germany have spiked in recent weeks.
From Newsmax, the EPA orders Norfolk Southern to clean up the site of its derailed train in East Palestine.
And from the New York Post, could cigarette-style labels warning about eating meat be coming to food stores?
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