On the first "Manic Monday" after the start of daylight savings time, here are some things going on:
From National Review, President Biden's bank bailout.
From FrontpageMag, it's not censorship when the left does it.
From Townhall, congresscritter Thomas Massie (R-KY) explains how the federal reserve enabled the recent failure of Silicon Valley Bank.
From The Washington Free Beacon, the bailout which Silicon Valley Bank will receive is "socialism for the rich".
From the Washington Examiner, PETA urges First Lady Jill Biden to use fake eggs for this year's White House Easter Egg Roll.
From The Federalist, Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer (D) pretends that she didn't ban the sale of seeds and gardening tools during her coronavirus lockdowns.
From American Thinker, our recent inflation would only be "transitory", they said.
From CNS News, it appears that Silicon Valley Bank went woke.
From NewsBusters, the hosts of The View demand that Democrats accept Vice President Harris, but can't name her accomplishments.
From Canada Free Press, the U.S. flails as its blind ideologues reject reality.
From TeleSUR, Peru prepares for the arrival of Cyclone Yaku.
From TCW Defending Freedom, the lie about the coronavirus that led to lockdowns and the mRNA "vaccine" experiment.
From Snouts in the Trough, are the U.K.'s rulers about to ban new gas cookers?
From EuroNews, thousand of people in Chisinau, Moldova protest against their pro-Western government.
From Euractiv, according to an opinion column, the writing is on the wall for Russian President Putin when it comes to Ukraine.
From ReMix, in The Hague, Netherlands, 10,000 Dutch farmers protest against their government's nitrogen emissions policies.
From Balkan Insight, police detain a man in Zagreb, Croatia for allegedly racially abusing foreign workers and posting video of his actions on the platform Reddit.
From Morocco World News, Morocco's cabinet responds to criticism from the Justice and Development Party regarding the country's position on Palestine and its relations with Israel.
From The North Africa Post, the Algerian army kills a Sahrawi resident of the Polisario-run Tindouf camp.
From Hürriyet Daily News, education restarts in three Turkish provinces in the area recently struck by two earthquakes.
From Turkish Minute, according to Interior Minister Süleyman Soylu, the number of people killed in the earthquakes has risen to 48,448.
From Rûdaw, the Iraqi government continues to remove war debris from the district of Shingal.
From Public Radio Of Armenia, Armenian Parliament Speaker Alen Simonyan briefs his Belgian, Hungarian and Egyptian counterparts on the Azerbaijani blockade.
From Azǝrbaycan24, Azerbaijani Commissioner for Human Rights Sabina Aliyeva prepares a report on the investigation of mass graves found in the village of Edilli.
From In-Cyprus, here's one Cypriot whom you don't want to mess with.
From The Syrian Observer, the recent earthquakes have exacerbated the housing crisis in Syria.
From North Press Agency, the city of Raqqa hosts Syria's first female basketball championship.
From The691, a Lebanese woman goes missing but then returns home.
From Arutz Sheva, an Israeli police commissioner forbids his officers to speak with National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir.
From The Times Of Israel, patriotic Israelis have a deep democratic instinct. (The article's author is Israeli opposition leader Yair Lapid.)
From The Jerusalem Post, Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu accuses Israeli media outlets of putting out "fake news" about his proposed judicial reforms.
From YNetNews, Jewish American singer Adam Lambert is reportedly planning to put on a concert in Tel Aviv, Israel, but this time without Queen.
From the Egypt Independent, starting in the school year 2024-2025, Egyptian public school students will be required to study French.
From Egypt Today, Egyptian President Abdel El-Sisi calls for a dam deal.
From the Ethiopian Monitor, according to Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, Ethiopia is committed to supporting peace and stability in South Sudan.
From the Saudi Gazette, according to Foreign Minister Prince Faisal, Saudi Arabia's agreement to restore relations with Iran does not mean that all difference between the countries have been resolved.
From Gulf News, a video of UAE astronaut Sultan Al Neyadi and his floating iPad on the International Space Station goes viral.
From The New Arab, the prosecution of Jordanian satirist Ahman al-Zoubi sparks outrage.
From Jewish News Syndicate, Saudi Arabia blocks an Israeli delegation from attending a U.N. event in the ancient desert city of Al-'Ula.
From Reuters, suspected Islamist terrorists kill 19 people in Kirindera, Kivu, Democratic Republic of Congo.
From Gatestone Institute, should the names of the Stanford students who disrupted a speech by Judge Kyle Duncan be published?
From The Stream, remembering evil at Israel's Yad Vashem museum of the Holocaust.
From The Daily Signal, a federal judge orders the Department of Homeland Security stop its mass paroling of illegal aliens.
From The American Conservative, why Jacob Chansley, a.k.a. the QAnon Shaman, matters.
From The Western Journal, Biden outrages climate activists by reportedly approving the Willow oil project on Alaska's North Slope.
From BizPac Review, law enforcement confirms that Jacob Chansley called the FBI on January 7th, 2021.
From The Daily Wire, during his speech at the Oscars, the director of Everything Everywhere All At Once defends drag for kids.
From the Daily Caller, Republican congresscritters on the House Oversight and Government Accountability Committee renew their demand that an art dealer provide documents about sales of First Son Hunter Biden's paintings.
From the New York Post, Biden's move to protect "pro-Democrat" clients of Silicon Valley Bank is slammed.
From Newsmax, Vice President Harris plans to spend a week visiting Africa.
And from The Babylon Bee, the Oscar for best actor goes to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky(y).
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