On a cool and cloudy Friday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, get rid of President Biden's mandates for electric vehicles.
From FrontpageMag, the IDF finds luxury apartments in the Gazan city of Khan Yunis where Hamas bigwigs reside.
From Townhall, Former Republican National Committee Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel finds a new gig at NBC.
From The Washington Free Beacon, the road to a Senate controlled by Republicans.
From the Washington Examiner, congresscritter Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) files a motion to remove congresscritter Mike Johnson (R-LA) as the Speaker.
From The Federalist, why did the U.S. military remove the phrase "duty, honor, country" from its mission statement.
From American Thinker, debunking some "passionately held" but stupid myths about the 1994 crime bill.
From MRCTV, Massachusetts Governor Maura Healy (D) "shrugs off" an alleged rape committed by an illegal alien migrant against a 15-year-old girl.
From NewsBusters, the media go Sergeant Schultz when it comes to hold the Bidens accountable.
From Canada Free Press, in woke America, another glass ceiling is shattered.
From TeleSUR, the Venezuelan congress approves a law for the defense of the region of Essequibo, which is actually in Guyana.
From TCW Defending Freedom, King's Cross railway station in London and its "Hadith of the Day". (A hadith is a short record of a saying or action by the Islamic prophet Mohammed, the word translating to something like "report". The plural is ahadith. The ahadith are very numerous and have been compiled into collections such as Sahih Muslim and Sahih Bukhari. This leads me to ask two questions. First, will King's Cross station display the hadith in which Mohammed conducts an exchange of slaves? Secondly, will any railway station in a Muslim-majority country display verses or other excerpts from the Bible or any other non-Muslim religious writings? My answer to both is "don't worry, I won't hold my breath".)
From Snouts in the Trough, is your life story "really interesting"?
From EuroNews, according to polls, the "radical right" is now "unstoppable" in the E.U.'s six founding countries. (The "radical right" are people who believe that there are only two biological genders, that countries should be governed by officials elected by their citizens rather than by international organizations, and that immigration should be controlled and limited by national governments.)
From Voice Of Europe, Germany and France agree on details for their new military cooperation. (If you read German, read the story at Spiegel.)
From ReMix, France, Hungary and Poland form an "unlikely alliance" against Ukrainian grain imports.
From Balkan Insight, Croatia wants Bosnia and Herzegovina to strengthen its visa regulations in order to decrease the number of migrants and asylum seekers.
From Morocco World News, a joint Moroccan-Spanish security operation intercepts a helicopter being used to smuggle drugs.
From The North Africa Post, why diplomacy by Algeria is in decline.
From HĆ¼rriyet Daily News, the Turkish government slams statements from Israeli officials targeting President ErdoÄan.
From Turkish Minute, the Ä°stanbul Regional Court of Appeals in Turkey finds that bans imposed on a Woman's Day march in the city's neighborhood of Taksim in 2022 constituted a rights violation.
From Rƻdaw, Iraq forms a judicial board for elections in the region of Kurdistan.
From Armenpress, a delegation led by Armenian National Assembly President Alen Simonyan arrives in Geneva, Switzerland.
From Public Radio Of Armenia, Armenia officially opens its embassy in Uruguay.
From AzÉrbaycan24, an Azerbaijani delegation led by Speaker of the Milli Majlis Sahiba Gafarova arrives in Geneva, Switzerland. (The Milli Majlis is Azerbaijan's legislature.)
From Azer News, while in Geneva, Speaker Majlis meets with the aforementioned Alen Simonyan.
From The Syrian Observer, Irish peacekeepers withdraw from the Quneitra countryside and the Yarmouk Basin in Syria.
From North Press Agency, according to human rights activists, reports to the U.N. are crucial to document Turkish violations in Syria.
From In-Cyprus, Cyprus's Ministry of the Interior outlines new criteria for acquiring Cypriot citizenship.
From The New Arab, Qatari soccer player Hassan Al-Haydos retires.
From The Times Of Israel, a Pakistani court sentences a woman to life imprisonment for burning a page from the Koran.
From Gatestone Institute, "inquisitions" and hatred of Jews in Canada.
From The Stream, the anarcho-tyranny in the U.S., and other items.
From The Daily Signal, the federal judiciary has new "guidelines" for assigning cases.
From The American Conservative, securing the border should be America's top priority.
From The Western Journal, a Republican congresscritter helps the Democrats one day before he leaves office.
From BizPac Review, 101 Republican congresscritters vote in favor of the omnibus bill, which fully funds Biden's open border policies. (Can we give each one of them a Dalmatian?)
From The Daily Wire, gunmen open fire and kill "numerous" people at the Crocus City Hall, a music hall in Moscow, Russia.
From the Daily Caller, the U.K.'s Princess Kate reveals her cancer diagnosis.
From Breitbart, the aforementioned Speaker Johnson violated the Hastert Rule.
From Newsmax, the body of University of Missouri student Riley Strain is found in the Cumberland River near Nashville, Tennessee.
And from the New York Post, good Samaritans find a dog after she ran away from her vet's office.