As the sunny but cold weather continues on a Tuesday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, former South Bend Indiana Mayor (D) and Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg is considering bagging his carpets to Michigan and running for Senator.
From FrontpageMag, the real purpose of sanctuary cities is not to help genuine refugees.
From Townhall, PETA wants to end Groundhog Day in order to rescue Punxsutawney Phil.
From The Washington Free Beacon, LGBT groups have nothing to say about the confirmation of new Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, the highest-ranking openly gay official to be confirmed by the Senate. (The ranking is based on his office's position in the order of presidential succession.)
From the Washington Examiner, Senator Gary Peters (D-Mich) decides against running for reelection in 2026. (This is probably the reason for the aforementioned story about Pete Buttigieg.)
From The Federalist, President Trump's 300 executive actions during his first week back in office made it the most consequential first week in the history of the office.
From American Thinker, a different way to deny birthright citizenship.
From MRCTV, Border Czar Tom Homan responds to singer Selena Gomez's crying about deportations.
From NewsBusters, correspondent Jim Acosta quits CNN.
From Canada Free Press, the U.S. is where it is today because of lawfare and ignoring reality.
From TeleSUR, Venezuela rejects U.S. "interference" in its dispute with Guyana over the region of Essequibo. (I'd bet that if the U.S. were to agree with Venezuela in this dispute, Venezuela would not call such agreement "interference".)
From TCW Defending Freedom, Prime Minister Keir Starmer doubles down on the U.K.'s two-tiered justice system.
From ReMix, Polish Minister of Education Barbara Nowacka is in trouble for claiming that "Polish Nazis" built concentration camps. (Before World War II, did Poland even have a political party calling itself "National Socialist"?)
From Balkan Insight, after months of protests over the government's handling of a deadly accident at a railway station in Novi Sad, Serbia, Prime Minister Milos Vučević resigns.
From The North Africa Post, new U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio commends Moroccan King Mohammed VI for his leadership in advancing regional and global peace.
From The New Arab, what's next for the ceasefire in Gaza, and will it hold?
From the Daily Mail, a convicted rapist in the U.K. claims to have been victimized by police because he is gay.
From Arutz Sheva, it's stabbing season in Europe.
From Gatestone Institute, Trump was elected for "peace through strength", not to sound retreat.
From Radio Free Asia, the AI technology DeepSeek has close ties to the Chinese government.
From The Stream, the U.K.'s dogma of multiculturalism was an important enabler of Pakistani rape grooming gangs.
From The Daily Signal, the birthright citizenship clause that too many Americans forget.
From The American Conservative, an interview with Greenland Business Minister Naaja Nathanielsen.
From The Western Journal, more on the aforementioned upcoming retirement of Senator Gary Peters.
From BizPac Review, right-wing commentator Tucker Carlson accuses the Biden administration of trying to assassinate Russian President Putin.
From The Daily Wire, the Trump administration welcomes the "new media" into White House press briefings.
From the Daily Caller, according to new White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt, the Federal Aviation Administration authorized drones to fly over New Jersey.
From the New York Post, new Homeland Security Secretary and former South Dakota Governor Kristi Noem (R) joins federal authorities carrying out deportation raids in New York City.
From Breitbart, New York Magazine is caught cropping black people out of a photograph of people at a Trump inaugural party.
From Newsmax, Trump issues and executive order to start planning for an "Iron Dome" air defense system like the one that Israel has.
And from The Babylon Bee, Democrats warn that Trump's immigration and deportation policies will cause skyrocketing unemployment among child traffickers.
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