On a cool and cloudy Wednesday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, President Trump has some big plans for "Mar-a-Gaza".
From FrontpageMag, workers at Meta are enraged that tampons are no longer available in men's restrooms.
From Townhall, remember the transgender actor who received an Oscar nomination?
From The Washington Free Beacon, CNN laughs off a protest by Democrats against the Chief Twit.
From the Washington Examiner, a judge in my neck of the woods issues a nationwide preliminary injunction against Trump's executive order on birthright citizenship. (In my opinion, changing the nature of birthright citizenship or how the 14th Amendment is implemented will probably require action from Congress, if not another Amendment clarifying the 14th Amendment's citizenship section.)
From The Federalist, religious "charities" received over $1 billion from American taxpayers to facilitate the migrant pipeline. (What is this "separation of church and state" you speak of?)
From American Thinker, the bill comes due for ungrateful illegal aliens.
From MRCTV, illegal aliens stage "a day without immigrants" protests. (They don't realize, it seems, that because they came to the U.S. in violation of our laws, that they are not immigrants.)
From NewsBusters, five reasons why "public" broadcasting should be defunded.
From Canada Free Press, the real reason why liberals love illegal aliens.
From TeleSUR, Colombian President Gustavo Petro criticizes the attitudes of some of this ministers in a cabinet meeting.
From TCW Defending Freedom, why did police publicly name the man who burned a Koran in Manchester, England?
From Snouts in the Trough, does Islam have a "doomsday clock"?
From EuroNews, French Prime Minister François Bayrou survives his second no-confidence vote.
From Free West Media, Saudi Arabia pledges to support Syria.
From ReMix, Poland doubles down on its shift toward drone warfare.
From Balkan Insight, North Macedonia has a shortage of kindergartens.
From The North Africa Post, a report by human rights watchdogs claims that Tunisian authorities are involved in a slave trade, in which migrants are sold to Libyan militias.
From The New Arab, the U.S. reportedly drafts a plan to withdraw its troops from Syria.
From Allah's Willing Executioners, an annual carnival parade in Kempten, Germany is canceled due to an inability to increase security in response to terrorism. (In other words, in Kempten, the terrorists have won. If you read German, read the story at Exxpress.)
From AMU, the Taliban suspends broadcasts of a woman-focused radio station in Kabul, Afghanistan.
From the Express, U.K. Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner creates an Islamophobia council, which sparks fears of an "Orwellian" crackdown on free speech.
From Gatestone Institute, the real destroyer of Europe is the E.U.
From Radio Free Asia, Thai authorities rescue a woman from Hong Kong from a Myanmar scam park.
From The Stream, Pam Bondi is confirmed as Attorney General, Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s nomination for Secretary of Health and Human Services advances, and other items.
From The Daily Signal, Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) slams USAID's partnership with leftist billionaire George Soros.
From The American Conservative, stick a fork into DEI because it's done.
From The Western Journal, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt humiliates Senator Chuck Schumer (D-NY) over his stunt with a can of Corona beer.
From BizPac Review, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy goes on a foul-mouthed rant against right-wing commentator Tucker Carlson.
From The Daily Wire, several pro-Israel experts see benefits to Trump's aforementioned plans for Gaza.
From the Daily Caller, more on the aforementioned plan to withdraw U.S. troops from Syria.
From Newsmax, Vietnam's trade surplus with the U.S. reached a record high in 2024.
And from the New York Post, retired Lieutenant Colonel Harry Stewart Jr., one of the last surviving Tuskegee Airmen, goes to the airfield in the sky.
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