I've been running around during much of today, so here are a few things going on:
From Allah's Willing Executioners, a Mauritanian Islamist worked as a consultant for the French Ministry of Justice. (If you read French, read the story at Le Point and FDeSouche.)
From Struggle for Hindu Existence, a crowd of fanatic Muslims allegedly beats a Hindu community leader to death in Dinajpur, Bangladesh.
From The Jerusalem Post, an Italian court upholds the life sentences given to a Pakistani couple who killed their teenage daughter for refusing an arranged marriage.
From Gatestone Institute, Iran's negotiation strategy is endless rounds of delay, deceive and cheat.
From The Stream, eight ways by which the Gospel of John connects Jesus to the Passover and the Exodus.
From The Daily Signal, diplomats should be hired on merit, not on demographic quotas.
From The American Conservative, President Javier Milei lifts Argentina's currency controls.
From The Western Journal, the wife of a recently deported illegal alien has nothing to say when asked about a protection order she once filed against him.
From Snouts in the Trough, U.K. taxpayers foot the bill for an attempt to remove carbon dioxide from seawater. (A simple way to do that, which the article apparently doesn't mention, is to heat the seawater. This is because liquids do a better job of dissolving gasses when the liquids are cold. Heat them up, and the gas wants to escape instead of dissolve. Have you ever noticed that fizzy drinks, mainly seltzer, soda and beer, are cold? That fizz is carbon dioxide, which is released when the pressure of on the drink is lowered, mainly by opening its container.)
From TCW Defending Freedom, the U.K.'s King Charles has become the "diluter of the faith".
From American Thinker, in Europe, the proverbial barbarians are already inside the gate.
From the Washington Examiner, congresscritter Jim Clyburn (D-SC) blames the media for the unpopularity of the Democratic Party.
From The Washington Free Beacon, President Trump's "art of the diplomatic deal".
From Townhall, the Trump administration starts pulling U.S. military forces out of Syria.
From FrontpageMag, if the army can't be used to secure the border, then it has no function.
And from National Review, Russian President Putin proposes an Easter truce for its invasion of Ukraine, but Ukrainian President Zelensky is skeptical of it.
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