On a cool and rainy Tuesday, falling on the birthday of musicians Stevie Wonder and Danny Kirwan, here are some things going on:
From National Review, the swamp is under new management.
From FrontpageMag, former President Biden and the biggest cover-up in U.S. history.
From Townhall, President Trump shocks the world by announcing the end of sanctions on Syria.
From The Washington Free Beacon, on the other hand, the Trump administration announces sanctions on three Iranian nuclear scientists.
From the Washington Examiner, according to journalist Jake Tapper, the White House lied about Biden's health to Congress, the Cabinet and the media.
From The Federalist, the media's claim of 15,000 "trans" military personnel is debunked.
From American Thinker, the Episcopal Church decides to stop resettling refugees because they don't want to help white South Africans.
From MRCTV, at a high school track meet in California, angry parents heckle a boy competing as a girl.
From NewsBusters, HBO host John Oliver admits being confused about religious freedom.
From Canada Free Press, will Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney get a majority government?
From TeleSUR, President Nicolás Maduro announces the construction of a Russian insulin production facility in Venezuela.
From TCW Defending Freedom, U.K. politician Nigel Farage is spearheading a revolution.
From EuroNews, will Russian President Putin meet with Ukrainian President Zelensky face-to-face?
From Free West Media, Trump's anti-DEI moves produce ripple effects.
From ReMix, an African migrant goes on trial for allegedly biting off part of a police officer's ear in Cologne, Germany. (If you read German, read the story at Bild.)
From Balkan Insight, Albania's Democratic Party rejects the results of the country's parliamentary elections.
From The North Africa Post, Moroccan scientist Rachid Yazami receives a U.S. patent for a battery safety invention.
From The New Arab, the news organization Al Jazeera is allowed to resume its work in the Palestinian territories.
From Gatestone Institute, the war against food.
From Radio Free Asia, the Myanmar junta bombs the village of Htun Ya Wai in the state of Rakhine.
From The Stream, Western countries try to save democracy by killing it.
From The Daily Signal, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. "seeks to free doctors from useless barriers".
From The American Conservative, Trump has a huge opportunity in the Middle East.
From The Western Journal, new inflation numbers refute the Democrat narrative about Trump's tariff strategy.
From BizPac Review, according to Senator John Thune (R-SD), codifying Trump's executive order to lower drug prices would be "fairly controversial".
From The Daily Wire, a new tax could stop illegal immigration and keep money away from the drug cartels.
From the Daily Caller, according to a poll, a majority of American Catholics have views differing with those of the Catholic Church.
From Breitbart, Saudi Arabia sets up a mobile McDonald's for the Donald.
From Newsmax, Senator Chuck Schumer (D-NY) plans to block Trump's nominations for the Department of Justice in response to Trump's intention to accept the gift of a jet from the Qatari government. (The story links to an article in The New York Times, which is behind a paywall.)
And from the New York Post, a RyanAir passenger finds a new way to get some sleep on a plane.
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