On a warm and rainy Tuesday, which prevented me from doing much exploring, here are some things going on:
From National Review, the woman who claims that senatorial candidate Graham Platner (D-ME) sexually abused her accuses The New York Times of downplaying her accusations.
From FrontpageMag, can the Iranian government be trusted to abide by any deal that it makes?
From The Washington Free Beacon, according to a report, almost half of New York City's schools are failing.
From the Washington Examiner, Senator Socialism (I-VT) calls upon the aforementioned Graham Platner to quit running for Senator.
From The Federalist, the Supreme Court's ruling about men in women's sports left one big question unanswered.
From American Thinker, after a Muslim migrant allegedly rapes a 16-year-old girl in Glasgow, Scottish police come up with a new euphemism to describe him.
From NewsBusters, 58 percent of Democrats now view socialism favorably.
From Canada Free Press, the long road to communism in Canada keeps getting shorter.
From TeleSUR, the Venezuelan government sets up 82 camps for earthquake survivors.
From TCW Defending Freedom, a left-wing U.K. bishop breaks ranks in the debate over a bill to ban LGBT conversion therapy.
From EuroNews, right-wing politician Marine Le Pen promises to run in the French presidential election next year despite being convicted of fraud.
From Free West Media, Poland decides to buy three submarines from Sweden.
From ReMix, 70 percent of tested "unaccompanied minor" migrants in Madrid, Spain turn out to be adults. (If you read Spanish, read the story at El Debate.)
From Balkan Insight, meet the Albanians taking to the streets in the capital city of Tirana.
From The North Africa Post, the Moroccan tax authority used AI against organized fraud in 2025.
From The New Arab, can Iraq's crackdown on corruption succeed?
From Allah's Willing Executioners, a Muslim bus driver in Ergoldingen, Germany parks his bus for several minutes in order to pray. (If you read German, read the story at Welt.)
From Arutz Sheva, several explosions occur in Damascus, Syria near the hotel where French President Emmanuel Macron is staying.
From the Daily Mail, media reports of the death of former Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad turn out to be greatly exaggerated.
From News(dot)com(dot)au, an Australian Muslim influencer is accused of faking charitable work for poverty-stricken children with AI-generated images. (The last four stories come via The Religion Of Peace.)
From Gatestone Institute, the Iranian government's war on Christians.
From The Daily Signal, right-wing commentator Victor Davis Hanson, who wrote the article, tells New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani (D) that he is a product of privilege and thus should act grateful.
From Radio Free Asia, according to analysts, China's Pacific missile test sends a message to American allies.
From The American Conservative, U.K. parliamentcritter Nigel Farage resigns his seat and calls for a by-election, challenging the "establishment" to defeat him.
From The Western Journal, a truck driver who killed a Pennsylvania state trooper in a crash turns out to be an illegal alien from Haiti who was given a Commercial Driver's License in Massachusetts.
From The Western Journal, "high-level sources" report that Senator Mitch McConnell (R-KY) is brain dead.
From the Daily Caller, according to an opinion column, a visa loophole is "quietly crushing" young Americans.
From the New York Post, the aforementioned Mitch McConnell tells Republican allies that reports of his brain being dead are greatly exaggerated.
From Breitbart, about 73 percent of Italians want illegal aliens to be deported.
From Newsmax, according to a survey, the number of Americans taking weight-loss drugs has almost quadrupled in two years.
And from The Babylon Bee, the U.S. reenters the World Cup after President Trump deports the entire Belgian team.