On a hot and sunny Friday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, the Supreme Court rules that people accused of domestic abuse can be legally prevented from having guns.
From Frontpage, the reality behind the effort to "regulate" home schooling.
From Townhall, according to an opinion column, President Biden's executive amnesty is "illegal, unjust and self-defeating".
From The Washington Free Beacon, independent voters are the key to the 2024 presidential election.
From the Washington Examiner, the Pentagon is sued over the deletion of the motto "duty, honor, country".
From The Federalist, the Supreme Court ruling that U.S. citizens do not have a constitutional right to bring their non-citizen spouses into the country looks bad for Biden's amnesty for illegal alien spouses.
From American Thinker, former President Trump's proposal for "no tax on tips" shows the great divide between left and right.
From MRCTV, Biden quietly allowed over a million illegal aliens into the U.S. by parole or app programs. (If you want to illegally enter the U.S., there's an app for that.)
From NewsBusters, TV host Stephen Colbert objects to a study showing that male gun owners are not trying to compensate for anything.
From Canada Free Press, the Vatican summons Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò to Rome over the alleged crime of schism.
From TeleSUR, heavy rains in Central America affect over 7,000 people.
From TCW Defending Freedom, the Reform party is the only option for people of the U.K.
From Snouts in the Trough, the "stupid" U.K. Supreme Court will bring the country back to the stone age.
From Voice Of Europe, according to Ukrainian Interior Minister Ihor Klymenko, Ukraine and the E.U. are discussing the potential repatriation of Ukrainian men who illegally entered the E.U. (Such men could be both military service dodgers and illegal aliens.)
From ReMix, former Czech Prime Minister Andrej Babiš pulls his europarliamentcritters out of the liberal Renew group.
From Balkan Insight, according to the E.U. Anti-Fraud Office, Albania misused €33 million.
From The North Africa Post, according to Finance Minister Nadia Fettah Alaoui, Morocco plans to reduce its public debt to less than 70 percent of its GDP.
From The New Arab, Hamas laughs at the idea that Qatar would impose sanctions on them.
From Gatestone Institute, after California legalized marijuana, the Mexican cartels took it over.
From The Stream, don't you love paying off other people's student loans, with their gratitude going not to you but to the Big Guy?
From The Daily Signal, your share of the U.S. debt is now $100,000.
From The American Conservative, how congresscritter Byron Donalds's (R-FL) star has risen.
From The Western Journal, Democrats prepare an authoritarian crackdown for their convention in Chicago, and the locals will pay the price.
From BizPac Review, a dean at Harvard University doesn't want its leaders and policies to be criticized.
From The Daily Wire, how the doctor at the center of a Texas children's hospital scandal formed an alliance with transgender activists.
From the Daily Caller, one of the Just Stop Oil activists who vandalized Stonehenge claims that American men taunted the by chanting the word "oil".
From the New York Post, authorities remove a mysterious monolith from a mount range near Las Vegas, Nevada.
From Breitbart, a country songwriter and an 18-year-old singer combine to produce a pro-life anthem.
From Newsmax, congresscritter Scott Perry (R-PA) explains why Biden is losing support.
And from SFGate, according to its organizers, if you can make it through the Broken Arrow Skyrace near Lake Tahoe, "you're a rock star". (In my opinion, you're also a badass.)
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