On a warm and partly sunny Tuesday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, former President Trump has a partial victory at the Supreme Court.
From FrontpageMag, some illegal aliens could receive more gun rights than U.S. citizens.
From Townhall, Trump's sentencing for his hush-money-related convictions is postponed.
From The Washington Free Beacon, text messages show deans at Columbia University sneering at alleged "privilege" of Jewish students.
From the Washington Examiner, congresscritter Matt Gaetz (R-FL)'s former friendship with an eventual convicted sex trafficker comes back to haunt him.
From The Federalist, how it took just a week for President Biden's mental decline to go from "misinformation" to fact.
From American Thinker, fellow right-wingers, any speculation that the 17th Amendment can be repealed is pure fantasy. (The 17th Amendment established electing Senators directly by the people of each respective state, replacing the original constitutional practice of having them chosen by each respective state legislature. To repeal this Amendment would be to take away votes from the people, something which the vast majority of whom would probably not be willing to accept.)
From MRCTV, New York state disbars former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani (R).
From NewsBusters, MSNBC mischaracterizes Trump's immunity case.
From Canada Free Press, if the things said about her by visiting former Somali Prime Minister Hassan Khaire are correct, congresscritter Ilhan Omar (D-Min) should go.
From TeleSUR, a confrontation between drug cartels in the Mexican state of Chiapas leaves 19 people dead. (While drug cartels have been known to be active in Mexico's northern border regions near the United States, Chiapas is the southernmost state in Mexico.)
From TCW Defending Freedom, in the U.K., blame everything on former Prime Minister Liz Truss.
From EuroNews, candidates from French opposition parties unite against the party National Rally.
From Voice Of Europe, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz is expected to announce compensation to living Polish victims of Nazi crimes during World War II.
From ReMix, Ukrainian Armed Forces leader Oleksandr Syrskyi clashes with President Volodymyr Zelensky.
From Balkan Insight, Greek unions and the opposition party SYRIZA protest the governing New Democracy party's proposal to shift some industries to a six-day work week.
From The North Africa Post, the Nigerian military imposes a curfew in the state of Borno after a series of suicide bombings.
From The New Arab, the Arab League denies removing the group Hezbollah from its "terror list".
From The Times Of Israel, the mother of recently rescued Israeli hostage Noa Argamani dies of cancer.
From Gatestone Institute, why does Western media ignore Hamas's crimes?
From The Stream, we Christians need to "stand up".
From The Daily Signal, congresscritter Lloyd Doggett (D-TX) becomes the first elected Democrat to call for Biden to exit the 2024 presidential race.
From The American Conservative, cars and freedom are on the ballot.
From The Western Journal, the HuffPost is reported to the FBI for "the most dangerous headline in American history".
From BizPac Review, columnist Jennifer Rubin of The Washington Post gets some facts incorrect in an attempt to compare Trump to Hitler. (She appears to have fallen for the common misconception that Hitler was elected to office in Germany. In reality, he was appointed to the cabinet position of chancellor by President Paul von Hindenburg.)
From The Daily Wire, a look at how, according to a lawsuit, affirmative action works.
From the Daily Caller and maybe the "believe it or not" department, Chinese illegal aliens are deported and flown back home, the first such flights in six years.
From Breitbart, Biden signs an election year agreement with Panama to close the Darien Gap migration route.
From Newsmax, according to a survey, 56 percent of voters don't like Vice President Harris.
And from the New York Post and maybe again from the aforementioned "believe it or not" department, home prices decrease in the New York borough of Manhattan.
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