On a very warm and sunny Wednesday, after I gave myself a day off, here are some things going on:
From National Review, presidential candidate Vice President Harris and vice presidential candidate Governor Tim Walz (D-Min) will have their long-awaited interview.
From FrontpageMag, Arab Americans fault African Americans for supporting Harris.
From Townhall, the FBI gives an update on the attempt to assassinate former President Trump.
From The Washington Free Beacon, congresscritter Susan Wild (D-PA) sends contradictory letters to her constituents about Israel's fight in Gaza.
From The Federalist, Special Counsel Jack Smith indicts Trump for daring to question the 2020 election results.
From American Thinker, a school district in Oklahoma bans the American flag, which backfires profusely.
From MRCTV, pro-abortionists vandalized a Catholic pro-life pregnancy center in Chicago during the Democratic National Convention. (I've said it before and I'll say it again. If you have a problem with such pro-life centers, especially if you are willing to vandalize them, you are not pro-choice. You are pro-abortion.)
From NewsBusters, CNN correspondent Manu Raju asks congresscritter Chris Deluzio (D-PA) is he's concerned about Trump appealing to fans of singer Taylor Swift.
From Canada Free Press, if you're eligible to vote "don't even consider" not voting. (Or in the lyrics written by another Canadian, Rush drummer Neal Peart, "If you choose not to decide, you still have made a choice".)
From TeleSUR, the "far right" reportedly attacks Venezuela's electrical system.
From TCW Defending Freedom, the U.K's Labour Party dithers as illegal immigration goes through the roof.
From Snouts in the Trough, the U.K.'s "journalists" give Prime Minister Keir Starmer an easy ride.
From EuroNews, Telegram CEO Pavel Durov is released from detention, but still faces an indictment.
From ReMix, a German police union leaders dares to tell the truth about immigration and crime. (If you read German, read the story at Apollo News.)
From Balkan Insight, according to Interior Minister Ivica Dačić, regional celebrities will be removed from Serbia's entry "watch list".
From The North Africa Post, a Tunisian administrative court approves the presidential candidacy of Abdellatif Mekki, an opponent of President Kaïs Saïed.
From The New Arab, a review of a book on American involvement in the Middle East during the 1950s.
From Arutz Sheva, more about what's going on in Germany.
From Gatestone Institute, Iran wages war on Israel from the West Bank.
From The Stream, has Harris flipped on the border wall?
From The Daily Signal, will Harris's political ploy succeed?
From The American Conservative, although Trump has wobbled on abortion, he is still the pro-life presidential candidate.
From BizPac Review, right-wing commentator Tucker Carlson trolls Harris for claiming that he sent a "moronic" letter in favor of gun control.
From The Daily Wire, a Muslim man in England attacks three women for not wearing traditional clothes, but avoids prison time.
From the Daily Caller, courts in California and Massachusetts gives opposing rulings about the legality of carrying switchblades.
From the New York Post, former Speaker Pelosi (D-Cal) admits some responsibility for the failure to protect the Capitol during the January 6th riot.
From Breitbart, HBO footage shows Pelosi not accepting responsibility for the failure to protect the Capitol.
From Newsmax, the would-be Trump assassin spent months trying to choose a target.
And from the Genesius Times, in a truly original move, Harris descends an escalator to announce her bold original intention to build a border wall.
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