On a hot and mostly sunny Thursday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, a look at former President Biden's autopen scandal.
From FrontpageMag, who really had the power to protect the late Jeffrey Epstein?
From Townhall, police in Iron Mountain, Michigan arrest a man for allegedly throwing a Molotov cocktail at the Republican headquarters for Dickinson County.
From The Washington Free Beacon, domestic violence survivors speak out against New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani's (D) call to stop cops from responding to domestic violence.
From the Washington Examiner, congresscritter Cory Mills (R-FL) keeps attracting big campaign donors despite his mounting controversies.
From The Federalist, illegal aliens contribute to the growth of international theft rings.
From American Thinker, President Trump's tariffs drive a $27 billion budget surplus for this past June.
From NewsBusters, a CBS reporter claims that Trump supporters gave him PTSD after Trump was shot.
From Canada Free Press, New York City's Bolshevik Revolution gains steam.
From TeleSUR, Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez accuses U.S. politicians of funding subversion in his country.
From TCW Defending Freedom, U.K. politician Donna Edmunds tries to set up an archive for survivors of grooming gangs.
From Snouts in the Trough, how the mainstream media like to use the words "unexpected" and "surprise" when reporting negative news about the U.K. economy.
From EuroNews, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy claims that his country will increase its domestic weapons production.
From Free West Media, has NATO reached a turning point?
From ReMix, an Islamist influencer in Germany is jailed for defrauding his followers of €496,000 including €78,000 raised for a "For Palestine" campaign. (If you read German, read the story at Frankfurter Allgemeine.)
From Balkan Insight, millions of euros in subsidies were paid to fake farmers in Greece.
From The North Africa Post, South Sudanese President Salva Kiir calls for the lifting of sanctions on his country to bolster its fragile peace process.
From The New Arab, the Syrian government accuses local armed factions of carrying out a "massacre" at the Suweida National Hospital.
From AMU, Taliban authorities arrest two people in Kabul, Afghanistan for allegedly Christianity.
From Arutz Sheva, according to Israeli Ambassador to the U.N. Danny Danon, the U.N. is silent on a massacre in Syria but targets Israel.
From The Jerusalem Post, an 80-year-old Druze sheikh dies after being publicly humiliated by members of the Hayat Tahrir al-Sham in al-Tha'la, Syria.
From Gatestone Institute, the latest scam by Palestinians is that Hamas can become a "political party".
From Radio Free Asia, Taiwan holds its annual life-fire drills that simulate an air attack by China.
From The Stream, Catholic bishops play with fire and get burned, such as by the attack on the secrecy of confession.
From The Daily Signal, Planned Avoidance Of Parenthood does not provide "health care", and their defunding was long overdue.
From The American Conservative, "how Trump can promote religious liberty" in U.S. allies and partners that suppress minority faiths.
From The Western Journal, an ESPN commentator calls WNBA player Caitlin Clark a "villain" seconds after she wins the "WNBA Player of the Year" award at the ESPYs.
From BizPac Review, according to a poll, 49 percent of Americans want a third political party, but not one founded by the Chief Twit.
From The Daily Wire, New York City mayoral candidate Curtis Sliwa (R) unloads on his rival Andrew Cuomo (I). (According to Google Translate, śliwa is the Polish word for "plum tree".)
From the Daily Caller, Senator Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) introduces an amendment that would require the Department of Defense to vet U.S. defense contractors for ties with Chinese intelligence.
From the New York Post, Buddhist monk Sadom Kaewkanjana, from Thailand, is one shot out of the lead at the British open.
From Breitbart, Trump cancels $4 billion in funding for California's "train to nowhere".
From Newsmax, two people are dead and several others injured when an apparent Israeli airstrike hits the only Catholic church in Gaza.
And from SFGate, a film sells out at a theater in San Francisco - a year before its release.
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