On a strangely cool Friday on the first day of August, here are some things going on:
From National Review, Mexico's corruption problem belongs to the U.S., too.
From FrontpageMag, Iran experiences mysterious fires and explosions.
From Townhall, President Trump takes a (figurative) shot at Senator Susan Collins (R-ME).
From The Washington Free Beacon, officials of Nantucket, Massachusetts have buyer's remorse over the nearby offshore birdchoppers.
From the Washington Examiner, convicted sex trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell is moved from a federal prison in Florida to one in Texas.
From The Federalist, the "Sydney Sweeney has great jeans" ad campaign is an admission that woke advertising doesn't work.
From American Thinker, the U.K. is accepting "record-breaking" numbers of illegal migrants from the Third World.
From MRCTV, when NBC faked truck explosions by setting off rockets.
From NewsBusters, 90 percent of the guests of Jon Stewart's podcast have been liberals.
From Canada Free Press, were the FBI's "burn bags" an accident or something else?
From TeleSUR, over 1,500 people were killed in Haiti during the second quarter of 2025.
From TCW Defending Freedom, the court case that could bring justice to people injured by coronavirus vaccines.
From The Slovenia Times, Slovenia becomes the first E.U. country to call for a ban on sending weapons to Israel.
From EuroNews, the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv observes a day of mourning over 31 people killed by Russian drone and missile strikes.
From Free West Media, U.S. President Trump "eats Europe for breakfast".
From ReMix, an illegal migrant from Somalia is arrested in Zweibrücken, Germany for allegedly murdering a child and torturing other migrants, the arrest warrant being issued by prosecutors in Palermo, Italy. (If you read Italian, read the story at Il Giornale.)
From Balkan Insight, former Serbian Trade Minister Tomislav Momirović and 10 others are arrested for alleged corruption over the upgrade of a railway line.
From Morocco World News, Spain removes its flags from two uninhabited islands off the Moroccan coast.
From The North Africa Post, a French anchovy processing company invests in energy efficiency and environmental protection measures at its facility in Tangier, Morocco.
From the Libyan Express, Libyan Prime Minister Abdul Dbeibeh meets with Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni and Turkish President Recep Erdoğan in İstanbul, Türkiye.
From Hürriyet Daily News, the Turkish parliament's anti-terror panel will start its work on August 5th.
From Turkish Minute, Turkey's Radio and Television Supreme Council imposes a five-day broadcast ban and a fine on pro-opposition media outlet Sözcü TV.
From Rûdaw, the Iraqi parliament is set to vote on a controversial bill that would ban hate speech, insults to religious sects, protests at night, and gatherings near schools, hospitals and government offices. (What are these "free speech" and "freedom of peaceable assembly" that you speak of?)
From Armenpress, according to Armenian authorities, more Iranians are visiting Armenia.
From Public Radio Of Armenia, Armenian Deputy Foreign Minister Paruyr Hovhannisyan is elected vice president of UNECOSOC.
From AzerNews, natural gas from Azerbaijan will be exported to Syria via Turkish territory.
From The Syrian Observer, a Syrian man who returned from Germany dies under mysterious circumstances while in the custody of Syrian Internal Security Forces.
From North Press Agency, protesters in the Syrian region of Suwayda demand international action is response to the violence and humanitarian crisis there. (I have seen the name of this region and its namesake city also spelled "Suweida".)
From In-Cyprus, Cypriot government agencies acknowledge gaps and weaknesses but no errors or omissions in their response to a wildfire in the city of Limassol.
From The New Arab, the Lebanese Christian village of Rmeish denies painting its sidewalks with the colors of the Israeli flag.
From Jewish News Syndicate, 583 newborn babies are named "Yahya" in the U.K. during 2024, after a slain leader of Hamas.
From Gatestone Institute, will Bangladesh turn into an Islamic theocracy?
From Radio Free Asia, a bill announced by a bipartisan group of U.S. lawmakers targets China's repression of the Uyghurs.
From The Stream, can Trump prevail over the anti-Western academia?
From The Daily Signal, government employees get back their right to religious expression.
From The American Conservative, the truth about the relationship between the U.S. and India.
From The Western Journal, the Oval Office meeting that led to the Russiagate hoax.
From BizPac Review, a leftist rants over the rise of American Eagle stock, due to the success of the aforementioned Sydney Sweeny ad campaign.
From The Daily Wire, U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee and special envoy Steve Witkoff tour an humanitarian aid site run by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation.
From the Daily Caller, Federal Reserve Board Governor Adriana Kugler decides to resign, giving Trump a vacancy to fill.
From the New York Post, a House panel agrees to postpone a deposition from the aforementioned Ghislaine Maxwell.
And from the Independent, we now know the origins of former Vice President Quayle's favorite vegetable.
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