On a surprisingly cool and cloudy Tuesday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, three good things came out of yesterday's summit between U.S. President Trump, Ukrainian President Zelensky, and other European leaders.
From FrontpageMag, a Palestinian Authority columnist claims that "Jesus belongs to the Palestinians".
From Townhall, MSNBC anchorwoman Joy Reid claims that white people never invented anything.
From The Washington Free Beacon, the founder of a legal group backed by left-wing billionaire George Soros resigns after her own staff accuses her of racism.
From the Washington Examiner, according to the Texas Department of State Health Services the measles outbreak in the western part of the state is now over.
From The Federalist, a drop box camera catches alleged ballot stuffing in Hamtramck, Michigan.
From American Thinker, congresscritter Eric Swalwell (D-Cal) unleashes his version of "we will bury you".
From NewsBusters, CBS correspondent Scott MacFarlane pushes crooked data on crime in Washington, D.C. and hides information about the arrest of a violent illegal alien.
From Canada Free Press, will the recent summit between Trump and Russian President Putin result in reproachment or rapprochement?
From TeleSUR, the governing Honduran party LIBRE calls for a mass rally.
From TCW Defending Freedom, when shoplifting resulted in consequences for the perpetrator.
From Snouts in the Trough, the author of SitT has been banned from YouTube.
From EuroNews, the suspect in a car ramming attack in Magdeburg, Germany is charged with murder, attempted murder, and bodily harm.
From Free West Media, what do we make of the aforementioned summit between Trump and Putin?
From ReMix, a Somali migrant is arrested after allegedly stabbing two Romanians and headbutting another at a train station in Vienna, Austria. (If you read German, read the story at OE24.)
From Balkan Insight, young athletes revive the ruined Olympic luge track in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina.
From The North Africa Post, the U.S. construction firm Bechtel is interested in modernizing Moroccan airports.
From The New Arab, two members of Syria's Internal Security force are shot dead in the city of Tartus.
From Inside Croydon, a councilor from the London district of Lambeth and two other men are arrested for sexual offenses including exposure. (The article uses the spelling "councillor", which my spellchecker rejects. Croydon is a borough in London.)
From Arutz Sheva, 32 Christians per day are killed in Africa, but the West only sees Gaza.
From Gatestone Institute, the E.U.'s "elites" - Part 2.
From Radio Free Asia, two Hong Kong pro-democracy activists are granted asylum, one by the U.K. and the other by Australia.
From The Stream, the Vatican officially recognizes group pilgrimages by LGBT+ Catholics for the Jubilee Year.
From The Daily Signal, according to Senator Chuck Grassley (R-IA), the Biden administration placed over 11,000 illegal alien children with unvetted sponsors.
From The American Conservative, Hezbollah's support from Iran could snarl U.S. diplomacy with Iran.
From The Western Journal, after 10 years, the Trump National Doral returns to the PGA Tour schedule.
From BizPac Review, Secretary of Health and Human Services Bobby Kennedy Jr. and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth face off at pullups and pushups.
From The Daily Wire, the Sydney Sweeney jeans ad is a hollow "victory" for the right.
From the Daily Caller, according to Trump, the U.S. may give Ukraine air support as part of a peace deal.
From Breitbart, the Department of Homeland Security is reaching 40 million Americans via social media, thus bypassing the mainstream media.
And from the New York Post, after an Alaska man complains that finding spare parts for his Soviet-era Ukrainian-made motorcycle is becoming more difficult, Putin gives him a new ride.
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