On a warm and cloudy Wednesday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, ICE is not a new Gestapo.
From FrontpageMag, New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani (D) wants police to not respond to certain crimes that are disproportionately committed by Muslims.
From Townhall, Fort Stewart in Georgia goes into lockdown after a gunman shoots and wounds five soldiers.
From The Washington Free Beacon, a former associate of former Attorney General Eric Holder's law firm accuses it of racism.
From the Washington Examiner, the Trump administration rescinds its approval of a large bird chopper project in Idaho.
From The Federalist, why giving justice to the Russia collusion hoaxers is both tricky and important.
From American Thinker, 80 years after the atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, a right-wing oikophobia emerges. (The term "oikophobia" which comes from ancient Greece, is bigotry or a harsh attitude toward one's own country, culture or society, sometimes accompanied by praise toward other countries, cultures or societies. It's the opposite of "xenophobia".)
From MRCTV, an illegal alien from Mexico, who received DACA, announces his self-deportation.
From NewsBusters, the show CBS Mornings becomes the first lead network newscast to cover the hubbub over the American Eagle jeans ad featuring Sydney Sweeney.
From Canada Free Press, the U.S. weather machine appears to be attacking Russia. (I remember jokes about the George W. Bush weather machine and Dick Cheney earthquake machine from back when those two were president and vice president, respectively. With the recent earthquake and volcanic eruption in the Russian region of Kamchatka, it seems that Vice President Vance has figured out how to operate the Dick Cheney earthquake machine.)
From TeleSUR, Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum announces that the retail chain Walmart has expressed interest in joining the "Mexico Plan".
From TCW Defending Freedom, how expensive would a vaccine against hypocrisy be?
From Snouts in the Trough, more on the aforementioned Sydney Sweeny hubbub, and some climate stupidity.
From EuroNews, Italy gives its final approval for a bridge connecting the island of Sicily to the mainland.
From Free West Media, Palantir software is coming, perhaps to monitor alleged "hate crimes".
From ReMix, will new Polish President Karol Nawrocki be able to fulfill his campaign promises on taxes?
From Balkan Insight, Bosnia's Central Election Commission revokes the presidential mandate of Bosnian Serb leader Milorad Dodik due to his prison sentence and ban on holding public office.
From The North Africa Post, Morocco is elected vice-president of the U.N. Conference on Landlocked Developing Countries.
From The New Arab, the Lebanese Army kills three of the country's most notorious drug lords in a raid in the city of Baalbek.
From The Hans India, five people are killed and 100 are missing due to flash floods in the Indian state of Uttarakhand.
From the Hindustan Times, India fires back at U.S. President Trump's additional 25 percent tariff.
From India Today, some facts about India's purchase of Russian oil.
From the Dhaka Tribune, political rallies block roads and cause congestion in Dhaka, Bangladesh.
From New Age, exports of readymade garments from Bangladesh to the U.S. increase by 25 percent from January to June.
From the Daily Mirror, as Trump's tariffs on Sri Lankan products have been reduced, Sri Lanka should strive to export even more goods.
From Raajje, the People's Majlis in the Maldive Islands greenlights a bill to strip councils of their power.
From the Bangkok Post, a new dinosaur fossil is found in Thailand's Fu Wiang National Park.
From Gatestone Institute, lessons from the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, Japan, 80 years later.
From The Stream, the defunding of NPR and PBS is a much-needed end of an era.
From The Daily Signal, why the U.S. can't disarm, 80 years after Hiroshima.
From The American Conservative, reports of America's economic death from Trump's tariffs have been greatly exaggerated, but challenges remain.
From The Western Journal, Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker (D) jokingly admits that his state's congressional district map looks like it was drawn by a "kindergarten class".
From BizPac Review, shock jock Howard Stern's show on SiriusXM is reportedly on its way to being canceled.
From The Daily Wire, more on the aforementioned shootings at Fort Stewart.
From the Daily Caller, how then-President Biden allegedly abused the federal workforce to snatch voters.
From the New York Post, New York City opens the first taxpayer-funded transgender homeless shelter in the U.S.
From Breitbart, MSNBC and CNN lose at least 40 percent of their viewers from last year.
From Newsmax, Trump claims that Senator Chuck Schumer (D-NY) is "extorting" him for $2 billion in exchange for confirming hundreds of his appointees.
And from the Genesius Times, Attorney General Pam Bondi promises to make up for not arresting clients of the late Jeffrey Epstein by not arresting anyone involved in the Russia collusion hoax.
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