On a cool and rainy Wednesday, here some things going on:
From National Review, Doha, Qatar is not safe for Hamas any more.
From FrontpageMag, reports of the death of a Palestinian boy at the hands of the IDF turn out to be greatly exaggerated.
From The Washington Free Beacon, a former fundraiser for Hamas is now a journalism professor at Northwestern University.
From the Washington Examiner, U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee admits that he "wasn't privy" to the timeline before Israel struck Hamas leaders in Qatar.
From The Federalist, the judge who freed the man who allegedly stabbed Ukrainian refugee Iryna Zarutska to death on a light rail car in Charlotte, North Carolina has exactly the credentials that you'd expect.
From American Thinker, the tragedy suffered by migrant children under then-President Biden.
From NewsBusters, ABC slowly backs away from the murder of the aforementioned Iryna Zarutska. (I keep wanting to spell her last name "Zarucka", since the letter "c" in Polish sounds like "ts".)
From Canada Free Press, the management at Cracker Barrel will realize that the empty barrel makes the most noise.
From TCW Defending Freedom, the Muslim Brotherhood wages "stealth jihad" while the U.K. government looks the other way.
From EuroNews, a mural created by the street artist known as Banksy, showing a judge beating up a protester, is quickly censored.
From ReMix, mass protests in France include road blockages, arson attacks, and battle with police.
From Balkan Insight, the U.S. denies entry to former Montenegrin officials Milo Božović and Vesna Medenica for alleged corruption.
From The North Africa Post, after the stadium lights go out during a soccer game in Algeria, automobile lights come to the rescue.
From The New Arab, the Gaza-bound Sumud Flotilla will set sail as planned, despite being attacked allegedly by Israeli drones.
From ANHA, ISIS mercenaries kill 127 people in the Nigerien region of Tillabéri.
From Spectrum News, the death toll from two attacks by ISIS-affiliated rebels in the Congolese region of North Kivu reaches 89.
From Allah's Willing Executioners, a statue of the Virgin Mary holding the baby Jesus is set on fire during mass at the Notre-Dame de Bon Secours basilica in Guingamp, France. (If you read French, read the story at L'Echo.)
From Gatestone Institute, the hidden war in Sudan.
From Arutz Sheva, according to an opinion column, "side by side in peace" is impossible.
From Radio Free Asia, the Hong Kong legislature rejects a bill grant limited recognition to same-sex partnerships.
From The Stream, religious revival gets hijacked.
From The Daily Signal, a Democrat wins a special congressional election in Virginia, but the turnout is very low.
From The American Conservative, a speech about U.S.-Israel relations.
From The Western Journal, in an excerpt from her book, former Vice President Harris throws Biden and his "inner circle" under the bus.
From BizPac Review, Russian drones enter Polish airspace and are shot down by the Polish military.
From the Daily Caller, older Democrat congresscritters want to keep their power instead of retiring.
From the New York Post, alumni of The Love Boat reunite in New York City to celebrate the opening night of a play put on by actor Ted Lange, one of their own.
From Breitbart, according to the head of a U.K. police watchdog, police should stop being free speech monitors.
From Newsmax, Trump weighs in on the aforementioned Russian breach of Polish airspace.
And from Fox News, right-wing activist Charlie Kirk is shot at a Turning Point USA event at Utah Valley University.
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