As the sunny but cool weather continues on a Tuesday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, "Bridge Day" comes to Iran.
From FrontpageMag, a review of a book about jihad by Iranian-American author Aynaz Anni Cyrus.
From Townhall, Iran deploys children as human shields.
From The Washington Free Beacon, The New York Times shows its double standards on defense spending.
From the Washington Examiner, the Artemis II astronauts send pictures from beyond the moon.
From The Federalist, The (aforementioned) New York Times finds more illegal aliens whom it thinks should be allowed to keep breaking the law.
From American Thinker, the twisted psychology behind the left's support of terrorism.
From NewsBusters, CBS reports a "shocking" new example of possible fraud in California's hospice system.
From Canada Free Press, should Alcatraz Island be reopened as a prison to house former Speaker Pelosi (D-Cal)?
From TeleSUR, Mexico plans to have universal access to health care by 2027.
From TCW Defending Freedom, what Norway can teach U.K. energy minister Ed Miliband about natural gas.
From Snouts in the Trough, how the BBC gaslights the British people again and again and again.
From EuroNews, the Russian government threatens Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia, claiming that they helped Ukraine strike Russia's oil terminals.
From Balkan Insight, Serbia is ready to produce drones with the Israeli arms manufacturer Elbit Systems.
From The North Africa Post, Chinese, Moroccan and French companies sign an agreement to create an electric logistics corridor between Morocco and France.
From The New Arab, the World Health Organization suspends its operation in Gaza after one of its contract workers is killed.
From The Jerusalem Post, gunmen open fire near the Israeli consulate in İstabul, Türkiye in an attack possible linked to ISIS.
From The Times Of Israel, a cinema in Frankfurt, Germany declines to participate in a local Jewish film festival.
From Arutz Sheva, Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei is reportedly unconscious in a hospital in Qom, Iran.
From Gatestone Institute, Germany's "national interest" and its support for Israel.
From The Daily Signal, Virginia's bill HB 355 and the threat to parents and students in the state.
From The American Conservative, Congress can end President Trump's allegedly unconstitutional war against Iran.
From The Western Journal, new Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin considers cracking down at international airports serving sanctuary cities.
From BizPac Review, a judge lets a thrice-deported illegal alien who allegedly kidnapped a four-year-old girl go free with GPS monitoring.
From the Daily Caller, while in Hungary, Vance gets Trump on the phone.
From the New York Post, Apple has some technical difficulties with its new $2,000 folding iPhone.
From Breitbart, Charlies Angels stars Jaclyn Smith, Kate Jackson and Cheryl Ladd reunite for the show's 50th anniversary.
And from the Genesius Times, congresscritter Hank Johnson (D-GA) warns that "The whole island of Iran will capsize" if American troops are sent there.
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