Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Tuesday Things

On a warm and rainy Tuesday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, the coming presidential campaign of congresscritter AOC (D-NY).

From FrontpageMag, Nazi physician Josef Mengele, the concentration camp at Auschwitz-Birkenau, and "gender affirming care".

From Townhall, New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani's (D) swing at the late U.K. Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher comes back to haunt him.

From The Washington Free Beacon, meet the left-wing leaders of the Massachusetts Teachers Association.

From the Washington Examiner, according to congresscritter Diana Harshbarger (R-TN), protecting Medicaid against fraud is even harder than defending her family's pharmacy from an armed robber.

From The Federalist, President Trump gets a win at the Supreme Court in a case involving the "work-related speech" of immigration judges.

From American Thinker, why won't the Republicans point out the good things that Trump is doing for the economy?

From NewsBusters, the NBC show Today claims that Trump's health is "under a growing spotlight", which they never said about then-President Biden.

From Canada Free Press, Pope Leo XIV hypocritically laments the Catholic Church's past "support" of slavery.

From TeleSUR, the archbishop of Buenos Aires urges Argentine President Javier Milei to prioritize his country's poorest citizens.

From TCW Defending Freedom, jihad marches through the U.K.

From Snouts in the Trough, is gang rape in the U.K. now legal for "enrichers"?

From EuroNews, a Portuguese juvenile court orders that two French boys abandoned in Portugal are returned to France.

From Free West Media, will U.S. President Trump kidnap Israeli President Herzog for violating his Israeli sedition edict?

From ReMix, the U.K. and Poland plan to sign an enhanced security agreement.  (If you read Polish, read the story at Do Rzeczy.)

From Balkan Insight, Greece arrests 22 people over an alleged scheme to falsely claim E.U. agricultural subsidies.

From The North Africa Post, Sudanese gold exports in April and May surpass their total from January to March.

From The New Arab, Egypt moves to expand its exploration for lithium and other minerals with help from Spain.

From the Daily Mail, Gaza flotilla participants fake injuries.

From The Jerusalem Post, effigies of U.S. President Trump, Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu, and Israeli Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir are paraded in the streets of Montreal.

From Culture Watch, Canadian marketing professor Gad Saad discusses "Islamophobia".

From Gatestone Institute, the Gaza peace plan is a fantasy that keeps Hamas in power.

From The Daily Signal, according to an opinion column, the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative will cost Virginia billions, just like it did in Pennsylvania.

From The American Conservative, the reputation of the ancient Greeks gets blackened.

From The Western Journal, the Democratic Party's account on X puts up and then deletes a disrespectful Memorial Day post, but TWJ has the receipts.

From BizPac ReviewMinneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey (D) makes Memorial Day about the late criminal George Floyd.

From the Daily Caller, New York City replaces school discipline with therapy, but classroom violence gets worse anyway.

From the New York Post, a man explores a cave in New York state and learns the meaning of the expression "between a rock and a hard place".

From Page Six, a look at the "ultra-private" island in the Bahamas where Donald Trump the Younger and Bettina Anderson got married.

From Breitbart, early projections for the movie Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow look disastrous.

From Newsmax, Hoover Dam lights up for the upcoming America250 celebration.

And from The Babylon Bee, the Chicago Police Department confirms that the entire population of Chicago was shot during Memorial Day weekend.

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