Thursday, June 4, 2026

Thursday Things

On a very warm and sunny Thursday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, do Democratic Senators really buy candidate Graham Platner's (D-ME) assurances?

From FrontpageMag, Senator Socialism (I-VT) wants 50 percent of AI to be placed under government control.

From Townhall, New York Democratic state lawmakers observe "Pride Month" by getting rid of the terms "mother" and "father" in their legislation.

From The Washington Free Beacon, Virginia Governor Abigail Spanberger (D) chooses an activist connected to left-wing billionaire George Soros who claimed to be "self-conscious" about her "whiteness" to serve on the state's criminal justice board.

From the Washington Examiner, former National Security Advisor John Bolton reportedly reaches a plea deal in his classified documents case.

From The Federalist, the U.K.'s censorship regime was always going to lead to the deaths of people like British-Polish student Henry Nowak.

From American Thinker, reports of the Islamophobic nature of a murder in Minneapolis turn out to be greatly exaggerated.

From NewsBusters, Louisiana Governor Jeff Landry (R) signs a law that recognizes biological reality.

From Canada Free Press, "ideological capture" makes truth irrelevant.

From TeleSURVenezuelan acting President Delcy Rodriguez meets with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

From TCW Defending Freedom, the training that led to the death of the aforementioned Henry Nowak.

From Snouts in the Trough, does U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer think that the author of SitT is "creating division"?

From EuroNews, E.U. governments are considering restricting temporary protection for military-age Ukrainian men.

From Free West Media, more on the death of the twice-aforementioned Henry Nowak.

From ReMix, a member of the German party AfD dares the German government to prosecute her for calling Chancellor Friedrich Merz "lying Fritz".

From Balkan Insight, Romanian President Nicoşur Dan chooses europarliamentcritter Eugen Tomac as Prime Minister-designate and gives him 10 days to form a government.

From The North Africa Post, U.N. Sahara Envoy Staffan de Mistura is expected to visit the Tindouf camps in Algeria and deliver a final warning to the separatist group Polisario.

From The New Arab, ten activists from a Gaza aid convoy go on a hunger strike after being detained in Libya.

From 7News, the man who saved lives at the terror attack at Australian's Bondi Beach is charged with assaulting his father.  (via the Daily Mail)

From Gatestone Institute, what happens when jihadis perceive weakness.

From The Daily Signal, the Supreme Court upholds a combined $100 million in fines assessed by the FCC against AT&T and Verizon.

From The American Conservative, expanding the Abraham Accords would help Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, but not the U.S.

From The Western Journal, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis (R) lambastes California's process of taking weeks to count votes.

From BizPac Review, President Trump invites a Chinese-born reporter to read his anti-communism post aloud in the Oval Office.

From the Daily Caller, six Republican congresscritters join their Democratic colleagues by voting to advance a bill for more aid to Ukraine.

From the New York Post, a Lufthansa 787 Dreamliner collapses onto its front landing gear at a gate in Frankfurt, Germany.

From Breitbart, despite a recent increase, jobless claims have rarely been this low at this time of the year.

From Newsmax, North Korea unveils a new facility for making fuel for atomic bombs.

And from Page Six, former Bon Jovi guitarist Richie Sambora sings one of the band's hits at his daughter's wedding, over a dozen years after leaving them.

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