Tuesday, June 23, 2026

Tuesday Tidings

On an unseasonably cool and rainy Tuesday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, President Trump's face gets posted all over Washington, D.C.

From FrontpageMag, among the guests at the opening of former President Obama's center are his old friends Bill Ayers and Bernardine Dorn.

From Townhall, an illegal alien working illegally as an Uber driver is arrested after allegedly kidnapping, drugging and raping a passenger in Miami.

From The Washington Free Beacon, senatorial candidate James Talarico (D-TX) scrubs his website of statements supporting "trans kids" and "bold, progressive ideas".

From the Washington Examiner, an appeals court rules that ICE may deport illegal aliens without the approval of a judge.

From The Federalist, senatorial candidate Graham Platner (D-ME) and Planned Avoidance Of Parenthood have some things in common.

From American Thinker, my state wrongly sends out over 500,000 replacement mail-in ballots.

From NewsBusters, according to a study, TV news networks waste almost seven hours discussing the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool.

From Canada Free Press, U.S. energy dominance can defund terrorism.

From TeleSUR, Peruvian presidential candidate Roberto Sánchez denounces what he believes is fraud and refuses to recognize rival Keiko Fujimori if she becomes president.

From TCW Defending Freedom, if U.K. parliamentcritter Andy Burnham becomes prime minister, he won't fix the country.

From Snouts in the Trough, according to U.K. fictional character Amelia, replacing former Prime Minister Keir Starmer with Burnham won't do much good.

From EuroNewsthe E.U. warns that tensions between Poland and Ukraine will play into Russian President Putin's hands.

From ReMix, according to a right-wing Hungarian politician, it's "understandable" that someone threw LGBTQ Pride flags off a bridge in Budapest.

From Balkan Insight, 14 Serbian NGOs urge the U.N. to investigate if a "sonic weapon" was used to break up a protest in the capital city of Belgrade.

From The North Africa Post, Djibouti asks Morocco for help in developing solar energy.

From The New Arab, Algeria beats Jordan 2-1 at the World Cup.

From The Jerusalem Post, a middle school principal in Boston apologizes to Arab and Muslim students who felt "unsafe" after a lesson about the Holocaust.  (Imagine apologizing to non-black students after a lesson about slavery.)

From Gatestone Institute, Iran and Hamas have no intention of meeting U.S. President Trump's peace demands.

From The Daily Signal, the Department of Justice and the Drug Enforcement Administration under then-President Biden allowed hundreds of thousands of fentanyl pills into the U.S. to gather intelligence.

From The American Conservative, Vice President Vance angers the neocons.

From The Western Journal, more on the Biden administration allowing large numbers of fentanyl pills into the U.S.

From BizPac Review, Dr. Anthony Fauci gets a subpoena.

From the Daily Caller, right-wing commentator Tucker Carlson ditches the Republican Party.

From the New York Post, the IDF claims that an Al Jazeera journalist killed in Gaza and mourned by New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani (D) was a sniper for Hamas.

From Breitbart, shipping in the Strait of Hormuz increases slightly, defying Iran's claim that it was closed.

From Newsmax, the Department of Justice sues New York state over its law restricting federal immigration officers and ending cooperation with ICE.

And from SFGate, El Niño hits California.

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