On a sunny and mild Tuesday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, the city that is best in the world for withstanding an aerial bombardment.
From FrontpageMag, Pope Leo XIV will condemn terror attacks, but will not identify their perpetrators.
From Townhall, Virginia Attorney General Jay Jones (D) tries to appeal the Virginia Supreme Court's ruling on the recent redistricting attempt, and messes up big time. (Or you could call it "messing up bigly".)
From The Washington Free Beacon, Virginia Governor Abigail Spanberger (D) makes a faceplant.
From the Washington Examiner, Democrats try a bait-and-switch move with an independent senatorial candidate in Nebraska.
From The Federalist, taxpayers forced to pay reparations should be given reparations.
From American Thinker, college grads rightly fear AI, and so should commencement speakers.
From NewsBusters, the Saturday Night Live version of Justice Brett Kavanaugh claims that the Supreme Court will allow President Trump to ignore the Constitution.
From Canada Free Press, Russian President Putin exposes Trump's China reset, causing former U.S. President Obama, left-wing billionaire George Soros's network and Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney to panic.
From TeleSUR, air pollution in Tegucigalpa, Honduras reaches harmful levels.
From TCW Defending Freedom, arrogance by the U.K.'s Reform party hands Wales to Plaid Cymru.
From Snouts in the Trough, U.K. Prime Minister Starmer and the unmentionables.
From EuroNews, according to European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, the E.U. might propose a ban on social media for children this summer.
From ReMix, Greek Migration Minister Thanos Plevris warns that about 550,000 migrants are in Libya trying to reach Europe. (If you read Greek, read the story at ERT News.)
From Balkan Insight, the Kosovo Specialist Chambers court rejects "misleading" claims that the rights of defendants in a war crimes court based in The Hague, Netherlands were violated.
From The North Africa Post, Morocco launches a digital system to modernize the governance of maritime fisheries.
From The New Arab, Iraq's Popular Mobilisation Forces launch an operation in the provinces of Najaf and Karbala after reports of an alleged "secret Israeli base".
From Jewish News Syndicate, French authorities arrest a Tunisian man for allegedly planning a terror attack on a museum and on French Jews.
From The Jerusalem Post, a 300-page report lays out evidence of sexual violence by Hamas during its attack on October 7th, 2023.
From Arutz Sheva, how France has capitulated to Islam.
From Gatestone Institute, Sweden drops the term "Islamophobia" and votes for free speech.
From The Daily Signal, why Los Angeles mayoral candidate Spencer Pratt (R) is on the rise.
From Radio Free Asia, beware of China twisting U.S. President Trump's words during his summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping.
From The American Conservative, the case for Secretary of State Marco Rubio as a presidential candidate for 2028 is overstated.
From The Western Journal, more on the aforementioned appeal of the Virginia Supreme Court's ruling on the redistricting attempt.
From BizPac Review, Trump talks up Heisman Trophy winner Fernando Mendoza, who missed an event at the White House.
From the Daily Caller, the Trump administration boycotts a U.N. migration summit.
From Breitbart, Energy Secretary Doug Burgum points out that California is the only state dependent on oil passing through the Strait of Hormuz.
From Newsmax, the Department of Justice and PayPal reach a settlement over the latter's race-based DEI initiative.
And from the New York Post, in a campaign ad, the aforementioned Spencer Pratt uses the force.