From the New York Post, President Trump finds another official to strip of his security clearance.
From Space War, the president's military parade is suffering the same fate as numerous other government programs.
From LifeZette, authorities have reportedly destroyed the "extremist Muslim" compound in New Mexico, but the details are hard to come by.
From the Washington Examiner, if the Catholic Church wants to change, it should learn from its own pro-life teachings.
From the Express, scientists in Canada develop a way to speed up the formation of a mineral that absorbs carbon dioxide.
From Russia Today, rebuilding starts in parts of Syria.
From Radio Poland, Polish President Andrzej Duda arrives in Melbourne, Australia.
From Deutsche Welle, a teenage Yazidi girl formerly held as a sex slave by ISIS encounters her captor in Germany.
From Sputnik International, Congressman Thomas Massie (R-KY) accuses Democrats of being "hysterical and xenophobic" about Russia.
From the Evening Standard, four teenagers are stabbed in the city where knives are illegal.
From the NL Times, a couple is arrested for scamming hotels and restaurants in the Netherlands.
From Ekathimerini, Greece and Germany reach a deal about returning migrants to the former. (The migrants subject to the deal have sought asylum in Greece, but later turn up at the German-Austrian border.)
From the Greek Reporter, a Turkish coast guard ship allegedly harassed Greek fishermen.
From The Slovak Spectator, the organization For a Decent Slovakia plans a protest for September.
From France24, Saudi Arabia launches the "smart hajj" initiative.
From Gatestone Institute, being pro-Muslim is complicated.
From FrontpageMag, how left-wing policies contribute to wildfires.
From National Review, the ADF continues to defend free speech.
From Townhall, a judge threatens a newspaper for printing information about the Parkland school shooter, which the judge had ordered redacted.
From Deadspin, in one of yesterday's baseball games, there was triple play in which the batter was not retired.
And from Breaking Burgh, the Catholic Church is happy that most priests in Pennsylvania have not abused children.
UPDATE: VOE has posted a Tweet since I started writing this post, thanking another account for their support.
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