From The Daily Wire, three reasons why Gillette's "toxic masculinity" ads are stupid.
From CNS News, on the other hand, NBC cheers Gillette's ads.
From The Dallas Morning News, a retired pitcher's masculinity appears to have been very toxic. (via the New York Post)
From The Federalist, policy disagreements are not crimes.
From American Thinker, the FBI goes after Trump without any evidence.
From the Washington Examiner, Attorney General nominee William Barr says that he won't be bullied.
From Mediaite, a CNN analyst accuses a black Fox contributor of benefiting from white privilege. (via The Washington Free Beacon)
From Townhall, new jobs just keep coming into being on Trump's watch.
From National Review, 20 things you might not know about Senator Kamala Harris (D-Cal).
From FrontpageMag, the Chicago Democrat who banned guns, except for his own.
From Voice Of Europe, in an interview with the BBC, a Muslim cleric claims to the right to marry a nine-year-old girl.
From the Express, a Tory MP gives a very brief speech explaining his opposition to Prime Minister May's Brexit deal. (A politician being brief? Yes, believe it or not.)
From the Evening Standard, just before the Brexit deal vote, "key" amendments are withdrawn.
UPDATE: The House of Commons votes against the Brexit deal.
From BBC News, the MPs vote, and a man chases people with a machete at a train station.
From the Independent, Germany's foreign minister suggests that Brexit negotiations could be reopened if the current deal is rejected.
From the Irish Examiner, a "Not My Taoiseach" protest is called off due to low turnout. (Like yours truly, they might have had a difficult time pronouncing "Taoiseach".)
From CBC News, more than 100 First Nations groups could team up to purchase the Trans Mountain expansion pipeline.
From Global News, Canada requests clemency for a Canadian man sentenced to death in China.
From CTV News, a large iceberg which which parked itself near a Newfoundland town will be portrayed on a stamp.
From El País, as the Andalusian parliament starts its investiture debate, feminists protest outside.
From the NL Times, underage asylum seekers in the Netherlands increasingly disappear from their shelters.
From Dutch News, four U.K. nationals in the Netherlands sue to keep their E.U. rights.
From Deutsche Welle, a worker for the German party AfD is accused of ordering arson in Ukraine.
From Radio Poland, Poland's deputy foreign minister meets with Iran's ambassador to Poland to discuss an upcoming Middle East summit.
From The Slovak Spectator, Slovakia's first satellite has stopped transmitting data.
From Daily News Hungary, a Hungarian MEP calls for the E.U. to protect its borders.
From About Hungary, according to Hungary's foreign minister, cooperation between east and west is in Hungary's interests.
From Total Croatia News, Krka National Park will get one of the world's longest pedestrian bridges.
From Ekathimerini, an accused Albanian drug lord, wanted for allegedly smuggling drugs into Greece, turns himself in.
From the Greek Reporter, Greek and Turkish Cypriots have begun restoring a historic monastery.
From Sputnik International, relatives of an American detained in Russia have no plans to visit him.
From Hürriyet Daily News, Turkish President Erdoğan announces that a safe zone will be set up in Syria.
From Turkish Minute, owners of a now-defunct poultry producer have been arrested for alleged Gülen links.
From British Israel Communications and Research Center, the U.S. is considering establishing a safe zone in northeastern Syria.
From Arutz Sheva, an Israeli woman punches an Arab man trying to steal her car.
From The Times Of Israel, a man infiltrates Lebanon from Israel.
From the Egypt Independent, Egyptian President Sisi meets with the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees.
From Radio Farda, Iran's foreign minister claims that the country is not seeking war by launching a satellite.
From Khaama Press, Afghanistan's new ambassador to the U.S. presents her credentials to President Trump.
From Coconuts, in a photoshop manipulation, an all-female Korean pop group gets arrested by sharia police in Indonesia.
From The National, terrorists use explosives and guns to carry out an attack at a hotel in Nairobi, Kenya.
From Gatestone Institute, the U.N., Palestine, and the torture of women.
From The New York Times, former N.Y. Yankees pitcher Mel Stottlemyre goes to the baseball field in the sky.
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