From National Review, President Trump must not break the promises he made to gun-rights supporters.
From FrontpageMag, Islam's "cultural exchange" with the West wasn't pretty.
From TownHall, the hoax about Charlottesville that won't die.
From The Washington Free Beacon, according to a study, kids who receive school vouchers are more likely to graduate from college.
From the Washington Examiner, Israel gives U.S. congresscritter Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich) permission to visit her Palestinian grandmother, but she declines to go.
From The Federalist, The New York Times doesn't understand conservatives.
From American Thinker, the left misses the point on gun ownership.
From CNS News, Greenland is not for sale.
From Global News, a Hamilton, Ontario city employee with links to white supremacy is terminated from his job.
From CTV News, a police interview with an alleged van attacker will be made public at least a month from now.
From The Jakarta Post, the Indonesian government hopes to deal with economic inequality between the country's regions.
From The Straits Times, Hong Kong's police say that there's no need for China's government to intervene.
From the Borneo Post, controversial Islamic preacher Zakir Naik makes a police report against Malaysia's human resource minister.
From Free Malaysia Today, Malaysia parliamentcritter Charles Santiago (DAP-Klang) vows to prove that he did not misquote Dr. Naik.
From The Mainichi, a former aircraft engine factory damaged in raids during World War II should serve as an anti-war reminder, says a man who once worked there.
From the Daily Mail, ISIS has reportedly found a footing in Sri Lanka and India.
From the Colombo Page, the Sri Lankan navy recovers a kilo of methamphetamine hidden in a beach.
From The Hans India, the Gandhi Peace Foundation criticizes the Indian government's changes to the status of Jammu and Kashmir.
From the Hindustan Times, the Indian government decides to roll back some restrictions in Jammu and Kashmir.
From ANI, the Indian Army foils another infiltration attempt, allegedly supported by the Pakistani Army.
From India Today, India tells Pakistan that it must stop terrorism before talks can begin.
From Khaama Press, Taliban terrorists are using mosques and houses to fight, command, and make IEDs. (That's why I call them "terrorists", instead of "militants" or "fighters".)
From Dawn, four people are killed and 20 others injured in an explosion at a madrassa in Quetta, Pakistan.
From The Express Tribune, before meeting with the U.N. Security Council, Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan takes U.S. President Trump into confidence.
From Pakistan Today, thousands of people in Kashmir clash with police.
From Radio Farda, a long-time ally of Iranian Supreme Leader Khamenei is under fire.
From IranWire, to what extent was Tehran responsible for the Iran-Iraq war?
From StepFeed, Saudi Arabia gets its first electric car charging station.
From Arutz Sheva, Israel's Iron Dome defense system intercepts a rocket from Gaza.
From The Times Of Israel, two Israeli teenagers are injured in a car-ramming attack in the West Bank.
From The Jerusalem Post, an IDF officer is reprimanded for crossing into Lebanon via a Hezbollah tunnel without informing his superiors.
From Egypt Today, Egypt carefully checks grain imported from Russia.
From In-Cyprus, refugees in Morphou, Cyprus protest the continued Turkish occupation of part of the island.
From Hürriyet Daily News, a Turkish charity sends meat from animals sacrificed during Eid al-Adha to millions of poor families.
From Turkish Minute, 400 migrants cross from Turkey to Greek Aegean islands in two days.
From Clarion Project, the man who wounded six policemen in Philadelphia attended a radical mosque.
From Gatestone Institute, "is the Palestinian Authority preparing for a new Intifada?"
From The Stream, two Google employees expose more anti-conservative bias.
From the Daily Caller, politicians and the media keep talking about a possible recession.
From Fox News, a colony of prairie dogs in Colorado dies from the plague.
From NumbersUSA, to end illegal immigration, require E-Verify and prosecute employers who hire illegal aliens.
From the New York Post, an abandoned asylum in Saratoga County, New York goes up for auction.
And from Tulsa World, "Old Ladies Against Tazing" defend a woman who was arrested after refusing to sign an ticket.
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