From National Review, President Trump should keep that boot on ISIS's neck right where it is.
From FrontpageMag, why congresscritter Ilhan Omar (D-MN) is wrong to regard "white men" as a worse threat than jihadis.
From The Washington Free Beacon, what the Palestinians want is not equal rights.
From the Washington Examiner, Texas gun laws will become less restrictive next month.
From The Federalist, gentrification isn't the evil that some thought it would be.
From American Thinker, the dangerous game which Democrats are playing.
From LifeZette, congresscritter AOC (D-NY) tries to distance herself from her former chief of staff.
From CBC News, Canada's ambassador to the U.S. decides to step down.
From Global News, Canadians get to choose names for a star and its exoplanet.
From CTV News, what we know and might never know about the murders allegedly committed by the two now-dead suspects.
From The Conservative Woman, western women look the other way as Muslim women are jailed for not covering their heads.
From the Express, anti-Brexit protesters are told to "go home" after hijacking the Abbey Road street crossing.
From the Evening Standard, the old fortress Tintagel gets a new footbridge.
From the (U.K.) Independent, in the city where knives are illegal, a police officer is stabbed during a routine traffic stop.
From the (Irish) Independent, the U.K. decides to pull out of the Europe-wide Interrailing scheme.
From the Irish Examiner, according to the Irish Refugee Council, refugees in Ireland are "struggling to access basic services".
From RFI, Tour de France winner Egan Bernal receives a hero's welcome in his home town of Zipaquira, Colombia.
From VRT NWS, a man returns to his home in Ichtegem, Belgium to find his house crawling with beetles.
From the NL Times, a prisoner returns from leave with a gun in his car.
From Dutch News, foreign students in the Netherlands might be required to take Dutch language lessons. (The article links to one in Times Higher Education, which is behind a paywall.)
From Deutsche Welle, will Germans have to deal with higher meat costs due to a proposed tax?
From the CPH Post, tourists have been "trampling" the Danish UNESCO World Heritage site Vadehavet.
From Polskie Radio, the speaker of the lower house of the Polish parliament resigns.
From Radio Praha, about 40 former dissidents sign an open letter protesting what they see as an attempt to rewrite history.
From The Slovak Spectator, Slovakia will contend for a seat on the U.N. Security Council.
From the Hungary Journal, Hungarian Prime Minister Orban is popular in the Czech Republic.
From Daily News Hungary, Hungarian authorities are still searching for the last missing victim of a boat collision which happen in May.
From Hungary Today, according to opposition party Jobbik, Hungary has become a "migrant destination".
From About Hungary, Hungary is the wrong country to accuse of rising anti-Semitism.
From Russia Today, a former high-ranking investigator tries to start an investigation against Josef Stalin.
From Sputnik International, two people are killed and four others injured in an explosion at a military training ground in Russia's Arkhangelsk region.
From The Moscow Times, what to expect from this Saturday's round of protests in Moscow.
From Romania-Insider, families of Syrian and Iranian origin plan to build a residential complex in eastern Bucharest. (If you read Romanian, read the story at Profit(dot)Ro.)
From Novinite, according to the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, the African swine flu virus can survive in frozen meats for up to three years.
From The Sofia Globe, archaeologists find the northern fortress walls of Serdica, the ancient city upon which Sofia was built.
From Radio Bulgaria, the Bulgarian Food Safety Agency will be investigated for possible malfeasance.
From Ekathimerini, once again, the Moria migrant camp on Lesvos is in crisis.
From the Greek Reporter, the Greek parliament votes to abolish university asylum.
From Independent Balkan News Agency, the Trans Adriatic Pipeline in Italy, Albania and Greece is 99 percent complete.
From Total Croatia News, what U.K. nationals in Croatia need to know if there's a no-deal Brexit.
From the Malta Independent, a Spanish NGO boat carrying 121 migrants, denied port by Malta and Italy, asks Spain, France and Germany for help.
From El País, on a bus in Madrid, a man allegedly makes a racist attack on a Spanish woman originally from the Dominican Republic.
From The Portugal News, a shopping center in Loulé, Portugal is closed due to a bomb threat.
From The Stream, a fighter pilot killed in Vietnam is flow to Dallas by his own son.
From Breitbart, on his claimed "home turf" in Scranton, Pennsylvania, former Vice President Biden barely edges Senator Elizabeth Warren.
From Twitchy, Florida Republicans plan to register voters at a gun show.
From the New York Post, federal authorities release 300 of the 700 workers detained in immigration raids in Mississippi.
And from The Babylon Bee, a fourth grade teacher in California lists red wine and dark chocolate on her requested supply list.
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