From DC Dirty Laundry, some questions about the El Paso Walmart shooting.
From Townhall, the mayor of El Paso has the "perfect response" when asked if President Trump was creating an atmosphere of violence.
From the Washington Examiner, former Senator Rick Santorum (R-PA) points out that mass shooters pick "soft targets".
From Crime Prevention Research Center, what's in the Walmart shooter's manifesto? (This sets aside the question of whether the manifesto is a hoax, as alleged by the DCDL article above.)
From American Thinker, someone allegedly on the left tries to turn the El Paso shooter into a Republican.
From LifeZette, crowds in El Paso line up to donate blood.
From National Review, "the Democrats break left".
From The Washington Free Beacon, the PAC who helped elect the "Squad" launches Facebook ads hitting the DCCC over diversity (or alleged lack thereof).
From The Conservative Woman, terrorists go online to wage war on Christians.
From the Express, has the DUP found the solution to the Irish backstop?
From the Evening Standard, the U.K. Border Force detains dozens of migrants after they cross the English Channel.
From the Independent, a teenager allegedly throws a six-year-old boy off a viewing platform at London's Tate Modern art gallery. (Something similar happened at the Mall of America in the U.S. state of Minnesota.)
From EuroNews, U.K. Border Force personnel find 60 guns in a car arriving at Dover, England from Calais, France.
From the Irish Examiner, teenagers throw themselves off a cliff in Kilkee, County Clare, Ireland.
From France24, Nigerian authorities crack down on an influential Shiite group.
From RFI, on his second attempt, the French flyboard inventor successfully crosses the English Channel.
From VRT NWS, more tourists are staying in the Belgian region of Flanders. (Yours truly was there in 2005 and briefly again in 2017.)
From Deutsche Welle, China denies entry to a member of Germany's Green Party because of her support for the Uighur Muslims.
From Free West Media, a German government report shows an increasing number of crimes committed by migrants.
From Polskie Radio, Slavs and Vikings figuratively "slug it out" at a festival on the Polish island of Wolin.
From The Slovak Spectator, Slovak craftsmen design blueprint skis.
From Daily News Hungary, a list of the most visited Hungarian destinations.
From Russia Today, China opens itself to foreign oil and gas exploration.
From Sputnik International, Russian military aviation puts out some of Siberia's forest fires.
From The Moscow Times, despite 1,000 arrests, Russia's opposition plans more protests.
From Global News, an Iranian-born Canadian returns to Canada after spending 11 years in an Iranian prison.
From CTV News, a damaged boat seen near Gillam, Manitoba leads the RCMP to conduct an diving operation.
From Morocco World News, Morocco will compensate former POWs held in the Tindouf camps.
From The Portugal News, Portugal and Spain consider extending a cross-border program against domestic violence.
From the Malta Independent, 40 migrants are transferred from a ship run by the German NGO Sea-Eye to Malta, with 123 others still "in limbo".
From Total Croatia News, according to the Serb National Council, Croatia should assume responsibility for crimes committed during Operation Storm.
From Independent Balkan News Agency, North Macedonia rejects Bulgaria's call for a meeting of the joint historical commission.
From Ekathimerini, Greece's Transport Ministry decides to ease restrictions on ATVs.
From the Greek Reporter, a look from above at the Lichades, a.k.a. the "Greek Seychelles".
From The Sofia Globe, counting the cost of Bulgaria's swine fever outbreak.
From Hürriyet Daily News, Turkish security forces recover a 1,000-year-old Quran from smugglers. (This story was published yesterday, but since HDN didn't put out anything today, and because you don't often read about 1,000-year-old manuscripts, I have decided to include it.)
From In-Cyprus, Cyprus's interior minister will ask E.U. countries to take in some refugees currently in Cyprus.
From Arutz Sheva, Knesset Speaker Yuli Edelstein aspires to be Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu's successor.
From The Times Of Israel, Israel's defense ministry rolls out three new tank prototypes.
From The Jerusalem Post, French immigrants in Herzliya, Israel rally to keep their synagogue open.
From YNetNews, according to an opinion column, the American entertainer JLo "did more for Israel than any politician ever could".
From Egypt Today, construction of the first wind farm to operate on the BOO system will start in October.
From Radio Farda, some Iranians suspect that their government has sold out their country's rights in the Caspian Sea.
From The Express Tribune, Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan demands action from the UNSC over the alleged use of cluster ammunition by India.
From Pakistan Today, Indian troops kill seven more youths in the Kupwara district of the Indian controlled section of Kashmir.
From Khaama Press, an explosion destroys a minibus owned by a private TV channel in Kabul, killing or injuring 27 people.
From The Hans India, India's space agency releases the first pictures of earth taken by the spacecraft Chandrayaan-2.
From the Hindustan Times, India test-fires a quick reaction surface-to-air missile.
From ANI, a priest prevents a Dalit man from entering a temple in Nakhtrana, India. (The Dalits are people formerly called "untouchables".)
From the Daily Mirror, the U.S. embassy reminds its citizens of a travel warning for Sri Lanka.
From the Colombo Page, Sri Lanka's defense ministry assures that the country is safe to visit.
From Gatestone Institute, Christian refugees are ignored.
From The Jakarta Post, Indonesia's Military Information Center publishes a homophobic comic strip.
From The Straits Times, police in Hong Kong use tear gas against protesters near Causeway Bay.
From the Borneo Post, a Malaysian man is arrested at the Chennai Airport in India after diamonds are found in his luggage.
From Free Malaysia Today, Education Minister Maszlee Malik is ready to allow multiple forms of calligraphy in Malaysia's school curriculum.
From The Mainichi, a magnitude-6.4 earthquake strikes in Japan's Fukushima prefecture.
From the New York Post, President Trump addresses the two mass shootings.
From Fox News, TV media host Howard Kurz defends Trump.
From The Washington Times, NASA wants to establish a lunar docking station for future missions to Mars.
From Reason, "the perils of zero-sum worldviews, revisited".
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