From National Review, was President Obama really the "Deporter in Chief"?
From FrontpageMag, America drowns in left-wing lies about President Trump.
From Townhall, what you won't hear about the El Paso and Dayton shootings.
From The Washington Free Beacon, the DNC uses the shooting to raise funds.
From the Washington Examiner, stop scapegoating Trump, and don't scapegoat Senator Warren, either.
From The Federalist, no, efforts against terrorism have not hampered efforts against white supremacy.
From American Thinker, incitement to violence has come from Democrats.
From CNS News, according to Senator Lindsey Graham (R-SC), calling Trump names won't solve the problem of mass shootings.
From LifeZette, polled swing voters "overwhelmingly" reject increased immigration.
From NewsBusters, under left-wing pressure, The New York Times changes its headline. (And many on the left wonder why we on the right allege a left-wing bias in the media.)
From Global News, a sand bunker on a golf course in Nova Scotia contains an additional hazard.
From TeleSUR, Bolivia celebrates its Independence Day.
From The Jakarta Post, if you're in Jakarta, are you wearing the right kind of face mask?
From The Straits Times, over 300 people besiege the Sham Shui Po police station in Hong Kong.
From the Borneo Post, Malaysia's Women, Family and Community Development Ministry launches initiatives against sexual harassment.
From Free Malaysia Today, for the third day, a search team tries to find a missing Irish teenager.
From The Mainichi, Hiroshima observes the 74th anniversary of the U.S. atomic bomb attack with a peace declaration.
From the Daily Mirror, police investigate the stoning of a statue of St. Sebastian in Katuwapitiya, Sri Lanka.
From the Colombo Page, Sri Lanka's prime minister regards India's creation of Ladakh as a union territory is a matter internal thereto.
From The Hans India, the Indian army foils an infiltration attempt by several terrorists in the Machhal sector of Jammu and Kashmir.
From the Hindustan Times, the Indian spacecraft Chandrayaan-2 makes its fifth and final orbit-raising burn.
From India Today, a train in West Bengal has to deal with a large four-legged obstacle.
From Khaama Press, an explosion in Kabul kills five counter-narcotics department employees.
From The Express Tribune, according to Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan, "India will ethnically cleanse occupied Kashmir".
From Pakistan Today, China objects to India's moves on Kashmir.
From Radio Farda, female Iranian activists call for Supreme Leader Khamenei to step down.
From IranWire, an Iranian woman is arrested for not wearing a bra.
From StepFeed, for the first time, women ride horses alongside men in Saudi Arabia's Souq Okaz Festival.
From Rûdaw, people returning to Nineveh, Iraq are outnumbered by people returning to displacement camps.
From Egypt Today, tourists ride horses in Hurghada, Egypt.
From Arutz Sheva, Israel's General Security Service thwarts an attempted bomb attack in Jerusalem by Hamas.
From The Times Of Israel, according to Foreign Minister Israel Katz, Israel is involved in the U.S.-led mission in the Persian Gulf. (How many countries have a foreign minister whose first name is the same as the country's name?)
From The Jerusalem Post, did the crash of the Israeli spacecraft Beresheet spill "water bears" onto the moon?
From YNetNews, a civilian worker is killed by an explosion at an IDF base.
From In-Cyprus, Brexit could lead to between 350 and 1,220 job losses in Cyprus.
From Hürriyet Daily News, Turkish President Erdoğan announces an operation in northern Syria "very soon".
From Turkish Minute, thousands of Turks hold protest march against a planned gold mine near the town of Kirazlı. (Yes, the second "i" has no dot.)
From the National, the BBC apologizes for wrongly describing a common Islamic gesture as an ISIS salute.
From Coconuts, an ad showing a goat in a hijab goes over baaaaadly.
From The Nation, an Islamic teacher in Niger is jailed for "defiling" 35 boys.
From Sp!ked, "the forgotten victims of ISIS".
From Gatestone Institute, despite liberal laws, caste discrimination in India still remains.
From Romania-Insider, the Austrian group OMV is not aware of ExxonMobil's plan to exit their joint gas project in the Black Sea.
From Novinite, the city of Sofia will invest in chimney filters.
From The Sofia Globe, Bulgaria will receive €2.9 million from the E.U. to fight swine fever.
From Radio Bulgaria, Bulgaria denies reports of mistreatment of refugees at its border with Turkey.
From Ekathimerini, a man arrested in the Exarchia district of Athens for drug-related offenses was found to be carrying a stolen police gun.
From the Greek Reporter, archaeologists find an intact first-century BC tomb in Kozani, Greece.
From Independent Balkan News Agency, have the leaders of Bosnia and Hercegovina created a "historic agreement" or another failure?
From Total Croatia News, a dozen activists protest in Zagreb against crimes committed during Operation Storm.
From the Malta Independent, Malta reportedly denies entry to the NGO ship open arms.
From Malta Today, Italy's new law about migrant rescue ships entering its territorial waters concerns the UNHCR.
From ANSA, a new security decree from Interior Minister Matteo Salvini wins approval in the Italian Senate.
From SwissInfo, a peace treaty brokered by Switzerland is signed in Mozambique.
From France24, two feuding ethnic groups in Mali sign a ceasefire.
From El País, in the Spanish county of Campo de Gibraltar, "drug traffickers are practically idols".
From The Portugal News, a missing British woman is found in Olhos de Água, Portugal.
From Morocco World News, an Algerian "sovereign" is considering reopening the land border with Morocco.
From Russia Today, communists want the head of the Moscow Election Committee fired.
From Sputnik International, Russia is developing a system to recharge satellites using lasers.
From The Moscow Times, who are the ten Russians risking imprisonment for their roles in the Moscow protests?
From the Hungary Journal, no country wants to take a convicted terrorist known as Ahmed H., currently in Hungary. (If you read Hungarian, read the story at Magyar Hírlap.)
From Daily News Hungary, most Hungarians are optimistic about the E.U.
From Hungary Today, musician Gene Simmons loves visiting Hungary.
From About Hungary, Hungarian official Zoltán Kovács hits back at criticism of Prime Minister Orban and U.S. President Trump.
From The Slovak Spectator, Comenius University in Bratislava offers summertime Slovak language classes to foreigners for the first time.
From Radio Praha, protesters block the entrance to the Czech Republic's Ministry of the Environment.
From Radio Poland, according to his chief of staff, Polish President Andrzej Duda has made relations with the U.S. a priority.
From the CPH Post, Danish MPs argue that kids "should be able to change their gender".
From Deutsche Welle, according to a German lawmaker, children who don't speak German well enough shouldn't start school.
From the NL Times, "oh yes, they call him the streak".
From Dutch News, Dutch police call for a crackdown on antisocial drivers. (If you read Dutch, read the story at AD.)
From the Express, U.K. Prime Minister Johnson and Foreign Secretary Raab seek new trade deals with Canada and Estonia.
From the Evening Standard, some residents of Whaley Bridge are allowed to return home.
From the (U.K.) Independent, according to cabinet minister Michael Gove, the E.U. doesn't seem to want to negotiate with the U.K.
From the (Irish) Independent, according to Irish Taoiseach Leo Varadkar, a no-deal Brexit is not unavoidable.
From the Irish Examiner, according to Irish Finance Minister Paschal Donohoe, a no-deal Brexit would "fundamentally change" the relationship between Ireland and the U.K.
From The Conservative Woman, is there a "coffee crisis" or a "global warming storm in a teacup"?
From The Stream, the "twin tragedies" in El Paso and Dayton.
From WPVI-TV, electric fans are reportedly harmful in dry heat.
From the Daily Caller, letters from a former cardinal to alleged victims of sexual abuse show signs of grooming.
From Fox News, service dogs go to El Paso.
From Accuracy in Media, a video from Prager U debunks media claims about Trump's response to events in Charlottesville.
From the New York Post, migrant children are given a chance for an education on a converted bus in Tijuana, Mexico.
And from Twitchy, the BBC puts out some dubious information on various types of guns.
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