From National Review, on Ukraine, Democrats show their double standards.
From FrontpageMag, some negative influence from Islam on European behavior.
From Townhall, congresscritter Adam Schiff (D-Cal) makes up parts of the transcript of the call between President Trump and Ukrainian President Zelensky.
From The Washington Free Beacon, the ban on fracking proposed by some Democrat presidential candidates would eliminate millions of jobs.
From the Washington Examiner, the "favor" Trump asked of Zelensky was related to CrowdStrike and not to any member of the Biden family.
From The Federalist, worshiping the climate is merely recycled paganism.
From American Thinker, is American prosperity really the result of slavery?
From Canada Free Press, zero population growth is a humanitarian hoax.
From CBC News, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau promises to overhaul health care for Canada's indigenous people.
From Global News, Alberta's oil and gas sector uses technology to decrease its greenhouse gas emissions.
From TeleSUR, Mexico searches for the remains of 43 student teachers who disappeared five years ago.
From Morocco World News, Mauritania ignores the Western Sahara conflict at the U.N., which angers Polisario.
From Hürriyet Daily News, a 5.8-magnitude earthquake strikes near Istanbul.
From Turkish Minute, according to the International Press Institute, Turkish courts prosecute journalists while ignoring the principle of fair trials. (What is this "freedom of the press" you speak of?)
From Rûdaw, the University of Mosul in Iraq, after being occupied by ISIS, bustles with students again.
From In-Cyprus, Cypriot President Nicos Anastasiades rejects allegations made by Turkish President Recep Erdoğan at the U.N.
From The Syrian Observer, according to Russian sources, the presidency of the Syrian constitutitonal committee will be shared between the regime and the opposition.
From Arutz Sheva, according to former Israeli Education Minister Naftali Bennett, the New Right party will support a government lead by Prime Minister Netanyahu.
From The Times Of Israel, Israeli President Rivlin looks to history for a power sharing model.
From The Jerusalem Post, a police officer is stabbed in a suspected terror attack near the Temple Mount in Jerusalem.
From YNetNews, Israel's population passes 9 million.
From Egypt Today, according to a U.S. spokesperson, the meeting between U.S. President Trump and Egyptian President al-Sisi was "fruitful and successful".
From Radio Farda, Iran's media and revolutionary guards welcome Supreme Leader Khamenei's speech at the U.N. General Assembly.
From The Express Tribune, as elections in Afghanistan approach, Pakistan beefs up its border security.
From Pakistan Today, Trump tells India and Pakistan to "work it out".
From Khaama Press, Afghan forces arrest a would-be suicide bomber in the city of Taloqan.
From The Hans India, according to the chief of the Indian Space Research Organisation, the Chandrayaan-2 orbiter is doing well, but has not communicated with the Vikram lander.
From the Hindustan Times, the science and technology department of Anna University in Chennai, India causes controversy by making the language Sanskrit mandatory.
From India Today, following a directive by a Kerala High Court, police enter a church and evict "Jacobite" priests who had locked themselves inside. (The article states the that church was caught in a dispute between "Orthodox" and "Jacobite" factions, but does not define these two terms.)
From the Daily Mirror, are Sri Lankans using their right to vote?
From the Colombo Page, Sri Lanka and the U.N. will discuss the latter's ban on the former's troops in peacekeeping missions.
From Coconuts, there is no ban on premarital sex in Bali.
From IsraellyCool, CAIR executive director Zahra Billoo dehumanizes Jews and an Israeli Muslim.
From Jewish News Syndicate, a Shiite imam based in Detroit praises the attacks on Saudi Arabian oil facilities.
From Gatestone Institute, Sweden is "spinning out of control".
From The Jakarta Post, end the police brutality in the Indonesian province of Papua.
From The Straits Times, protesters chant slogans as Hong Kong leader Carrie Lamb tries to hold a town hall.
From the Borneo Post, a man tries to smuggle eight Myanmar nationals into Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, which becomes his last mistake.
From Free Malaysia Today, in Kuching, Sarawak, Malaysia, a plant which makes hydrogen for hydrogen-powered buses is temporarily closed due to contamination.
From The Mainichi, a passenger with a knife passes through security at the Osaka airport.
From the New York Post, here's what will get you a Twitter block from congresscritter AOC (D-NY).
From the Daily Caller, Trump unloads on the Democrats.
From Numbers USA, immigration might explain the media's blind spot on the negative aspects of population growth.
And from The Babylon Bee and maybe the "don't give them any ideas" department, new genderfluid dolls alert authorities and shoot pepper spray when children use the wrong pronoun.
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