From National Review, former Vice President Biden's running mate will need to be "ready from day one".
From FrontpageMag, in California, the real resistance makes its appearance.
From Townhall, after Secretary of State Mike Pompeo points out how the Chinese government mishandled earlier disease outbreaks, liberals accuse him of racism.
From The Washington Free Beacon, Harvard University cancels a panel discussion on Hong Kong as its president meets with Chinese President Xi Jinping.
From the Washington Examiner, officials in Illinois urge people to stay home as the weather gets warm.
From The Federalist, a guide to the Obama administration's actions against General Michael Flynn.
From American Thinker, an anti-lockdown protester's sign is digitally altered look like it has a white supremacist slogan.
From CNS News, America's worst virus is not the coronavirus but tyranny.
From LifeZette, despite the coronavirus and other problems, President Trump's approval rating is as high as ever.
From NewsBusters, according to left-wing billionaire Warren Buffet, the coronavirus will not cripple the U.S. economy in the long run.
From Canada Free Press, five epicenters of coronavirus death exaggeration.
From CBC News, Canadian provinces start lifting their coronavirus restrictions.
From Global News, according to Prime Minister Trudeau, there is no timeline for a federal budget for Canada due to uncertainty caused by the coronavirus.
From TeleSUR, two months after its most recent elections, Guyana sets the date for counting the votes.
From Morocco World News, Moroccan authorities arrest three people and seize the seven tons of cannabis resin that they were allegedly transporting.
From Hürriyet Daily News, Turkey lifts the three-day coronavirus curfew which it had placed on 31 provinces.
From Turkish Minute, Turkey is constructing a hospital for coronavirus patients on runways at the closed İstanbul Atatürk Airport.
From Rûdaw, Syrian refugees use their experience from war and exile to deal with anxiety over the coronavirus.
From In-Cyprus, Cyprus's Labour Inspection Department inspects 370 retail businesses and 95 construction sites for compliance with coronavirus measures.
From The Syrian Observer, imprisoned ISIS members riot at al-Sanaa Prison in the Syrian governorate of Hassakeh.
From Arutz Sheva, the Israeli government considers a full closing on the holiday of Lag B'Omer. (To learn more about Lag B'Omer, got to My Jewish Learning.)
From The Times Of Israel, the Israeli cabinet considers reopening malls and markets by this coming Thursday.
From The Jerusalem Post, according to Prime Minister Netanyahu, Israel will invest $60 million toward producing a coronavirus vaccine.
From the Egypt Independent, the Egyptian military sends medical aid to Sudan.
From Egypt Today, no one in Egypt is confirmed to have caught the coronavirus twice.
From the Saudi Gazette, a look inside the coronavirus emergency operation center in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
From StepFeed, finding devotion during Ramadan under quarantine.
From The New Arab, ISIS used the Al-Hota gorge in northeastern Syria to dump the bodies of its victims.
From Radio Farda, the Iranian parliament votes to change the country's currency by removing the last four zeros from its banknotes.
From Dawn, the Punjab provincial government approves a transfer of land from the Pakistani army to civilian officials.
From The Express Tribune, Prime Minister Imran Khan calls for a gradual easing of Pakistan's coronavirus lockdown.
From Pakistan Today, according to the chairman of the Pakistan People's Party, Imran Khan should resign.
From Khaama Press, Afghan security forces arrest two Pakistani nationals who were allegedly affiliated with ISIS.
From The Hans India, according to the country's army chief, India will respond proportionately to acts of terrorism by Pakistan.
From the Hindustan Times, three Indian policemen are killed in an ambush in the territory of Jammu and Kashmir.
From India Today, government-run liquor stores in non-containment zones in the Indian state of Tamil Nadu will reopen on May 7th.
From the Dhaka Tribune, Bangladeshis will not be going home for Eid-ul-Fitr this year.
From the Daily Mirror, according to Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa, Sri Lanka has not used any foreign financial aid in its coronavirus campaign.
From the Colombo Page, the Sri Lankan government explains how civilian life can resume under its coronavirus curfew.
From Maldives Insider, the Velaa Private Island resort in the Maldive Islands donates protective equipment to neighboring islands.
From The Jakarta Post, 200 businesses in Jakarta lose their licenses for disobeying coronavirus restrictions.
From The Straits Times, Singapore reports 573 more cases of the coronavirus, 560 of them being foreign workers in their dormitories.
From the Borneo Post, Malaysian courts will resume open hearings on May 13th.
From Free Malaysia Today, as the Malaysian government eases some of its coronavirus restrictions, commuters go back to work.
From Vietnam Plus, over 28,000 people visit Hanoi, Vietnam over a four-day holiday, a large decrease from a year earlier.
From The Mainichi, a truck driver is arrested for allegedly shoplifting 40 face masks in Kitakyushu, Japan.
From The Stream, does being concerned that a child will grow up without a mother make one a "selfish Christofacist"?
From AP News, the police chief of San Francisco bans officers from wearing "thin blue line" face masks.
From National File, in response to a court ruling, ICE releases 1,200 illegal aliens onto Florida's streets. (Will any of the released aliens bother to wear face masks and observe social distancing rules? I won't hold my so-far coronavirus-free breath.)
From Breitbart, CNN's Don Lemon not only prefers former President Obama to President Trump, but also Michele Obama over Melania Trump.
From the New York Post, a "mystery barber" cuts hair on a sidewalk in Brooklyn.
And from The Babylon Bee, Trump defies California's coronavirus rules by skateboarding in Venice Beach.
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I've had to drop the Ethiopian Monitor because when I click there, I get a message saying that my connection is not private. If I drop the "s" from the "https" in the url, I get a message that the domain has expired. On the other hand, I welcome Vietnam Plus to my list of sources.
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I've had to drop the Ethiopian Monitor because when I click there, I get a message saying that my connection is not private. If I drop the "s" from the "https" in the url, I get a message that the domain has expired. On the other hand, I welcome Vietnam Plus to my list of sources.
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