From National Review, the real story of the unmasking of General Michael Flynn is that he wasn't masked in the first place.
From The Washington Free Beacon, gubernatorial candidate Nicole Galloway (D-MO) denounces "dark money" while accepting the endorsement of a "dark money" group.
From the Washington Examiner, New York state admits undercounting deaths from the coronavirus in nursing homes. (Are coronavirus-related deaths being overcounted or undercounted......or both?)
From American Thinker, it's becoming apparent that Democrats use the coronavirus pandemic to control people's lives.
From LifeZette, a few Democrat congresscritters voted against Speaker Pelosi's (D) latest coronavirus stimulus bill.
From NewsBusters, a look back at journalist Dan Rather, who thought that honest people could still "lie about any number of things".
From Canada Free Press, religious freedom versus coronavirus lockdowns on churches.
From Global News, Health Canada approves the country's first clinical trial of a potential coronavirus vaccine.
From CTV News, the Canadian government rejects disability benefits claims made for deceased veterans who had no surviving spouse of dependent children.
From TeleSUR, a businessman accused of involvement in the Rwandan genocide in 1994 is arrested in Paris.
From Morocco World News, Moroccan baccalaureate students will be able to apply for identity cards starting on May 18th.
From Hürriyet Daily News, Turkey imposes a four-day coronavirus curfew in 15 provinces.
From Rûdaw, Kurds cherish their Maraza goats.
From In-Cyprus, two men in Cyprus are arrested for allegedly stealing face masks.
From Arutz Sheva, IDF soldiers thwart a terror attack near Jerusalem.
From The Times Of Israel, Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu is reportedly likely to nominate a fellow Likud knessetcritter to head a new "ministry for settlement affairs".
From The Jerusalem Post, firefighting planes put out a forest fire near Beit Shemesh, Israel.
From YNetNews, according to an opinion column, Israel's Druze community should be taken more seriously.
From the Egypt Independent, ten hotels in the southern Sinai or near the Red Sea are given permission to reopen.
From Egypt Today, Defense Minister Mohamed Zaki attends a line-up of Egyptian paratroopers.
From the Ethiopian Monitor, Ethiopia and Sudan have some coronavirus and dam discussions.
From the Saudi Gazette, hand sanitizer is given out in Mecca, Saudi Arabia.
From The New Arab, Lebanese residential areas get swarmed by bugs.
From Radio Farda, Iran tones down its anti-Israel Qods Day events due to the coronavirus.
From The Express Tribune, Pakistan conducts its highest daily number of coronavirus tests.
From Pakistan Today, the Pakistani government is likely to freeze military recruiting for two years due to the coronavirus.
From Khaama Press, in the province of Uruzgan, Afghan Special Forces send 23 Taliban terrorists, including a "key" commander, to their virgins.
From The Hans India, the Indian government eases restrictions on the country's airspace.
From the Hindustan Times, the state of Odisha asks the Indian government to suspend "Shramik Special" trains due to an impending cyclone.
From ANI, the Rajiv Gandhi International Airport in Hyderabad, India introduces a contactless boarding systen.
From India Today, Muslims perform the last rites for a deceased Sikh in the Indian territory of Jammu and Kashmir.
From the Dhaka Tribune, more on the storm in the Bay of Bengal that might turn into a cyclone.
From the Daily Mirror, Sri Lanka demands that the U.K. website The Guardian remove a quiz calling "Eelam" an indigenous name for Sri Lanka.
From the Colombo Page, Sri Lanka imposes an islandwide curfew from today until Monday morning.
From Maldives Insider, the Maldive Islands relaxes its rules on emergency loans.
From The Jakarta Post, hundreds of migrant workers returning to Indonesia wait for hours outside an emergency hospital to get tested for the coronavirus.
From The Straits Times, a 67-year-old Singaporean man dies of complications from the coronavirus, as 1,094 more patients are released from hospitals.
From the Borneo Post, the Malaysian government will allow tour offices to operate for administrative and management functions, but not to put on tours.
From Free Malaysia Today, the Malaysian government will finalize its standard operating procedures for reopening non-Muslim houses of worship on Monday.
From Vietnam Plus, Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc inaugurates a temple dedicated to the ancestors of North Vietnamese President Ho Chi Minh.
From The Mainichi, the coronavirus-stricken cruise ship Diamond Princess finally leaves Japan.
From The Stream, a look at judgment.
From Natural News, San Antonio passes a resolution designating calling the Chinese coronavirus as being Chinese "racist hate speech". (In other words, it's now racist to acknowledge reality.)
From BizPac Review, congresscritter Scott Perry (R-PA) slams Governor Tom Wolf (D-PA) for his coronavirus policies on the House floor.
From the New York Post, whether summer camps can open this year in upstate New York has become a heated issue.
And from Twitchy, congresscritter Justin Amash (I-Mich) decides against running for president.
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