From National Review, the anger about the coronavirus pandemic looks for a convenient target.
From FrontpageMag, the worst risk we face is not the coronavirus.
From The Washington Free Beacon, two citizens of Wisconsin sue to have the state's stay-at-home order declared unconstitutional.
From the Washington Examiner, Cuomo wants out-of-state healthcare workers who entered New York to help with coronavirus patients to pay in-state income taxes.
From The Federalist, the media keep publishing the same anti-Trump column again and again while expecting the president to disappear.
From American Thinker, why Hulu's Mrs. America is wrong about Phyllis Schafly.
From CNS News, do churches or liquor stores have more rights?
From LifeZette, former Attorney General Eric Holder has a fantasy about the hypothetical nomination of a President Biden.
From NewsBusters, USA Today can't make up its mind about when the world will end.
From Canada Free Press, why leftists don't want a return to normal.
From CBC News, inside the slaughterhouse in High River, Alberta, Canada, which is the source of North America's single largest coronavirus outbreak.
From TeleSUR, a mercenary surrenders to Venezuelan authorities.
From Morocco World News, Morocco remains the world's largest exporter of phosphate and phosphoric acid.
From Hürriyet Daily News, according to Health Minister Fahrettin Koca, Turkey is entering the second phase of its fight against the coronavirus.
From Turkish Minute, Turkish Airlines reportedly plans to partially restart operations in June.
From In-Cyprus, labor inspectors close 11 construction sites in Cyprus.
From The Syrian Observer, ISIS tries to take advantage of the coronavirus pandemic by launching an attack in eastern Syria.
From Arutz Sheva, the Israeli Knesset starts voting on the deal for a coalition government.
From The Times Of Israel, U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo plans to visit Israel and meet with Prime Minister Netanyahu and Blue and White party leader Gantz.
From The Jerusalem Post, the Israeli Holocaust memorial Yad Vashem puts 107 of its workers on unpaid leave, which results in a lawsuit.
From the Egypt Independent, an account of the dam negotiations.
From the Ethiopian Monitor, the prime ministers of Ethiopia and Sudan agree to form a body for demarcating their mutual border.
From the Saudi Gazette, daily flights from the U.S. to Saudi Arabia will resume next week.
From The New Arab, how the city of Tripoli became the epicenter of Lebanon's national crisis.
From Radio Farda, Iranian officials promise more leniency toward workers, but the persecution against them continues.
From IranWire, a female Iranian literary figure whom you should know.
From The Express Tribune, the majority of Pakistani provinces disagree over when to reopen the country's schools.
From Pakistan Today, congregational prayers in Pakistan will continue despite a surge in coronavirus infections.
From Khaama Press, Afghan Special Forces bust a terrorist network including ISIS and Haqqani fighters, and send five of them to their virgins.
From The Hans India, according to an activist, India's chief labor commissioner "has no data on migrant workers".
From the Hindustan Times, about 150 "highly-trained" foreign terrorists are active in the Kashmir Valley in the Indian territory of Jammu and Kashmir.
From India Today, how a math teacher became a most wanted terrorist in Jammu and Kashmir.
From the Dhaka Tribune, how the coronavirus has affected agriculture in Bangladesh.
From the Daily Mirror, the "long walk" to freedom of the press in Sri Lanka.
From the Colombo Page, the Sri Lanka Chamber of Commerce presidents its plan for an accelerated post-coronavirus economic recovery to President Gotabaya Rajapaksa.
From Maldives Insider, a group of tourism industry representatives slams the Maldivian government for not taking any substantial actions to save businesses and jobs.
From News(dot)com(dot)au, a Sydney, Australia woman loses her appeal of her terrorism conviction.
From British Israel Communications and Research Centre, according to an Israeli official, Iran is withdrawing from Syria.
From the International Business Times, Saudi Arabia orders the arrest of a citizen who allegedly insulted an Asian man for not being Muslim.
From Janta Ka Reporter, Canada removes a man of Indian origin from his job and from his school body for his Islamophobic Tweets.
From The Star, how an imam in Kenya spread the coronavirus. (The last fives stories come via The Religion Of Peace.)
From The Jakarta Post, a student at the Indonesian Islamic University will be stripped of his honors because 30 female students have accused him of sexual abuse.
From The Straits Times, the Catholic Church in Singapore says that it can't perform marriages by video link.
From the Borneo Post, Malaysia is still not allowing foreigners to enter due to the coronavirus.
From Free Malaysia Today, a man in Banting, Malaysia is stopped from hanging his dog.
From Vietnam Plus, the remains of 26 Vietnamese soldiers who were killed in Laos are reburied in Quang Bihn, Vietnam.
From The Mainichi, a computer-savvy Japanese teenager designs an app to fight the coronvirus.
From Gatestone Institute, the Palestinian Authority uses the coronavirus to silence critics.
From The Stream, are the governors of some blue states pro-coronavirus?
From the New York Post, Education Secretary Betsy DeVos outlines new rules for how U.S. campuses respond to sexual assault accusations.
From TechRepublic, how to determine when to start using AI at your business.
From The Intercept, the Democratic Party in New Jersey is finally getting challenged.
From LifeNews, actor John Voight praises President Trump for "raising up this nation" during the coroanvirus pandemic.
And from WPVI-TV, a quiz about Mother's Day.
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