From National Review, two shootings occur in CHAZ/CHOP in 48 hours.
From FrontpageMag, the high cost of reducing civil rights to criminals' rights.
From Townhall, Governor DeSantis (R-FL) rips Governor Cuomo (D-NY) for suggesting that he would quarantine visitors from Florida.
From The Washington Free Beacon, a look at the one 2nd Amendment case that the Supreme Court will hear during its current session.
From the Washington Examiner, the small state with a big name will remove part of it.
From The Federalist, rioters tear down statues out of envy. (I've come to realize that if we only allowed statues of people who had no faults, they would all have to be crucifixes, which would naturally violate some people's definitions of separation of church and state if publicly visible.)
From American Thinker, President Trump's rally in Tulsa, although not as well-attended as he would have liked, is still a "net benefit".
From CNS News, Attorney General Barr rejects mob rule.
From LifeZette, the media goes after former National Security Advisor John Bolton.
From NewsBusters, retired NFL player Brett Favre is asked a stupid question about the original anthem kneeler, and gives a stupid answer.
From Canada Free Press, Canada is a country that isn't.
From Global News, the Canadian province of Quebec record no deaths from the coronavirus on a single day for the first time since March.
From CTV News, a father and son rescue Bullwinkle.
From TeleSUR, an Iranian cargo ship enters Venezuelan waters.
From Hürriyet Daily News, the Turkish government lobbies the German and Russian governments to open their borders.
From Turkish Minute, another poll shows Turkey's governing party losing some of its support.
From Armenian News, Armenia's governing party claims to want to hear from their opposition colleagues about drafted constitutional amendments. (via The Armenian Reporter)
From The Syrian Observer, eight Syrian army soldiers are killed by a roadside bomb while riding in a bus.
From Arutz Sheva, knessetcritter Ayelet Shaked calls upon Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu to apply sovereignty without isolating communities.
From The Times Of Israel, according to an op-ed, the U.S. should oppose Netanyahu's plan to annex the Jordan Valley.
From The Jerusalem Post, fossils found in Mount Carmel show that prehistoric humans migrated into what is now Israel during the Ice Age.
From the Egypt Independent, could there be a dam war?
From Egypt Today, ovens and a mud brick wall dating to Roman times are found in Luxur, Egypt.
From the Ethiopian Monitor, Addis Ababa, Ethiopian renames a road after a general who was killed by his bodyguard a year ago.
From the Saudi Gazette, the international airport in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia starts operating its free automated train service.
From The New Arab, Sudan reportedly repels a cross-border attack by Ethiopian forces.
From Radio Farda, Iran arrests a charity founder for alleged "anti-Iranian" activities.
From IranWire, another young Iranian woman is murdered in an honor killing as families of victims are silenced.
From Dawn, three Pakistani cricket players test positive for the coronavirus before their team travels to England.
From The Express Tribune, Pakistan releases two Indian High Commission employees involved in a hit-and-run traffic incident back into India.
From Pakistan Today, a preliminary report on the plane crash in Karachi will be presented to Pakistan's National Assembly this coming Wednesday.
From Khaama Press, a Taliban leader meets with a U.N. representative in Doha, Qatar.
From The Hans India, Indian and Chinese military commanders meet today.
From the Hindustan Times, India closes its military gap with China along their common border.
From ANI, 1,020 illegally transported bottles of liquor are seized at the border between the Indian states of Andhra Pradesh and Telangana. (My spellchecker has no problem with "Andhra", but objects to "Pradesh" and "Telangana".)
From India Today, in the Indian state of Rajasthan, loud music and chemicals fail to drive away locusts and only irritate farmers.
From the Dhaka Tribune, another earthquake strikes Dhaka, Bangladesh.
From the Daily Mirror, Sri Lanka's Welisara Naval Base resumes operations starting tomorrow.
From the Colombo Page, Sri Lanka's Horton Plains National Park is limited to 50 visiting tour groups each day.
From Maldives Insider, a look at travel trends after the coronavirus.
From The Jakarta Post, residents of an island in the Indonesian province of West Sulawesi used as a turtle conservation area reportedly sell it.
From The Straits Times, South Korea claims to be dealing with a "second wave" of the coronavirus.
From the Borneo Post, wedding receptions are still not allowed at Malaysian places of worship.
From Free Malaysia Today, Malaysian police look for an alleged drug smuggler who uses a drone to deliver them.
From Vietnam Plus, a 45-megawatt solar power plant is inaugurated in Phuoc Ninh, Vietnam.
From The Mainichi, South Korea will demand that certain Japanese sites related to the country's industrial revolution are removed from UNESCO's World Heritage list.
From Gatestone Institute, the Palestinian Authority's "un-Islamic" family protection law.
From The American Spectator, how Marxists have exploited race, even back in the 1930s.
From Big League Politics, a co-founder of BLM confirms that the movement is run by Marxists.
From the Chicago Sun-Times, 104 people were shot last weekend in Chicago, with 14 of them being killed. (via The Daily Wire)
From Gateway Pundit, ProFa plans to burn a flag in Gettyburg on July 4th.
From the New York Post, New York City's coronavirus tracing program is still struggling.
And from The Babylon Bee, left-wing protesters attack Presbyterians worshiping outdoors after mistaking them for statues.
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