From National Review, congresscritter Steve King (R-Iowa) gets primaried.
From FrontpageMag, unequal responses to killer cops and racist crimes.
From Townhall, the Democrats don't want 1968, but 1932.
From The Washington Free Beacon, the former CIA operative whose named got leaked loses her congressional primary (D-NMex).
From the Washington Examiner, conservative radio host Larry Elder sets forth some facts.
From The Federalist, the media have lied, and are lying again.
From American Thinker, was it really about the coronavirus?
From CNS News, the Free Speech Alliance offers some fairness guidelines for social media in response to President Trump's executive order.
From LifeZette, a sheriff in South Carolina finds a clever way to respond to the George Floyd protests.
From NewsBusters, the media have let ProFa off the hook for three years.
From Canada Free Press, Democrats try to replace pandemic fears with anarchy.
From CBC News, a black man in Reginia, Saskatchewan, Canada is accused on social media of breaking into a car, which is his own.
From Global News, an organization gives the Canadian government a failing grade for not delivering action on its inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls.
From CTV News, a Canadian military team ends its mission to recover wreckage and remains from a helicopter crash in the Mediterranean.
From The Portugal News, Portuguese courts resume normal activity today.
From RFI, thousands of French protesters denounce the death of a black man who died in police custody in 2016.
From SwissInfo, a proposal to allow same-sex marriages moves forward in the Swiss parliament despite some opposition.
From ANSA, according to Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte, the coronavirus crisis "should be used to redesign Italy". (Would this "redesign" be anything like the "fundamental transformation" that a certain presidential candidate wanted for America?)
From Free West Media, an Italian doctor make a confusing claim about the coronavirus in his country.
From the Malta Independent, a soccer club nursery official is dismissed for racial insults made against a Maltese goalkeeper.
From Malta Today, a Maltese official will be posted in Libya help deter illegal migration.
From Total Slovenia News, Austria ends health checks at its border with Slovenia.
From Total Croatia News, the Croatian company Eco Mobile provides smart waste receptacles for the city of Zagreb. (If you read Croatian, read the story at Poslovni Dnevnik.)
From Independent Balkan News Agency, the North Macedonian government announces a new coronavirus curfew.
From Balkan Insight, Kosovo's parliament confirms a new government led by Avdullah Hoti.
From Ekathimerini, the Holy Synod of the Church of Greece defends Holy Communion and denounces yoga.
From the Greek Reporter, a family of bears breaks into a farm in Metsovo, Greece, where they eat fruit and drink ouzo.
From Novinite, 3,500 people in and around Burgas, Bulgaria will be tested for the coronavirus to ensure the area's safety.
From The Sofia Globe, according to Prime Minister Boiko Borissov, all of Bulgaria's coronavirus measures except for social measure will expire on June 15th.
From Radio Bulgaria, starting on June 10th, Bulgaria will allow outdoor sports events in front of live audiences, at 30 percent of each venue's seating capacity.
From Romania-Insider, Sibiu, Romania is listed among the safest post-coronavirus European travel destinations. (If you read Romanian, read the story at News(dot)Ro.)
From Voice Of Europe, Romania drops mandatory sex education from its school curriculum, due to an outcry from the Romanian Orthodox Church.
From Russia Today, a Russian company starts building elevators equipped with the voice of Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin.
From Sputnik International, the Russian government denounces a Ukrainian computer game in which players can change the outcome of World War II as "Nazi propaganda".
From The Moscow Times, Russian President Putin declares a state of emergency over a fuel spill near Norilsk in Siberia.
From Daily News Hungary, the Hungarian opposition party Democratic Coalition decides against attending the parliamentary session marking the 100th anniversary of the Trianon.
From Hungary Today, in Vienna, a Hungarian doctor performs the first lung transplant on a live coronavirus patient. (If you read Hungarian, read the story at Valasz Online. If you read German, read the story at the website of Medizinische Universität Wien.)
From About Hungary, Hungary's coronavirus restrictions will be re-evaluated tomorrow.
From The Slovak Spectator, "Czechoslovakia" will be "restored" at midnight.
From Radio Prague, Czech Prime Minister Andrej Babiš calls for a unified position from the Visegrad Four on the E.U.'s coronavirus rescue deal.
From Polskie Radio, Poland's antitrust authority takes aim at the Russian company Gazprom over the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline.
From the CPH Post, the current drought in Denmark is a "record-breaker".
From Deutsche Welle, Germany plans to discontinue its travel restrictions to the E.U. by June 15th.
From the NL Times, the Netherlands will allow its people to travel within Europe, but not outside of it.
From VRT NWS, the Belgian commune of Flander has its own "Captain Tom".
From The Brussels Times, phase 3 of Belgium's coronavirus lockdown exit plan will start on June 8th.
From EuroNews, Sint-Katelijne Waver, Belgium becomes on of the first towns to allow weddings with guests.
From the Express, former U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May is rebuked after firing a warning shot on Brexit to her successor Boris Johnson.
From the Evening Standard, thanks to the economic slowdown resulting from the coronavirus, the endangered spiny sea horse makes a comeback in U.K. waters.
From the (U.K.) Independent, U.K. Business Secretary Alok Sharma self-isolates and gets tested for the coronavirus after "feeling unwell".
From the (Irish) Independent, Irish patients face lockouts and "apocalyptic" waiting lists.
From the Irish Examiner, according to Chief Medical Officer Dr. Tony Holohan, Ireland is on track to enter Phase 2 of its plan to exit its coronavirus lockdown.
From The Conservative Woman, the "contemptuous creed" of the "zealots" who dictate sex education in the U.K.
From The Stream, the riots of 1968 and today were fueled by Marxist rage, not "justice".
From Bleeping Computer, Mozilla releases Firefox 77.0.1.
From AP News, residents of Minneapolis band together to protect their neighborhoods. (via the Daily Caller)
From The Right Scoop, NFL player Drew Brees gives a great answer when asked about the original anthem kneeler kneeling for George Floyd.
From BizPac Review, according to Fox News host Tucker Carlson, the riots are a "class war disguised as a race war".
From CBS News, the charge against the policeman who killed George Floyd is upgraded to second degree murder, and the three cops also involved in the incident are charged. (via The Blaze)
From the New York Post, for a cool $19 million, a farm in Redding, Connecticut with its own recording studio, ball field, three guest houses, and other amenities could be yours.
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