From National Review, President Trump will not drop out of the 2020 election.
From FrontpageMag, why the left doesn't like objectivity.
From The Washington Free Beacon, 10 things to avoid while celebrating Independence Day this weekend.
From the Washington Examiner, the Washington Redskins plan to have a "thorough review" of their name.
From The Federalist, we can't have a conversation if people are fired for saying what they honestly believe.
From American Thinker, Americans and police officers are presumed guilty of racism.
From LifeZette, protesters carrying pitchforks show up at former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg's mansion in the Hamptons.
From NewsBusters, statues of racist eugenicist Margaret Sanger remain untouched.
From Canada Free Press, the rioters for socialism show their desperation.
From CBC News, Canada suspends its extradition treaty with Hong Kong due to China's new security law.
From Global News, Alberta provincial Health Minister Tyler Shandro orders an investigation of an alleged noose taped to an operating room door in 2016.
From CTV News, Canada's Atlantic provinces lift their travel restrictions on each other's residents.
From Morocco World News, Moroccans are still not allowed into Germany or the Czech Republic.
From Hürriyet Daily News, four people are killed and dozens are injured in an explosion at a fireworks factory in the Turkish province of Sakarya.
From Rûdaw, war-torn Syria has a harvest boom.
From Panorama, medical workers from Lithuania complete their mission in Armenia. (via The Armenian Reporter)
From The Syrian Observer, demonstrators in Daraa, Syria demand the release of detainees held by the Syrian government.
From Arutz Sheva, why is aliyah accelerating now?
From The Times Of Israel, trying to figure out Defense Minister Benny Gantz's view on Israel's planned annexation.
From The Jerusalem Post, a Kuwaiti newspaper claims that Israel carried out a cyber attack on a nuclear facility in Natanz, Iran.
From the Egypt Independent, according to Egypt's youth and sports minister, Egyptian Premier League soccer will be suspended if the country's coronavirus situation gets worse.
From Egypt Today, Egypt "strongly" condemns Turkey's actions in Iraq.
From the Saudi Gazette, the coalition led by Saudi Arabia destroys four drones launched by the Houthi militia in Yemen.
From StepFeed, daily life in Lebanon involves bartering and poverty.
From The New Arab, the forgotten legacy of slavery in Zanzibar.
From Radio Farda, Iran claims to know the cause of what happened at the uranium enrichment facility in Natanz, but will not share what it knows for the time being.
From IranWire, Ukraine agrees to lead negotiations with Iran over the downed aircraft Flight PS752 on behalf of the U.K., Canada, Afghanistan and Sweden.
From The Express Tribune, at least 20 Sikh pilgrims are killed in a collision between a bus and a train in Sheikhupura, Pakistan.
From Pakistan Today, the U.S. government donates 100 ventilators to Pakistan.
From Khaama Press, President Mohammad Ashraf Ghani confers the title "Marshall of Afghanistan" on General Abdul Rashid Dostum.
From The Hans India, speaking in the territory of Ladakh, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi calls the age of expansion "over".
From the Hindustan Times, the Indian party Congress faults Modi for not mentioning China in his speech.
From the Dhaka Tribune, floods maroon hundreds of thousands of people in northern Bangladesh.
From the Daily Mirror, schools in Sri Lanka start of reopen on July 6th.
From the Colombo Page, Sri Lanka deploys over 2,000 police officers to go after people who don't wear masks.
From Maldives Insider, the Maldive Islands offers shipwrecks and sunken treasures.
From The Jakarta Post, a judge from the Jakarta Corruption Court is appointed to be a commissioner of a subsidiary of an Indonesian state-owned oil and gas company.
From The Straits Times, cinemas in Singapore can reopen on July 13th, with a limit of 50 people for each hall.
From the Borneo Post, a Malaysian assistant director for immigration is arrested for alleged involvement in migrant smuggling. (I have often mentioned that migrants are not merely migrating, but are being smuggled. Sadly, even officials who in charge of controlling migration might be aiding the illegal smuggling of migrants.)
From Free Malaysia Today, a Malaysian man is sentenced to prison for possessing 20 turtle eggs.
From Vietnam Plus, a look at an 800-year-old tower in the Vietnamese province of Phu Yen.
From The Mainichi, a court in Osaka, Japan orders a firm to pay damages for circulating anti-Korean articles.
From The Stream, is it farewell to the Redskins?
From BizPac Review, the professor who predicted Trump's win in 2016 thinks that his chances are even better this time around.
From The Daily Signal, remembering Frederick Douglass's Independence Day speech in context.
From The American Conservative, is Seattle's "summer of love" over, or did the mob win?
From the New York Post, Ghislaine Maxwell could be held at the same jail where Jeffrey Epstein died.
From the Daily Mail, Maxwell will reportedly "be naming names".
And from ESPN, the NFL will reportedly have the "black national anthem" Lift Ev'ry Voice And Sing sung before all games during its opening week. (Full disclosure: I have performed this song on piano, accompanying a group of singers. I have come to agree with something that then-Senator Obama (D-IL) said while running for president in 2008, that Lift Ev'ry Voice And Sing is a beautiful song, "but we only have one national anthem".)
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