From National Review, SCOTUS allows federal executions to resume.
From FrontpageMag, a University of California professor calls for cops to be killed.
From The Washington Free Beacon, the U.S. refuses to recognize China's claim in the South China Sea.
From the Washington Examiner, the sheriff of Volusia County, Florida and his deputies promise to honor every police officer in the U.S. who is killed in the line of duty.
From The Federalist, BLM is not a peaceful group.
From American Thinker, Governor Gavin Newsom (D) gives Californians a look at their future.
From CNS News, two policemen in Texas are gunned down while on the job.
From LifeZette, Los Angeles County's black district attorney slams BLM for wanting to abolish the police.
From Canada Free Press, former President Obama calls for voting by mail.
From CBC News, clinical trials of a potential coronavirus vaccine made in Quebec start on humans, but its manufacturer calls for caution.
From Global News, police in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada impound a Mazerati and a BMW after an alleged street race.
From CTV News, a terror suspect in Canada fights to obtain information for his bid to stop being deported to Egypt.
From TeleSUR, the Mexican consulate in New York City receives 105 urns containing the remains of migrants who died from the coronavirus.
From The Portugal News, Portugal's Judiciary Police seize 840 kilos of hashish in the region of Algarve.
From El País, a map of coronavirus outbreaks in Spain.
From EuroNews, two Algerians are arrested in the Spanish region of Catalonia for allegedly planning an attack using explosives in Barcelona.
From France24, according to French President Emmanuel Macron, new Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin should not be subjected to "judgement by social media". (Although the standard spelling of "judgment" does not have an "e" after the "g", my spellchecker has no problem with the spelling "judgement", which is used in the article.)
From the Malta Independent, Maltese opposition leader Adrian Delia intends to "drastically change" his shadow cabinet.
From Malta Today, good dog!
From Total Slovenia News, Slovenia, Slovakia, Austria, Hungary and the Czech Republic meet to coordinate the reopening of their borders to other countries.
From Total Croatia News, what is know about Croatia's border requirements for non-E.U. visitors.
From Independent Balkan News Agency, Montenegrin Prime Minister Duško Marković completes a round of talks with E.U. officials.
From Balkan Insight, more than 700 North Macedonians who have contracted the coronavirus vote in their country's election ahead of the general populace.
From Ekathimerini, Greece considers extending its deadline for filing tax declarations.
From the Greek Reporter, trials in Greece of a coronavirus plasma treatment show promise.
From Novinite, people wait in line for coronavirus tests in Sofia, Bulgaria.
From The Sofia Globe, the U.S. embassy in Sofia makes a statement in support of protesting Bulgarians, as long as they keep it peaceful.
From Radio Bulgaria, Sofia University exhibits a skeleton of a deinotherium.
From Romania-Insider, according to Health Minister Nelu Tataru, an extension of Romania's coronavirus alert is "almost imminent".
From Russia Today, a Russian Orthodox deacon criticizes a nun for reportedly buying a Mercedes-Benz worth $135,000. (Maybe a certain song made famous by Janis Joplin came true.)
From Sputnik International, Russia launches an initiative to have Przewalski's horses "adopted".
From The Moscow Times, Russian authorities claim to have raided the homes of dozens of Jehovah's Witnesses in the region of Voronezh. (What is this "freedom of religion" you speak of?)
From Daily News Hungary, according to House Speaker László Kövér, the Hungarian parliament will not accept the political conditions tied to the E.U.'s coronavirus rescue package.
From Hungary Today, the British supermarket chain Tesco might consider selling off its stores in Hungary. (If you read Hungarian, read the story at Magyar Nemzet.)
From About Hungary, according to Foreign Minister Szijjarto, Hungary supports the U.S. peace plan for the Middle East.
From The Slovak Spectator, a bike route connects Skalica, Slovakia with Mikulčice, Czech Republic.
From Radio Prague, a judge is found guilty of manipulating protocol statements.
From Euractiv, the Czech government considers recognizing defending oneself with firearms as a constitutional right.
From Polskie Radio, what does Polish President Andrzej Duda plan for his second term?
From the CPH Post, Denmark's Statens Serum Institut develops a "promising" potential coronavirus vaccine.
From Deutsche Welle, a German comedian is targeted by threats from neo-Nazis.
From the NL Times, young Dutch people are smoking as much as ever.
From VRT NWS, a man in Keerbergen, Belgium is sentenced to a year in jail for decorating his house with a swastika and other Nazi symbols.
From The Brussels Times, according to a Belgian virologist, a second wave of the coronavirus has begun in Belgium.
From the Express, U.K. Health Secretary Matt Hancock urges shopkeepers to enforce the mandatory wearing of face masks, calling the police if necessary.
From the Evening Standard, the city which, according to John Lennon, once had 4,000 holes enforces extra lockdown measures due to a rise in coronavirus cases.
From the (U.K.) Independent, according to Home Secretary Priti Patel, E.U. citizens will be deported from the U.K. for minor offenses.
From the (Irish) Independent, Ireland reports 32 new coronavirus cases, the most for one a day in over a month.
From the Irish Examiner, Irish Taoiseach Micheál Martin is questioned over the number of appointed special advisors.
From The Conservative Woman, a bus could be driven through U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson's face mask rules.
From The Stream, five arguments against the idea that America is a racist country.
From The Daily Wire, the family of a one-year-old boy killed during a cookout in New York City ask if baby lives matter.
From the South China Morning Post, China imposes sanctions on the corporation Lockheed Martin for helping Taiwan upgrade its missile defenses. (via Breitbart)
From the Daily Caller, according to an opinion column, why "woke" is misguided and education should be reexamined.
From Web24, Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, in isolation due to catching the coronavirus, is bitten by an emu.
And from Fox News, a motorist stranded by a blown out tire finds a very large rescuer.
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