From National Review, should the police be defunded as homicide rises?
From FrontpageMag, the coronavirus political double standard.
From The Washington Free Beacon, July saw a record amount of gun sales.
From the Washington Examiner, former President Obama unveils his "first wave" of endorsements for the 2020 elections.
From The Federalist, Obama also endorses distorting history for political reasons.
From American Thinker, when it comes to the coronavirus, we were never really "in this together".
From CNS News, according to Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose, a lot of ballots could "come in after election day".
From LifeZette, is America tired of the drama from Democrats.
From NewsBusters, which media outlets will report on congresscritter Karen Bass's (D-FL) praise for communist dictator Fidel Castro? (Yes, this article picks on a real Karen.)
From Canada Free Press, could former Vice President Biden's apparent cognitive problems be a diversionary tactic by the Democrats?
From CBC News, why round rocks are on Canada's Arctic shores.
From Global News, a spokesperson for the Indigenous Joint Action Committee in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada wants prisons to be abolished.
From CTV News, the Liberal Party in the Canadian province of Newfoundland and Labrador is expected to announce its new leader.
From The Conservative Woman, England is "still the dirty man of Europe".
From the Express, the E.U. finally backs down on its demand that the U.K. keep the bloc's state aid laws as a condition for having a trade deal.
From the Evening Standard, three woman named Karen complain about the use of their name.
From the (U.K.) Independent, the U.K. government wants medicines to be stockpiled to prepare for a possible no-deal Brexit.
From the (Irish) Independent, John Hume, who spent over 40 years campaigning for peace in Northern Ireland and won the Nobel Peace Prize, dies at age 83.
From the Irish Examiner, pub operators claim to be used as a "messaging tool" by the Irish government.
From VRT NWS, a bust of King Leopold II is vandalized with paint outside the African Museum in Tervuren, Belgium.
From The Brussels Times, anyone wishing to visit the beach in Ostend, Belgium will have to register.
From the NL Times, the Dutch province of Utrecht launches a crowd monitor.
From Dutch News, Rotterdam, Netherlands Mayor Ahmed Aboutaleb closes three cafes and a sports pub for two weeks for violating coronavirus measures.
From Deutsche Welle, Germany debates restricting the freedom to assemble after a large protest against its coronavirus measures.
From Free West Media, a man described as having "suntanned skin" allegedly rapes a female cyclist in Munich, Germany.
From the CPH Post, a roundup of news in Denmark, including a stocking up of face masks.
From Polskie Radio, Poland's Supreme Court rules that the country's recent presidential election is valid.
From Radio Prague, the Czech government activates a coronavirus "risk" map.
From The Slovak Spectator, Slovakia eases the conditions for losing Slovak citizenship.
From Daily News Hungary, all Hungarian public school students will be eligible for free textbooks starting in September.
From Hungary Today, Dutch right-wing opposition politician Geert Wilders meets with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban.
From About Hungary, Roma Holocaust Memorial Day is observed in Budapest.
From Russia Today, Russian authorities opens an investigation after a mass grave dating to World War II is found in the region of Pskov.
From Sputnik International, a Russian coronavirus is successfully tested on volunteers.
From The Moscow Times, Russia provokes a backlash for allowing deforestation and construction around Lake Baykal.
From Romania-Insider, a hospital for coronavirus patients in Bucharest funded by donations opens an intensive care unit.
From Novinite, on the 26th day of protests in Bulgaria, three intersections in Sofia remain blocked.
From The Sofia Globe, Bulgarian state railways announces the winner of a public vote on the color scheme for its new locomotives.
From Radio Bulgaria, will the protests in Bulgaria "give birth" to a new face for the country's politics?
From Ekathimerini, Greece' public transportation services will be boosted at rush hour.
From the Greek Reporter, the E.U. approves €130 million for refugee and migrant facilities on Greek islands.
From Independent Balkan News Agency, Croatian President Zoran Milanović's decision to decorate several generals offends some Bosniaks in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
From Total Croatia News, a German "Stuka" dive bomber from World War II, found near the Croatian island of Žirje, is still well preserved. (If you read Croatian, read the story at Morski.)
From Total Slovenia News, take a bike ride around Slovenia.
From the Malta Independent, Maltese fish farmers reach a self-regulating agreement on cleaning up the sea.
From Malta Today, filming for the movie Jurassic World is set to start in Malta at the end of August.
From ReMix, as 11,000 migrants land on Italy's coast in a week, former Interior Minister Matteo Salvini slams the Italian government's "weak" response. (If you read French, read a related story at Le Figaro.
There doesn't seem to be any Italian article corresponding to the ReMix story.)
From France24, although not burned in the fire, the organ from Paris's Notre Dame Cathedral faces a long restoration process.
From The Portugal News, Portuguese military personnel monitor fire risk.
From The Stream, what we don't know about the coronavirus.
From The American Conservative, keeping children out of jail due to government overreach is a conservative position.
From Breitbart, Biden called for "revolutionary" changes in a podcast this past May.
From Military History Matters, the birthplace of Adolf Hitler in Braunau am Inn, Austria will be converted into a police station.
From TMZ, Elvis Presley's Martin D-18 acoustic guitar sells for $1.32 million, a record for his former possessions. (via the Daily Caller)
From WPVI-TV, Chicago fashion designer Borris Powell creates a mask through which the wearer can drink.
From CNN, a fake video of Speaker Pelosi (D-Cal) appearing drunk goes viral on Facebook. (via the New York Post)
From the New York Post, New York's Mr. Bill is called "pathetic" for not cleaning the vandalized BLM mural in front of the Trump Tower.
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