From National Review, how the American founders understood natural rights.
From FrontpageMag, progressives protect predators.
From Townhall, Postmaster General Louis DeJoy and congresscritter James Comer (R-KY) again expose "false talking points" from Democrats.
From The Washington Free Beacon, amid the coronavirus pandemic, the Democratic platform takes aim at school choice.
From the Washington Examiner, on the first day of their convention, Republicans renominate President Trump and Vice President Pence.
From The Federalist, why Reaganism is still America's best hope.
From American Thinker, an American white supremacist announces his presidential endorsement.
From LifeZette, RINOs try to make their presence known at the Republican convention.
From NewsBusters, left-wingers attack First Lady Melania Trump's Rose Garden design.
From Canada Free Press, the Democrat's death to America logo.
From CBC News, Canada's Conservative Party has a new leader.
From Global News, two women in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada are charged over an incident in which one of them allegedly hit BLM protesters with....you guessed it....a hockey stick.
From The Conservative Woman, there's still unchecked cruelty in the U.K.'s "home-care gulag".
From WestMonster, Prime Minister Boris Johnson urges U.K. parents to send their children back to school.
From the Express, E.U. negotiator Michel Barnier rejects a U.K. plan to keep shipping lanes open after Brexit.
From the Evening Standard, Scotland "considers" requiring masks in school, while England decides against them.
From the (U.K.) Independent, according to an education minister, parents in the U.K. who don't send their children to school could be fined as a "last resort".
From the (Irish) Independent, the Irish government tells parents that children may attend school if they sneeze or have a runny nose.
From the Irish Examiner, migrant families in Ireland are given coronavirus-related back-to-school advice in 30 languages.
From The Brussels Times, according to two federal spokespeople, Belgium could have 400 new coronavirus cases every day when school restarts.
From the NL Times, when in the Netherlands (and other places, too), please do not flush your face down the toilet.
From Dutch News, the coronavirus spreads to three more mink farms in the Netherlands, for a total of 39.
From Deutsche Welle, early tests done at the Berlin Charite hospital suggest the Russian dissident Alexey Navalny likely was poisoned.
From the CPH Post, a round-up of news in Denmark, including suspension of its Defence Intelligence Service and claims by whistle-blowers.
From Polskie Radio, Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki and opposition parties will discuss the situation in Belarus.
From Radio Prague, the Czech government earmarks aid for independent Belarusian media and persecuted people in Belarus.
From The Slovak Spectator, which companies have paid the most corporate taxes in Slovakia?
From Daily News Hungary, Nyíregyháza becomes the first city in Hungary other than Budapest to have hop-on hop-off sightseeing buses. (If you read Hungarian, read the story at Turizmus.)
From Hungary Today, Prime Minister Orban makes a video urging Hungarian to buy domestic products. (If you read Hungarian, read the story at InfoStart and a related story at Hirado.)
From About Hungary, Hungary's foreign summons the ambassador from Germany after German Minister of State Michael Roth accuses Hungary of anti-Semitism.
From Russia Today, visitors flock to Russia's Army-2020 annual defense expo.
From Sputnik International, a court in Moscow suspends a libel case against Navalny due to his illness.
From The Moscow Times, in a crackdown on opposition figures, Belarus summons Nobel laureate Svetlana Alexievich for questioning.
From Euractiv, tens of thousands of Lithuanians form a human chain for Belarus.
From EuroNews, Austria expels a Russian diplomat, and Russia responds in kind.
From Novinite, Bulgarian Prime Minister Boyko Borissov arrives in Athens to sign a contract for a gas terminal near Alexandroupolis in northern Greece.
From The Sofia Globe, a tent camp set up by anti-government protesters in Sofia, Bulgaria gets vandalized.
From Radio Bulgaria, an attempt to remove one of the protester tent camps in Sofia fails.
From Ekathimerini, the Greek Ministry of Environment and Energy offers subsidies for electric vehicles.
From the Greek Reporter, more on the agreement for a natural gas terminal in Alexandroupolis, Greece.
From Independent Balkan News Agency, Romania's Social Democratic Party gets a new president.
From Balkan Insight, citing events in 1989, prominent Romanians urge their government to take a tougher stand on Belarus.
From Total Croatia News, the Croatian island of Rab want to continue being free of the coronavirus. (If you read Croatian, read the story at Morski.)
From Total Slovenia News, entry from Croatia into Slovenia runs smoothly despite an approaching deadline, after which quarantines will be required.
From the Malta Independent, a Maltese man wanted in the U.S. for alleged sex offenses is arrested in St. Paul's Bay, Malta.
From Malta Today, Malta's plans to quarantine migrants on a ship at sea will go ahead despite a delay in the tendering process.
From SwissInfo, despite concerns about possibly causing earthquakes, Switzerland pushes ahead with geothermal energy projects.
From Free West Media, the French seaside resort town of Palavas-les-Flots is gripped by exceptional violence.
From El País, the Spanish region of Catalonia bans gatherings of over 10 people in an attempt to slow the spread of the coronavirus.
From The Portugal News, requests for Portuguese citizenship reach an all-time high.
From The Stream, what a win for the Democrats in this year's election would mean.
From The Daily Signal, the overwhelming majority of shooting victims in New York City's current crime wave are black.
From Space War, the operation Space Flag concludes for the first time under the Star Delta Provisional.
From the Daily Caller, Twitter labels President Trump's Tweets about mailboxes as "misinformation", but has no apparent problem with Tweets about post office conspiracies.
From The Daily Wire, newly declassified materials show the FBI's double standard on the 2016 Trump and Clinton presidential campaigns.
From Fox News, governors such as Andrew Cuomo (D-NY) go mum after the CDC drops its quarantine recommendation.
From CheckYourFact, yes, some Democrats have condemned the riots.
From the New York Post, Trump plans to order federal agencies to move into "opportunity zones".
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