From National Review, new disclosures show that the target of the Obama administration's Russia investigation was not the Trump campaign, but then-candidate Trump himself.
From Townhall, conservative media figure Tucker Carlson "drops a truth bomb" about Dr. Anthony Fauci.
From The Washington Free Beacon, a Democrat staffer in Montana sent messages disparaging women, minorities and the police in 2012.
From the Washington Examiner, former Vice President Biden finds a hatchet man in his old boss.
From The Federalist, rioters in Portland, Oregon show their true colors by burning Bibles.
From American Thinker, "the new Ten Commandments".
From Canada Free Press, why young people like socialism and communism.
From TeleSUR, Chileans protest against President Sebastian Piñera.
From The Conservative Woman, a few facts about Africa, race and slavery that might be inconvenient for BLM.
From the Evening Standard, demonstrators block roads in the London area of Brixton despite restrictions imposed by police to conduct an Afrikan Emancipation Day march.
From the Irish Examiner, Irish Taoiseach Micheál Martin denies that a new shared island unit will lead to a referendum on a united Ireland,
From the NL Times, 15 new coronavirus cases in the Netherlands are traced to three cafes in Amsterdam.
From Deutsche Welle, police in Berlin stop protests against coronavirus measures.
From the CPH Post, some things to eat while on holiday in Denmark.
From Polskie Radio, Polish President Andrzej Duda honors the victims of the 1994 Wola massacre, which happened during the Warsaw Uprising.
From Radio Prague, Czech mayors will receive information about coronavirus numbers in their respective municipalities.
From The Slovak Spectator, Komárno, Slovakia, new on the border with Hungary, was at one time a border fortification against the Ottoman Empire.
From Daily News Hungary, could the Hungarian emerald tree solve some global climate problems?
From Russia Today, a Soviet-era "Caspian Sea Monster" flying ship becomes the main attraction at a military park in Derbent, Russia.
From The Sofia Globe, the coronavirus breaks out among police officers deployed at anti-government protests in Sofia.
From the Greek Reporter, Greek museums and ancient sites will welcome visitors for watching the full moon.
From Balkan Insight, Bosniaks in Foca, Bosnia and Herzegovina will mark the anniversary of the ethnic cleansing of the town by Bosnian Serbs.
From Total Croatian News, this year's Sinjska Alka will be limited to a thousand spectators. (If you read Croatian, read the story at Slobodna Dalmacija.)
From Total Slovenia News, the coronavirus impacts Eid al-Adha celebrations in Slovenia.
From the Malta Independent, the bishops of Malta and Gozo announce that no more pilgrimages will take place this year due to the coronavirus.
From Free West Media, illegal migrants keep landing on the Italian island of Lampedusa, even while some of them test positive for the coronavirus.
From SwissInfo, an Asian giant hornet is spotted in Geneva, Switzerland. (Is this one of the so-called "murder hornets"?)
From EuroNews, prosecutors in Paris ask for a rape investigation against actor Gerard Depardieu to be reopened.
From The Portugal News, the number of fires in Portugal for 2020 is the second lowest in the last 10 years.
From Morocco World News, a Moroccan artist illustrates the Amazigh tattoo culture.
From Turkish Minute, Turkey's higher education board reportedly bans dissertations in Kurdish.
From Panorama, several houses in the Armenia border village of Aygepar are reconstructed after being hit by shells from Azerbaijan. (via The Armenian Reporter)
From Arutz Sheva, members of the "Peace Now" movement set up a false murder scene in Paris Square in Jerusalem.
From the Egypt Independent, a tunnel boring machine named after an ancient Egyptian queen continues its work under the Zamalek area of Cairo.
From the Saudi Gazette, seven people are jailed and fined for transporting pilgrims who don't have Hajj permits.
From The New Arab, small groups of pilgrims perform one of the final rites of the Hajj.
From Radio Farda, Iranian police complain about not having enough manpower to enforce laws requiring women to wear hijabs.
From Dawn, on Eidul Azha, Pakistani leaders tell people to obey coronavirus rules and to help the needy.
From the Hindustan Times, according to the leader of India's Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, the construction of the Ram Temple in Ayodhya "marks the beginning of a new India".
From the Dhaka Tribune, two members of the banned group Ansar-Al-Islam are arrested in Rajshahi, Bangladesh.
From the Colombo Page, a captured hawk used by drug smugglers is given to the Dehiwala National Zoo in Dehiwala, Sri Lanka.
From Maldives Insider, the Maldive Islands briefs over a thousand Chinese travel agents and tour operators on post-coronavirus travel.
From The Richardson Post, is it already too late to stop the Islamic colonization of the West?
From Gatestone Institute, why Turkey is having a "brain drain".
From The Jakarta Post, tests show an increase in coronavirus clusters in houses of worship in Jakarta, Indonesia. (If you read Bahasa Indonesia, read the story at Tempo.)
From The Straits Times, certain Singaporeans and Malaysians will be allowed to visit each other's country under strict conditions.
From Free Malaysia Today, a former chief minister for the Malaysian state of Sabah tells the Philippines to back off its claim over the state.
From Vietnam Plus, Vietnamese and Cambodian officials exchange topographic maps of the border between their countries.
From The Mainichi, after a five-month hiatus due to the coronavirus, kabuki theater reopens in Tokyo.
From The Stream, the popularity of the BLM organization is a myth.
From The Daily Signal, what we know about hydroxychloroquine as a treatment for the coronavirus.
From NBC Philadelphia, Pennsylvania will not only allow mail-in electoral ballots, but will pay for their postage. (via Breitbart)
From The Daily Wire, the mayor of D.C. exempts people who attended Representative John Lewis's funeral in Atlanta from his city's quarantine restrictions.
From the Daily Caller, according to Detroit's police chief, his force is "excited" to be helped by federal agents.
And from the New York Post, months after the "Central Park Karen" incident, bird watchers and dog walkers are still feuding.
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