From National Review, using the atomic bombs was "a terrible choice among even worse alternatives".
From FrontpageMag, in the U.K., "some protests are more equal than others".
From Townhall, former President Obama and his race card.
From The Washington Free Beacon, the NRA plans to spend "tens of millions" of dollars on races in battleground states.
From the Washington Examiner, according to Dr. Anthony Fauci, another economic shutdown is not necessary.
From The Federalist, President Truman was right to drop the atomic bomb.
From American Thinker, "the truth about slavery".
From LifeZette, according to President Trump, the first presidential debate should take place earlier due to mail-in voting.
From NewsBusters, CNN and MSNBC bury Biden's asking a black journalist if he's a junkie.
From Canada Free Press, the U.N.'s Agenda 21 is almost completely implemented.
From CBC News, the explosion in Beirut, Lebanon reminds people in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada of a blast that occurred in their city in 1917.
From Global News, Pakistani refugee Asia Bibi talks about her new life in Canada.
From CTV News, Nova Scotia Premier Stephen McNeil announces his resignation.
From TeleSUR, beaches and airports in Latin America prepare to reopen.
From Morocco World News, Morocco plans to send eight planeloads of humanitarian aid to Lebanon in response to the explosion in Beirut.
From Hürriyet Daily News, Turkey sends aid, health personnel and a rescue team to Lebanon.
From Rûdaw, an airplane carrying 20 tons of aid from Iraq arrives in Beirut and a Yezidi girl sits in the Iraqi prime minister's chair.
From Panorama, according to Deputy Prime Minister Tigran Avinyan, Armenia is likely to send aid to Lebanon this coming Saturday. (via The Armenian Reporter)
From In-Cyprus, four possible scenarios for Cyprus's new school year.
From The Syrian Observer, according to the Syrian Network for Human Rights, 107 civilians were killed in Syria during July.
From Arutz Sheva, the Israel Institute for Biological Research announces that it has developed a coronavirus vaccine.
From The Times Of Israel, with direct aid to Lebanon apparently off the table, Israelis seek workarounds to help Beirut.
From The Jerusalem Post, testing will start on the IIBR's coronavirus vaccine in October.
From the Egypt Independent, Egypt plans to turn some streets in Cairo into walking areas.
From Egypt Today, Egypt and Greece sign an agreement to demarcate their maritime borders.
From the Ethiopian Monitor, the foreign-owned company Ethio Lease turns 16 combine harvesters over to Ethiopian farmers.
From The Saudi Gazette, the Saudi-led coalition in Yemen shoots down a drone launched by the Houthi rebels.
From StepFeed, the explosions in Beirut were the result of negligence and incompetence from the Lebanese government. (The article includes an Instagram video of the explosion from The New York Times.)
From The New Arab, Lebanese Justice Minister Marie-Claude Najm calls for an international investigation into the explosions.
From Radio Farda, a member of the Tehran City Council warns of a possible disaster that could be worse than what happened in Beirut.
From The Express Tribune, the Pakistani government rules out any backdoor diplomacy with India over the situation in Kashmir.
From Pakistan Today, a court in Lahore, Pakistan indicts political figures Shahbaz Sharif and Hamza Shahbaz over the construction of a drain that served only the latter man's sugar mill.
From Khaama Press, seven civilians are killed by a roadside bomb planted by the Taliban in the Afghan province of Nimroz.
From The Hans India, troop disengagement talks between India and China "hit a roadblock".
From the Hindustan Times, India's central government tells the country's Supreme Court that foreign members of Tablighi Jamaat are free to leave if they tender an apology.
From India Today, India's Border Roads Organisation "races against time" to build a road near the Line of Actual Control in the territory of Ladakh, at an elevation of 16,696 feet.
From the Dhaka Tribune, Bangladeshi clothing exports to the U.S. dropped by 20 percent in 2020.
From the Daily Mirror, the party Sri Lanka Podujana Permuna appears headed to a landslide victory.
From the Colombo Page, Sri Lankan President Gotabaya Rajapaksa is ready to appoint a new cabinet.
From Maldives Insider, according to a study, the Maldive Islands has the world's highest concentration of microplastics in its surrounding waters.
From Gatestone Institute, Palestinians seem to have no problem with China's detention camps for Uighur Muslims.
From The Jakarta Post, Home Minister Tito Karnavian is set to ban on-street campaign rallies during Indonesia's upcoming regional elections.
From The Straits Times, two dozen residents of Hong Kong are charged with attending an illegal assembly on June 4th commemorating the Tiananmen Square crackdown.
From the Borneo Post, former Indonesian Finance Minister Lim Guan Eng will be charged for corruption relating to an undersea tunnel project.
From Free Malaysia Today, a High Court in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia rules that an 87-year-old doctor doesn't have to retire.
From Vietnam Plus, local authorities in Vietnam will be held responsible for coronavirus transmission in hospitals.
From The Mainichi, Hiroshima marks the 75th anniversary of the atomic bombing attack by the U.S.
From The Stream, is the left using the death of George Floyd to impose a police state?
From The American Conservative, why blockading Japan would have been better than dropping the two atomic bombs. (I realize that this article might disagree with others linked above regarding the atomic attack in Hiroshima. This difference of opinion is precisely why I included it.)
From The Daily Wire, former Vice President Biden calls black people less diverse than Hispanics, to which President Trump responds.
From The Daily Signal, how the tax credit for electric vehicles forces average Americans to subsidize rich people in California.
From Military History Matters, a German warship sunk in 1878 off the coast of England's County Kent is given protected status by the U.K. government.
From the eponymous site of Wayne Dupree, Speaker Pelosi (D-Cal) accuses the network PBS of "working for Republicans". (via LifeZette)
From Fox News, the U.S. air force and navy launch ICBMs from aircraft.
From the Daily Caller, Trump suggests that the NRA relocate to Texas after New York's attorney general files a suit against them and the NRA gives New York's AG what might be called an equal and opposite reaction.
From the New York Post, hundreds of thousands of people in New York state are still without electricity after Tropical Storm Isaias.
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