From National Review, Seattle's police chief urges the city's council to take action against "protesters" after they stop by her home.
From FrontpageMag, more coronavirus double standards.
From Townhall, a man in Portland, Oregon who tried to use a bomb to enter a federal courthouse, which attempt injured a U.S. marshal, has been arrested.
From The Washington Free Beacon, former President Obama does not endorse any of "the Squad" congresscritters. (I believe that today is his 59th birthday.)
From the Washington Examiner, according to two physicians at NYU Winthrop Hospital, hyperbaric oxygen therapy could help coronavirus patients.
From The Federalist, Senator Marsha Blackburn (R-TN) shares her way to defeat the "cancel culture" mob.
From American Thinker, the real reason why Democrats want mail-in ballots.
From CNS News, President Trump and Vice President Pence endorse absentee ballots but warn against universal mail-in ballots.
From LifeZette, the BLM movement has been lucrative for Al Sharpton.
From NewsBusters, a gun shop owner wears an appropriate T-shirt to a CNN interview.
From Canada Free Press, is congresscritter AOC (D-NY) "a bigot in league with the devil"?
From CBC News, a private Christian university in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada expects its students to refrain from sex outside of (heterosexual) marriage. (I put "heterosexual" in parentheses because according to traditional Christian belief, marriage is by definition a heterosexual relationship. Thus, the word "heterosexual" before "marriage" would be redundant.)
From Global News, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada gets its first electric bus.
From CTV News, according to Ontario provincial Premier Doug Ford, the 10-person limit on gatherings will likely last until the new year.
From Morocco World News, sub-Saharan migrants struggle to survive in Morocco.
From Hürriyet Daily News, Turkey hands over to Algeria a fugitive soldier accused of leaking confidential information.
From Panorama, activists opposing a gold mining operation at Amulsar mountain in Armenia are detained. (via The Armenian Reporter)
From The Syrian Observer, Syria's ministry of endowments suspends mass prayers and closes mosques as a precautionary measure against the coronavirus.
From Arutz Sheva, evidence of human migrations out of Africa about 100,000 years ago is found in Dimona, Israel.
From The Times Of Israel, according to Israeli Health Minister Yuli Edelstein, closing shops on weekends will be discontinued because it didn't help against the coronavirus.
From The Jerusalem Post, Palestinian leaders accuse Israel of "secretly" implementing its plan to annex parts of the West Bank.
From YNetNews, Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu hails the IDF's response to a terror attack launched from Syria.
From the Egypt Independent, former Egyptian Minister of Antiquities Zahi Hawass responds to Elon Musk's claim that aliens built the Giza pyramids.
From Egypt Today, Egyptian school curricula will be available in electronic form and no longer as textbooks.
From the Ethiopian Monitor, the U.S. donates 250 ventilators and other equipment to Ethiopia to help with its fight against the coronavirus.
From the Saudi Gazette, large numbers of Saudi businesswomen make the most out of the annual Unaizah Dates Festival.
From The New Arab, at least 10 people are dead after two large explosions go off in Beirut, Lebanon.
From Radio Farda, Iranian hardliners side with China as it suppresses Uyghur Muslims.
From The Express Tribune, Pakistani officials reopen the Chaman border crossing for one day.
From Pakistan Today, Pakistan's chief justice promises that the perpetrators of a 2014 attack on the Army Public School will be held accountable.
From Khaama Press, Afghanistani President Ghani talks with Pakistani Prime Minister Imran, and with Indian Prime Minister Modi.
From The Hans India, the full schedule for the Ram Mandir Bhumi Poojan.
From the Hindustan Times, according to Uttar Pradesh state Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath, the Ram temple in Ayodhya, India will be for everyone.
From ANI, police in Krishna, Andhra Pradesh, India destroy 826 liters of illegal country liquor. (It seems that "country liquor" might be the Indian equivalent of American "moonshine".)
From India Today, Indian politician Uma Bharti points out that Ram is not a political figure.
From the Dhaka Tribune, soccer returns to Bangladesh.
From the Daily Mirror, according to Sri Lankan health authorities, polling places are safe.
From the Colombo Page, over 82,000 security personnel will be deployed to keep Sri Lanka's elections peaceful.
From Maldives Insider, the Maldive Islands decrease the penalty for late rent payments.
From United with Israel, Israeli surgeons remove a bullet from the brain of an Arab boy.
From Stuff, New Zealand spends almost $5,000 per day to keep the Christchurch mosque shooter in prison.
From GMA News Online, Muslim legislators and an imam ask the Philippine Supreme Court to strike down an anti-terrorism law.
From Gatestone Institute, "the containment of China".
From The Jakarta Post, critics decry Indonesia's reopening of its migrant worker placement program.
From The Straits Times, a Singaporean man learns the hard way that pumpkins are ineffective for hiding drugs.
From the Borneo Post, schools outside of Malaysia's coronavirus red zones will be closed if necessary to prevent the virus from spreading.
From Free Malaysia Today, the Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia offices of Al Jazeera are raided by police, allegedly because of a documentary about the detention of migrants. (What is this "freedom of the press" you speak of?)
From Vietnam Plus, young people are involved in Vietnam's fight against the coronavirus.
From The Mainichi, more pieces of a meteorite that fell on July 2nd are found in Funabashi, Japan.
From The Stream, "woke tyranny".
From The Daily Signal, the Trump administration will grant more than $35 million to help survivors of human trafficking.
From The Daily Wire, one person is killed and two others are wounded at a house party in Beverly Hills, California.
From the Daily Caller, according to Dr. Jill Biden, her husband the former Vice President will show up for the three scheduled presidential debates.
From Fox News, presidential candidate Kanye West is dropped from the ballot in New Jersey due to his petition having invalid signatures.
From WPVI-TV, hundreds of thousands of people in and around Philadelphia are out of power due to Tropical Storm Isaias.
From CNN, Amazon was selling shoes having a brand name that included the N-word until a U.K. lawmaker complained. (via the New York Post)
From the New York Post, Aaron Judge and Giancarlo Stanton get the New York Yankees off to a flying start.
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