From National Review, codes of silence, no matter where from, are a threat to the public.
From FrontpageMag, moral cowardice hides behind moral equivalence.
From Townhall, after criticizing President Trump's visit to Kenosha, Wisconsin, for Vice President Biden decides to visit there, too.
From The Washington Free Beacon, Hunter Biden holds a stake in a Chinese surveillance company.
From the Washington Examiner, Portland, Oregon Mayor Ted Wheeler (D) flees his high-rise apartment after left-wing activists come to demonstrate in front of it.
From The Federalist, the violence in our cities was started by the left.
From American Thinker, the coronavirus con is exposed.
From CNS News, according to Attorney General Bill Barr, "violent instigators" came to Kenosha from Chicago, Washington State and California.
From LifeZette, Speaker Pelosi (D-Cal) gets special treatment and violates California's coronavirus regulations.
From NewsBusters, former RNC chairman Reince Preibus excoriates a CBS host for claiming the riots are proof that the Republicans are giving up on broadening their appeal.
From Canada Free Press, how the Democrats will steal the 2020 election.
From CBC News, according to a Canadian historian, Canada still struggles with World War II's legacy.
From Global News, a 10-year veteran of the Guelph, Ontario, Canada police force gets a well-deserved retirement.
From CTV News, revisiting the site of the Labour Day crisis in Ipperwash, Ontario, Canada 25 years later.
From TeleSUR, a federal court annuls one of the cases against former Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.
From Morocco World News, a fire destroys 80 businesses in the old medina of Fez, Morocco.
From Hürriyet Daily News, Turkey promises to take counter steps after the U.S. lifts its embargo on Cyprus.
From Turkish Minute, according to the German paper Die Welt, Turkish President Erdoğan wanted his country's navy to sink a Greek naval ship.
From Panorama, according to former Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan, Artsakh will never again be part of Azerbaijan. (via The Armenian Reporter)
From In-Cyprus, five statues in Lanarca, Cyprus "tell" their stories.
From The Syrian Observer, according to the Syrian Network for Human Rights, 122 civilians were killed in Syria last month, some due to land mines.
From Arutz Sheva, the World Zionist Organization sends its first-ever full time emissaries to the Jewish community of the UAE, in the wake of its peace deal with Israel.
From The Times Of Israel, Saudi Arabia allows flights from "all countries" to cross its airspace going to and from the UAE.
From The Jerusalem Post, 11 suspects are indicted in connection with a gang rape at a hotel in Eilat, Israel.
From YNetNews, the UAE is considering opening a consulate in either Nazareth or Haifa, both in northern Israel.
From the Egypt Independent, Egyptian ration cards come with a face mask.
From Egypt Today, Egypt has seven of the world's eight known coronavirus genes.
From the Ethiopian Monitor, why Africa is "well-placed" to benefit from post-coronavirus tourism.
From the Saudi Gazette, a court in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia sentences seven terrorists to death.
From StepFeed, schools in the Arab region turn out entrepreneurs.
From The New Arab, the Tunisian parliament approves a new government.
From Radio Farda, according to Amnesty International, Iranian protesters were tortured and given unfair trials.
From IranWire, how three brothers who participated in a protest in Shiraz, Iran have been treated by the Iranian government.
From The Express Tribune, Pakistan's interior ministry tells an American blogger to leave the country.
From Pakistan Today, Pakistan's Supreme Court temporarily suspends a lower court's ruling on the sugar inquiry commission and its report.
From Khaama Press, in the province of Nangarhar, the Afghan National Army sends 22 Taliban terrorists to their virgins.
From The Hans India, the Indian government bans 118 more Chinese mobile apps.
From the Hindustan Times, India's Supreme Court orders the removal of almost 48,000 slum dwellings located near railroad lines in Delhi.
From India Today, India's National Investigation Agency charges five people with provoking young Muslims to protest against the country's Citizenship Act.
From the Dhaka Tribune, due to a court decision, Hindu widows in Bangladesh will get a share of all the property owned by their respective husbands.
From the Daily Mirror, two Sri Lankan army colonels are charged with trying to establish a quarantine center on private land.
From the Colombo Page, the Sri Lankan cabinet approves the 20th Amendment to the country's Constitution.
From Maldives Insiders, travels entering the Maldive Island will be required to show a negative coronavirus test starting on September 10th.
From The Jakarta Post, the Indonesian House of Representatives will concluding debate on a data protection bill in November.
From The Straits Times, Singapore and South Korea reach a "fast-lane" agreement for official travel and essential business.
From The Borneo Post, according to a coroner's office chemist in Seremban, Malaysia, no drugs or pesticides were found in the body of Franco-Irish teenager Anne Quoirin.
From Free Malaysia Today, according to an election watchdog, candidates for the upcoming snap election in the Malaysian state of Sabah must be free from court cases.
From Vietnam Plus, Vietnam's National Day is celebrate outside the country.
From The Mainichi, residents of Kanoya, Japan remember a day when their village buried the crew of an American bomber under crosses.
From The Stream, vote like the 1st Amendment is on the ballot.
From The Daily Signal, a writer tells what she learned at the confirmation of Justice Brett Kavanaugh.
From SmallBizDaily, fives reasons to get an account with a bank that lets you do business online.
From The American Conservative, an opinion against the atomic bomb attacks on Japan.
From the Daily Caller, according to a poll, a majority of Americans think that the U.S. government should be changed.
From CheckYourFact, no, BLM protests did not result in cities going bankrupt.
From The Daily Wire, singer Demi Lovato regrets sharing the skin color of people who kill black people. (Aren't most of the people who kill blacks themselves black?)
From the New York Post, rapper Kanye West claims that God made him storm Taylor Swift's speech at the MTV VMAs.
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