On a warm sunny Tuesday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo (D) resigns over allegations of sexual harassment, and he was the "institutionalized" sexism that he talked about. (The italicized emphasis on "was" is in the title of the latter article.)
From FrontpageMag, the myth and reality of anti-Asian violence.
From Townhall, an incident at a Major League baseball game shows what liberals think of the country.
From The Washington Free Beacon, President Biden's pick for assistant secretary of energy for defense nuclear proliferation denies that Iran is pursuing nuclear weapons, despite the evidence.
From the Washington Examiner, Cuomo finally resigns after 15,000 dead seniors in nursing homes and 11 alleged sexual harassment victims.
From The Federalist, a look at Biden's "10 most insanely radical nominees".
From American Thinker, the biggest lie about the coronavirus.
From CNS News, according to Senator John Kennedy (R-LA), Republicans voting for the Democrat infrastructure bill might have been due to "day drinking".
From LifeZette, stick the proverbial fork in Governor Cuomo, he's done.
From NewsBusters, CNN makes "the mother of all mistakes" in a story about an eviction.
From Canada Free Press, Biden becomes "the face of hypocrisy".
From CTV News, Moderna plans to build a mRNA manufacturing plant in Canada within the next two years.
From TeleSUR, the Peruvian congress starts an offensive against new President Pedro Castillo.
From TCW Defending Freedom, the ridiculous array of prizes offered for taking the coronavirus jab.
From the (U.K.) Independent, builders working at a house in Liverpool, England find a jar full of human remains.
From ReMix, leftists attack police in Berlin.
From EuroNews, after Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki fires Deputy Prime Minister Jarosław Gowin, Poland's governing coalition collapses. (The EuroNews article spells the former deputy's first name "Jaroslow".)
From About Hungary, the Hungarian government renews its support for Hungarian universities in the Carpathian Basin.
From Euractiv, migration from Belarus into Lithuania sees a "significant decrease".
From The Moscow Times, allies of Russian dissident Alexei Navalny face new criminal charges.
From Radio Bulgaria, the Bulgarian party ITN will not propose a cabinet.
From the Greek City Times, video of Russian aircraft fighting fires in Greece.
From Independent Balkan News Agency, an arrest warrant goes out for former Bosnian Serb military officer Milomir Savčić in connection to the genocide in Srebrenica, Bosnia and Herzegovina.
From Balkan Insight, Bulgaria might be having its third election in a year.
From Allah's Willing Executioners, police in Austria have to protect the funeral of a 13-year-old girl who was raped and murdered allegedly by Afghan migrants.
From Free West Media, 11 out of 12 fully vaccinated employees at a restaurant in the Italian region of Abruzzo test positive for the coronavirus while their unvaccinated boss tests negative.
From The North Africa Post, a human rights council deplores slander against rape victims.
From The Jerusalem Post, a family visiting the Korazim National Park in the Israeli region of Galilee find a coin dating to the Talmudic era.
From The New Arab, according to a report, half of Syrians feel unsafe in areas controlled by the government.
From Iran International, Iran's Supreme Court acquits a prosecutor previously convicted in the deaths of detained prisoners.
From Pakistan Today, a Pakistani Hindu stuck in India with his three children years to return to Pakistan.
From ANI, the Indian state of Maharashtra issues standard operating procedures for reopening schools.
From RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty, Internet users in Turkmenistan are forced to swear on a Koran that they will not use VPNs. (I normally cite this source for stories about Iran, since it seems to have replaced Radio Farda, but it also has articles about other countries.)
From Gatestone Institute, Arabs celebrate the downfall of Islamists in Tunisia.
From The Stream, Republicans must not save the Biden administration from its own policies.
From Space War, the sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un condemns "perfidious" South Korea's military exercises with the U.S.
From The Daily Signal, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis (R) stands up to the "weenies" who won't take a stand.
From The American Conservative, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg's "metaphysical machinations".
From The Western Journal, a simple question causes White House press secretary Jen Psaki to lose her poker face.
From The Daily Wire, Senator Rand Paul (R-KY) wonders when YouTube became an arm of the government.
From the Daily Caller, the term "Cuomosexual" has not aged well.
From the New York Post, two of Cuomo's accusers are 'vindicated and relieved" that he's no longer governor.
From Breitbart, shootings continue in Chicago under Mayor Lori Lightfoot (D).
And from BizPac Review, when in bear country, keep your doors locked, including those on your cars.
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