On a sunny and relatively cool Friday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, President Biden is more angry with people who enforce our immigration laws than with those who break them.
From FrontpageMag, "conman-in-chief" Biden foists absurdities on Americans.
From Townhall, the photographer who took photos of a Border Patrol horse unit disproves the "whipping" lie.
From The Washington Free Beacon, environmental groups oppose geothermal energy.
From the Washington Examiner, what if Del Rio, Texas had a wall?
From The Federalist, Biden's border policy is pure horse [bleep].
From American Thinker, some "intriguing" facts about fraud in Russia's recent elections might seem familiar.
From CNS News, according to congresscritter Chip Roy (R-TX), accuses White House press secretary Jen Psaki of "lying" to the American people "on a daily basis".
From LifeZette, Democrats are trying to make their election cheating law.
From NewsBusters, suddenly, scandals involving First Son Hunter Biden are real.
From Canada Free Press, person of interest Brian Laundrie should have been charged in Utah, Wyoming and Florida.
From Global News, Canada is still counting mail-in ballots from its recent election.
From TeleSUR, Guatemalans demand the resignation of Attorney General Consuelo Porras.
From TCW Defending Freedom, why businesses have gone woke.
From Snouts in the Trough, can Africa be made into the world's wealthiest continent?
From the Evening Standard, the 91-year-old woman who received the world's first coronavirus vaccination gets her booster shot.
From the Irish Examiner, homelessness in Ireland rose for the third straight month in Ireland.
From The Brussels Times, Belgium launches a nationwide bicycle plan. (If you read Flemish, read the story at De Standaard.)
From Dutch News, nine men in Eindhoven, Netherlands are arrested for allegedly planning a terror attack.
From Euractiv, Germany's new arable land strategy impresses neither environmentalists nor organic farmers.
From ReMix, the Polish region of Świętokrzystkie gives in to E.U. pressure and repeals its law against spreading LGBT ideology.
From Hungary Today, Hungary's coronavirus restrictions are among the most lenient in Europe.
From Sputnik International, Turkish President Erdoğan expects Russia to change its approach in Syria.
From The Sofia Globe, according to Bulgaria's Education Ministry, the number of Bulgarians who want to study abroad has decreased sharply.
From Ekathimerini, illegal antiquities are seized on the Greek island of Kalymnos.
From Independent Balkan News Agency, according to Montenegrin President Milo Đurkanović, Russia is trying to make Montenegro into a Trojan horse within NATO and the E.U.
From Balkan Insight, Kosovo police deny beating three Serbs near the border with Serbia.
From The Slovenia Times, the coronavirus infection rate in Slovenia keeps decreasing.
From Malta Today, Maltese families host migrants under a project launched by the charity Migrant Offshore Aid Station.
From Italy24News, sneakers tell the story of multiple sclerosis patients in Milan, Italy.
From RFI, five neo-Nazis are arrested for allegedly planning an attack on a Masonic lodge in France.
From EuroNews, according to Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez, former Catalan leader Carles Puigdemont must "submit to Spanish justice".
From Free West Media, informed consent is impossible with the Pfizer coronavirus vaccine due to an unidentified ingredient.
From The North Africa Post, Libya plans to host an international conference on stability and security next month.
From Turkish Minute, according to judges on the Turkey Tribunal, acts of torture and forced disappearances in Turkey could constitute crimes against humanity.
From The Times Of Israel, speaking at the U.N. General Assembly, Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas demands that Israel returns to its 1967 boundary within a year.
From Egypt Today, Egyptian President Abdel El-Sisi inspects progress on the construction of the Ring Road around Cairo.
From the Ethiopian Monitor, Japan grants the equivalent of 7.5 million birr to support school expansion projects in the Ethiopian regions of Omoria and Afar.
From The New Arab, the U.N. issues a new figure for the number of people killed in Syria's civil war.
From IranWire, according to a report by Amnesty International, scores of deaths in Iranian prisons go "uninvestigated and unreported".
From The Express Tribune, Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan will address the U.N. General Assembly today.
From the Afghanistan Times, Afghanistan's central bank is asked to facilitate mass cash withdrawal.
From ANI, the Indian state of Maharashtra plans to reopen schools for classes 5 though 12.
From New Age, plastic waste continues to choke drains, canals and rivers in Bangladesh.
From the Daily Mirror, a steam-powered train will run between the stations of Colombo Fort and Ambepussa to commemorate Sri Lanka's first train service.
From Bernama, the Malaysian government considers banning transgender people from entering mosques in the country's federal territory.
From The Straits Times, Singapore will allow people to gather in groups of only 2 starting on September 27th.
From the Borneo Post, according to Minister Rina Mohd Harun, Malaysia needs more nursing homes due to a growing aging population.
From Vietnam Plus, Typhoon Dianmu wreaks havoc in many parts of Vietnam.
From Gatestone Institute, Turkey has become NATO's pro-Russia Taliban-friendly ally.
From The Stream, what's next, now that the left has rewritten Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg?
From The Daily Signal, is President Biden bringing terrorists from Afghanistan to the U.S.?
From Space War, Space Force Chief Master Sergeant Roger Towberman sets forth the path ahead for his service branch.
From The American Conservative, the coronavirus vaccine pass is a slippery slope.
From The Western Journal, Fox News runs a "devastating" list of all Biden's controversies, which is worse than you think.
From BizPac Review, congresscritters Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) and Debbie Dingell (D-MI) get into a shouting match on the Capitol steps.
From The Daily Wire, 88-year-old Senator Chuck Grassley (R-IA) announces that he will again run for reelection.
From AP News, the oldest human footprints in North America are found in New Mexico, in a dry lake bed in White Sands National Park. (via the Daily Caller)
From the Daily Caller, Jewish groups offer tepid responses to allegations by congresscritter Rashida Tlaib (D-MI) that Israel is an apartheid state.
From the New York Post, migrants are cleared from under the bridge in Del Rio, Texas.
From Politico, Fox News bans former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani for three months. (via Breitbart)
From Breitbart, newsman Chris Cuomo admits grabbing a female co-worker in the dupa.
From Newsmax, according to Senator Tom Cotton (R-Ark), it's "disgraceful" that Biden blames mounted Border Patrol agents for the border controversy.
And from the Genesius Times, Biden sends Dr. Fauci to the Amazon jungle to practice his vaccine blow dart technique.
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