On a sunny and pleasant Monday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, the man who shot President Reagan in 1981 is given unconditional release from mental health supervision.
From FrontpageMag, at U.S. military installations, Afghans are acting like Afghans.
From Townhall, Republican governors respond to White House press secretary Jen Psaki's dismissal of their party's efforts on the border crisis.
From The Washington Free Beacon, according to left-wing environmentalists, President Biden must create new taxes and eliminate natural gas to meet his climate change pledge.
From the Washington Examiner, Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas explains why the Biden administration won't build a border wall.
From The Federalist, Indiana parents sue Governor Eric Holcomb (R) over coronavirus rules imposed on their children.
From American Thinker, the plans of Biden and the Democrats are collapsing.
From CNS News, Mayorkas refuses to call the surge of Haitian migrants crossing the southern border a "flood".
From LifeZette, Democrats should change their party's name.
From NewsBusters, according to right-wing commentator Brent Bozell, even the left-wing media realizes that the "wheels are coming off" for Biden.
From Canada Free Press, what if some blue states really aren't blue?
From CTV News, an operation starts to rescue 39 miners trapped underground in Sudbury, Ontario, Canada.
From TeleSUR, about 20,000 Haitian migrants intending to reach the U.S. are stranded in Necocli, Colombia.
From TCW Defending Freedom, what the MSM won't tell you about Saturday's anti-vaccine mandate protest in London.
From Snouts in the Trough, U.K. taxpayers will save the world from climate change.
From the (U.K.) Independent, how and when will the U.K.'s fuel crisis end?
From Free West Media, the German Bundestag shifts leftward, but leftists don't get a majority.
From EuroNews, the Greens and the Free Democratic Party will be the key players in forming a coalition government for Germany.
From About Hungary, Pope Francis gives a private audience to Hungarian Cardinal Péter Erdő.
From The Moscow Times, a Siberian polar bear who wandered too far south is now at the Moscow zoo.
From Radio Bulgaria, Bulgarian President Rumen Radev announces that he is running for a second term.
From the Greek City Times, Greece and France will sign a mutual defense pact and a frigate deal.
From Independent Balkan News Agency, according to President Aleksandar Vučić, Serbia will not allow itself and its citizens to be humiliated.
From Balkan Insight, according to experts, the border dispute between Serbia and Kosovo is "driven by internal politics".
From Euractiv, the Swiss approve same-sex marriage, but not a tax increase on capital income.
From ReMix, President Emmanuel Macron and the liberal French government allocate €1 billion for health care for illegal aliens.
From The North Africa Post, does the Algerian government have enough money to buy social peace?
From The Jerusalem Post, speaking at the U.N., Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett points out that hating his country doesn't make you "woke".
From the Sudan Tribune, according to Sudanese officials, oil is again flowing to Port Sudan.
From The New Arab, when in Egypt, don't mess with state-owned land, even if you think it's abandoned.
From Iran International, the International Atomic Energy Agency and Iran are at loggerheads over a monitoring deal.
From Pakistan Today, according to Prime Minister Imran Khan, Pakistan should not be blamed for the outcome of the war in Afghanistan.
From India Today, according to the right-wing political party Shiv Sena, Indian Muslims are not ready to accept sabhacritter Asaduddin Owaisi as their leader. (A sabhacritter is the Indian equivalent of a U.S. congresscritter. The term is most definitely mine, not Shiv Sena's.)
From Sahara Reporters, the Taliban prohibit barbers from shaving or trimming men's beards.
From Jewish News Syndicate, the executive director of American Muslims for Palestine calls Israel "a parasite that sucks the blood of America".
From Gatestone Institute, U.S. climate czar John Kerry accepts China's treatment of the Uyghurs to get a climate deal.
From The Stream, Democrat congresscritters show that "it really is all about abortion".
From Timcast, according to South Korean President Moon Jae-in, it's time to stop eating dogs.
From Sino Daily, a British warship become the first one to make a transit of the Taiwan Strait since 2008.
From Terra Daily, U.S. Africom commander General Stephen Townsend visits Algeria and meets with President Abdelmadjid Tebboune.
From The American Conservative, "the consultancy scam".
From The Daily Signal, five things you should know about the paid family leave program in the $3.5 trillion dollar Democrat legislation.
From Reuters, singer R. Kelly is convicted of racketeering and transporting women and girls across state lines for prostitution.
From The Western Journal, the FBI purchases drones from a Chinese company.
From BizPac Review, Fox News correspondent Peter Doocy defends White House press secretary Jen Psaki from an accusation by Fox & Friends co-host Will Cain.
From The Daily Wire, Governor Ron DeSantis (R-FL) directs Florida's secretary of state to investigate Facebook for "alleged election interference".
From the Daily Caller, the Biden administration makes "laughable" arguments to the Supreme Court in a case involving the 2nd Amendment. (The article was written by former congresscritter Bob Barr (R-GA).)
From the New York Post, former President Trump call the U.S. "humiliated" after the withdrawal from Afghanistan and the Haitian refugee crisis at the southern border.
From Breitbart, the president of the Dallas branch of the Federal Reserve Bank announces his retirement.
From Newsmax, according to a Rasmussen poll, President Biden's disapproval ratings reach a new high.
And from The Babylon Bee, 10 ways to make sure that your kids are terrified of the coronavirus.
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