As the weather cools down somewhat after a warm weekend, here are some things going on:
From National Review, proof that the cancel mob at Georgetown University does not even believe in its own rhetoric.
From FrontpageMag, airbrushing the Jews out of Jerusalem and its Temple Mount.
From Townhall, the body of the Texas National Guard soldier who drowned trying to rescue migrants has been found.
From The Washington Free Beacon, the latest issue for Republicans during the upcoming midterms could be President Biden's proposal to ban menthol cigarettes.
From the Washington Examiner, the platform Twitter might have a new owner today.
From The Federalist, no, former presidential candidate Hillary Clinton can't hide her campaign's 2016 opposition research from Special Counsel John Durham.
From American Thinker, more black Americans have been killed in the Big Luxurious Mansions era than in 86 years of lynchings.
From CNS News, there are no Jews left in Afghanistan.
From LifeZette, Democrats acknowledge that Biden will sink them this coming November.
From the eponymous site of Steve Gruber, yes, congresscritter Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) should be allowed to run for reelection. (via LifeZette)
From NewsBusters, leftists on Twitter go nuts over the possible new ownership.
From Canada Free Press, how does Biden propose to fit 7 million illegal aliens into 500,000 beds for the homeless?
From TeleSUR, left-wing parties in Paraguay choose Senator Esperanza Martinez (Guasi Front) as their presidential candidate.
From TCW Defending Freedom, where is the anger against these child killers in the U.K.?
From Free West Media, German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock goes into "self-destruction mode".
From EuroNews, former German Chancellor Gerhard Schröder is asked to leave the Social Democratic Party over his ties to Russia.
From Euractiv, newly-reelected French President Emmanuel Macron faces challenges.
From Balkan Insight, former Montenegrin President Milo Đjukanović sees a path back to power for his once-dominant party.
From The North Africa Post, the Algerian League for Defense of Human Rights calls for an investigation of the death of political prisoner Hakim Debazi.
From The New Arab, Israeli forces "dismantle" a terrorist cell in the West Bank.
From Palestinian Media Watch, Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas sends condolences to the family of the terrorist who killed three people at a bar in Tel Aviv, Israel.
From Dawn, the hits and misses of the party Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf's term in power.
From The Express Tribune, former Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif is issued a passport that will allow him to return home.
From Pakistan Today, Pakistani Finance Minister Miftah Ismail rules out an immediate fuel price hike.
From The Hans India, the Indian state of Telangana needs police officers.
From the Hindustan Times, the leaders of India's Bharatiya Janata Party prepare to celebrate eight years of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government.
From India Today, the Indian state of Rajasthan suspends a magistrate over the destruction of a Shiva temple in the city of Alwar.
From the Dhaka Tribune, 33,000 Bangladeshi families will soon no longer be homeless.
From New Age, a Bangladeshi hacker is sentenced to 8 years in prison.
From the Colombo Page, the Sri Lankan cabinet approves a proposal for the 21st Amendment to the country's Constitution.
From the Daily Mirror, rumors that Sri Lankan Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa will resign are false.
From Raajje, over 100,000 tourists visit the Maldive Islands for the fourth month this year.
From Al-Monitor, ISIS announces "revenge" attacks for Ramadan.
From The Daily Star, no one over 65 will be allowed to perform the Hajj this year.
From Tempo(dot)Co, Indonesia's Soekamo-Hatta Airport see a surge in passenger numbers.
From The Straits Times, shoppers in Beijing, China clear shelves ahead of mass coronavirus testing.
From Free Malaysia Today, Malaysians produce a lot of food waste.
From the Borneo Post, the Malaysian state of Sarawak reports 57 new coronavirus cases, the lowest daily total since April 18th.
From MalayMail, a sharia court sentences a Malaysian parliamentcritter to a week in jail for "insulting" the Islamic judicial system.
From Vietnam Plus, Vietnamese Communist Party General Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong applauds the progress in relations between Vietnam and the U.S.
From the Taipei Times, isolation requirements are lifted for health workers in Taipei, Taiwan.
From The Mainichi, the world's oldest woman dies at age 119 in Fukuoka, Japan.
From Gatestone Institute, a U.S. economy powered mostly by solar and wind is a "dangerous fantasy".
From The Stream, during the Reformation, everyone were the persecutors.
From The Daily Signal, how the U.S. turned into La La Land.
From The American Conservative, how strategic ambiguity can be a better deterrent than strategic clarity.
From The Western Journal, in a poll about the 2024 Democratic primary, President Biden loses to "not sure".
From BizPac Review, Hunter Biden's emails show that he said some unpleasant things about his brother Beau's widow.
From The Daily Wire, according to a survey, young Americans want more parental control over education by a large margin.
From the Daily Caller, fellow users of Twitter, please welcome our new overlord.
From (appropriately) The U.S. Sun, the sun will be partially blotted out in a "mini" solar eclipse this week. (via the New York Post)
From the New York Post, a Texas judge invites Disney to relocate.
From Breitbart, Senator Rick Scott (R-FL) warns Disney and other companies about jumping into social issues.
From Newsmax, the group Iranian Americans for Liberty preemptively asks Elon Musk to remove the accounts of Iranian leaders from Twitter.
And from The Babylon Bee, a caravan of liberal refugees arrives at the border of MySpace.
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