On the anniversary of the Allied landings in the French region of Normandy, here are some things going on:
From National Review, when will President Biden start firing people?
From FrontpageMag, the real reason for the baby formula shortage.
From Townhall, gas prices have doubled since Biden took office.
From The Washington Free Beacon, why Harvard Law School is less woke than Yale Law School.
From the Washington Examiner, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis (R) blasts Biden for tying school lunches to LGBT policy.
From The Federalist, nine big things which we learned from the prosecution of Hillary Clinton campaign lawyer Michael Sussmann. (My spellchecker objects to "Sussmann", which is how he spells his last name, but has no problem with "Sussman", with a single "n".)
From American Thinker, the most terrifying aspect of school shootings.
From CNS News, the mayor of Kansas City, Missouri explains that a woman shot by police was armed, despite what a witness said.
From LifeZette, Biden is making his fellow Americans poorer.
From NewsBusters, networks pump an inflated stat about mass shootings and absolve far-left cities and prosecutors blame.
From Canada Free Press, problems with Big Tech won't be solved by big government.
From CBC News, due to higher food prices, almost a quarter of Canadians are eating less.
From Global News, tax charges against former Canadian parliamentcritter Rob Anders (Conservative-Calgary) are stayed.
From CTV News, the Canadian federal government names John Ware, a U.S.-born slave who became a successful rancher a person of national significance.
From TeleSUR, Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador decides against attending the Summit of the Americas.
From TCW Defending Freedom, U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson faces a no-confidence vote today.
From the Express, Prince Harry and Meghan Markel fly back to California in a private jet with no sign of having repaired their relations with the rest of the British royal family.
From the Evening Standard, U.K. parliamentcritters start voting on the no-confidence motion against Boris Johnson.
From the (U.K.) Independent, the U.K. reports 77 new cases of monkeypox, bringing its total to 302.
From the (Irish) Independent, a British national appears in court after €4.9 worth of she-don't-lie is seized from him in Dublin, Ireland.
From the Irish Examiner, almost 6,800 Ukrainian students are enrolled in Irish schools.
From VRT NWS, the Belgian town of Landen sees its worst flooding in 20 years.
From The Brussels Times, Belgium's King Philippe and Queen Mathilde will leave tomorrow to make a state visit to the Democratic Republic of Congo.
From the NL Times, according to the Dutch airline KLM, almost all of its passengers stranded on Saturday have either reached their destinations or have been rebooked.
From Dutch News, the amount of nitrogen compound pollution in some parts of the Netherlands will have to cut by 70 to 80 percent in order to comply with a court ruling. (If you read Dutch, read the story at NRC.)
From Deutsche Welle, Germany tries to forge energy connections with countries in Africa.
From Free West Media, Wiesbaden, Germany has so many problems with electric buses that the city has gone back to diesel-fuel buses.
From Polskie Radio, Polish weapons are reportedly earning compliments in Ukraine.
From ReMix, a possible new European alliance could give Poland an alternative to the E.U.
From Radio Prague, Czech economic diplomats meet in Prague in person, for the first time since 2019.
From The Slovak Spectator, victims of a police raid conducted on June 19th, 2013 in Moldava nad Bodvou, Slovakia will be compensated.
From Daily News Hungary, is the Hungarian government really "proto-fascist" and "white nationalist"? (My other two Hungarian sources have no stories for today, their most recent being from three days ago except for one from two days ago. If there is any reason why they might be taking a day off, I'm not aware of it.)
From Euractiv, record inflation is a hot topic ahead of the French parliamentary elections.
From Balkan Insight, Bosnian war survivors are angered by renaming of a street in the capital of Sarajevo after a war crimes defendant who died during his trial.
From The North Africa Post, Morocco and Libya discuss cooperation in strategic planning.
From The New Arab, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar and other countries protest "Islamophobic" remarks made by Indian official Nupur Sharma.
From RAIR Foundation, British Muslims protest against the film The Lady of Heaven.
From FXEmpire, M23 rebels in the Democratic Republic of Congo kill two Congolese soldiers.
From Gatestone Institute, the liberation of Europe and the fall of the Third Reich.
From The Stream, the Matt Walsh film What Is a Woman? exposes the disturbing transgender agenda.
From The Daily Signal, it's time to get away from the gun control debate loop.
From Space War, South Korea and the U.S. launch missiles in response to North Korea's missile tests.
From The American Conservative, how to abate the baby formula crisis.
From The Western Journal, how a pregnant woman armed with an AR-15 dropped an armed home invader who was attacking her 11-year-old daughter.
From BizPac Review, a billionaire former Republican spends lots of money in his effort to become the next mayor of Los Angeles.
From The Daily Wire, Burger King Austria introduces the "Pride Whopper". (I say that like Mickey D's and other fast food joints, when it comes to the Seven Deadly Sins, BK should stick to gluttony.)
From the Daily Caller, the movie Top Gun: Maverick has earned over $550 million worldwide.
From the New York Post, New York Mayor Eric Adams (D) lashes out at his city's criminal justice system.
From The Sun and the "oops" department, pro cyclist Luis Carlos Chia wins the third stage of the race Vuelta a Colombia, and then crashes into his wife. (via the New York Post)
From WESH, a Florida man is convicted of abusing his stepson due to a waitress noticing bruises on the boy. (via the New York Post)
From Breitbart, the establishment media are lukewarm about President Biden's possible second term.
From Newsmax, at least 160 Conservative U.K. parliamentcritters have expressed their support for the aforementioned Prime Minister Johnson.
From CNBC, the Justice Department moves to seize two jets from Russian oligarch Roman Abramovich. (via Newsmax)
And from The Babylon Bee, some signs to look for if you think that former First Lady/Senator (D-NY)/Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is sending hitmen after you. (She wouldn't do that to yours truly, would s
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