On a warm cloudy Tuesday which falls on Flag Day, here are some things going on:
From National Review, Americans increasingly oppose including men in women's sports.
From FrontpageMag, a convicted ISIS supporter in Brooklyn, New York shows that immigration is a national security issue.
From Townhall, according to an opinion column, Democrats can't define a "woman", but are dogmatic about "violent white supremacists".
From The Washington Free Beacon, the January 6th political calculation.
From the Washington Examiner, the oil industry asks President Biden for more leases and fewer rules.
From The Federalist, the refusal by Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts to release the ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization jeopardizes the lives of his colleagues.
From American Thinker, in honor of Pride month, let's take a realistic look at what's being celebrated.
From CNS News, according to congresscritter Kat Kammack (R-FL), neither Biden nor Speaker Pelosi (D-Cal) has "filled up a gas tank in 20 years".
From LifeZette, the Biden administration meets with people who support cop killers.
From NewsBusters, actor Tom Hanks admits that the movie The Da Vinci Code is fake history.
From Canada Free Press, an idea for federal gun control intervention.
From TeleSUR, the president of the Confederation of Indigenous Nationalities of Ecuador is arrested as the group starts a national strike.
From TCW Defending Freedom, the U.K.'s government is becoming a waste of energy.
From Snouts in the Trough, are some recent health cares related?
From Free West Media, the U.K.'s High Court upholds Rwanda as a stop for asylum seekers. (The U.S. has, or at least had, the "remain in Mexico" policy, while the U.K. has what I'd call the "detour to Rwanda" policy.)
From EuroNews, five items about the war in Ukraine.
From Euractiv, the European Commission buys 110,000 doses of monkeypox vaccine.
From ReMix, the German party AdF cancels its conference due to threats of left-wing violence.
From Allah's Willing Executioners, Austria's State Protection Service prevented a terror attack on the Vienna Marathon. (If you read German, read the story at Exxpress.)
From Balkan Insight, the European Court of Human Rights rules that Bulgaria must pay compensation to a woman whose son was the victim of a homophobic murder.
From Morocco World News, a delegation from Qatar visits Morocco for training in cyber-security.
From The North Africa Post, Morocco exposes links between separatist and terrorist groups and states proliferating weapons of mass destruction in the Mediterranean area.
From the Libyan Express, members of Lybia's House of Representatives and High Council of State hold talks on forming a constitution.
From Hürriyet Daily News, Turkey wants its troops in Libya to stay for 18 more months.
From Turkish Minute, 98 more Turkish people are given detention warrants for alleged Gülen links.
From Armenpress, Nobel Prize winner Ardem Patapoutian is elected an honorary member of Armenia's National Academy of Sciences.
From Public Radio Of Armenia, Patapoutian is given his own postage stamp.
From In-Cyprus, according the E.U. border agency Frontex, the number of illegal migrants entering Cyprus has increased by 213 percent.
From The Syrian Observer, 21 families of Iraqi Hezbollah terrorists move to Damascus, Syria.
From North Press Agency, Iraqi authorities arrest three ISIS terrorists near the border with Syria.
From The961, local Lebanese products have having a boom in sales.
From Arutz Sheva, knessetcritter Yair Golan (Meretz) calls former Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu a "malignant disease".
From The Times Of Israel, U.S. President Biden announces a trip to Israel, the West Bank, and Saudi Arabia in July.
From The Jerusalem Post, according to the Palestinian group Fatah, Hamas is trying to take over the West Bank.
From YNetNews, according to Prime Minister Naftali Bennett, Israel won't hesitate to foil attacks and use its power abroad.
From the Egypt Independent, Egyptian authorities arrest two men who claimed to have a 700-year-old "treasure" for President Abdel al-Sisi.
From Egypt Today, al-Sisi will meet Biden when he visits Saudi Arabia.
From the Sudan Tribune, the United Nations World Food Programme suspends its food assistance to almost a third of South Sudan due to "critical funding shortages".
From the Ethiopian Monitor, the first East Africa Art and Culture Festival starts in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
From the Saudi Gazette, the Saudi Arabian cabinet approves a memorandum of understanding with Iraq to connect their power grids.
From The New Arab, several Arab countries ban the movie Lightyear over a kiss between two female characters.
From RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty, pensioners and retired government employees protest against the Iranian government in the city of Ahvaz.
From IranWire, a court in Shiraz, Iran sentences 26 Baha'is to a total of 85 years in prison.
From Iran International, according to unconfirmed reports, "scores" of people have been killed in an explosion at a chemical factory in southern Iran.
From Khaama Press, Mohammad Ali Jinnah Hospital in Kabul, Afghanistan becomes a teaching hospital.
From Pajhwok Afghan News, residents in the Afghan provinces of Ghor, Badghis and Nimroz complain about soaring food prices.
From AsiaNews, a Pakistani Christian working as a cleaner for a Koran publisher is jailed for alleged blasphemy.
From the Catholic Herald, Bishop Jude Ayodeji Arogundade rebukes Irish President Michael Higgins for blaming a terror attack in Nigeria on climate change.
From Gatestone Institute, we salute the American flag.
From The Stream, former President Trump (whose birthday is today) responds to the January 6th Inquisition Committee.
From The Daily Signal, a piece by Fox News about transgenderism ignores the agony and regrets of detransitioners.
From The American Conservative, few liberals understand why a fire-resistant copy of Margaret Atwood's novel A Handmaid's Tale is a piece of self-satire.
From The Western Journal, conservative filmmaker Dinesh D'Souza challenges former Attorney General Bill Barr to a debate over the findings in his film 2000 Mules.
From BizPac Review, according to an op-ed, the Summit of the Americas exposes President Biden's incompetence and dishonesty.
From The Daily Wire, White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre flips through a binder for 20 seconds and can't find "anything new" about baby formula.
From the Daily Caller, Washington, D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser flies altered American flags.
From the New York Post, New York City Mayor Eric Adams (D) tries to tell congresscritter AOC (D-NY) that "we're Democrats, not socialists".
From Breitbart, the producer price index goes into double digits.
From Newsmax, Tennessee police warn against folder dollar bills laced with fentanyl.
And from Breaking Burgh, American corporations worry that they're not doing enough to exploit PRIDE month.
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