On a warm sunny Sunday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, according to a poll, almost three quarters of Americans disapprove of President Biden's handling of inflation.
From Townhall, we now know who's urging Biden to "forgive" student loans.
From The Washington Free Beacon, a review of a book about the Doobie Brothers.
From the Washington Examiner, the California Court of Appeals rules that Los Angeles District Attorney George Gascon must actually do his job.
From American Thinker, disarming victims is not a good way to fight crime.
From NewsBusters, The New York Times uses the Uvalde, Texas shooting to drum up support for gubernatorial candidate Bob O'Rourke (D-TX).
From Canada Free Press, Russia's war against Ukraine reaches its 100th day.
From TeleSUR, Colombian President Iván Duque is sentenced to five days of house arrest for contempt of court.
From TCW Defending Freedom, a poem on surviving an eco-warrior boat trip to an offshore bird chopper assembly.
From Snouts in the Trough, how will you little people spend your "carbon budgets"?
From Free West Media, according to a study, coronavirus vaccines are linked to 25 percent of heart attacks in young adults.
From EuroNews, allied World War II veterans gather to commemorate the Normandy landings on D-Day.
From Allah's Willing Executioners, in Berlin, a rejected asylum seeker from Tunisia allegedly stabs his ex-wife. (If you read German, read the story at BZ.)
From The North Africa Post, Morocco launches this year's edition of Operation Marhaba, under which Moroccans abroad will be able to visit their home country.
From The New Arab, Saudi Arabia hopes to triple its number of foreign tourists in 2022.
From the People's Gazette, "killer herdsmen" open fire in a Catholic church in Owo, Nigeria, killing at least 28 people. (via the eponymous site of Robert Spencer)
From The Print, how an Islamic cleric educated in Lucknow, India inspired the first jihad in the Chinese region of Xinjiang.
From Gatestone Institute, NATO should not pay ransom to Turkey, but should instead amend its rules to expel the country.
From The Stream, how to make a manufactured crisis.
From Space War, according to the South Korean military, North Korea has launched multiple ballistic missiles.
From The Daily Signal, some letters to the editor.
From The Western Journal, the private plane that got too close to Biden's Delaware beach house was not following a flight plan.
From Fox News, in a straw poll taken at a conservative conference in Colorado, Florida Governor DeSantis (R) beats former President Trump. (via BizPac Review)
From BizPac Review, Trump "torches" former Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis) for saying that the Republicans didn't have "the guts" to impeach him.
From The Daily Wire, according to a poll, Biden's approval is cratering on key issues.
From the New York Post, for the first time in a month, Russian missiles strike Kyiv, Ukraine.
From Breitbart, the aforementioned Governor DeSantis prioritizes school safety.
From Newsmax, Senator John Barrosso (R-WY) warns of looming power outages.
And from the Daily Caller, a Disneyland Paris employee breaks up a marriage proposal.
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