On a warm sunny Wednesday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, personal information on every concealed carry permit holder in California is leaked.
From FrontpageMag, former President Trump leaves a legacy at the Supreme Court.
From Townhall, where's the post-Dobbs v. Jackson Democrat primary turnout bump?
From The Washington Free Beacon, the Biden administration makes it easier for terrorists to enter the U.S.
From the Washington Examiner, the Democrats out on a deeply flawed January 6th show.
From The Federalist, no, the Dobbs v. Jackson decision does not ban doctors from treating ectopic pregnancies and miscarriages.
From American Thinker, a witness for the January 6th Inquisition Committee "ludicrously" testifies that Trump tried to choke a Secret Service agent.
From CNS News, did President George Washington violate the 1st Amendment by invoking God in his first inaugural address?
From LifeZette, the problems we're having are not a coincidence.
From NewsBusters, journalists go nuts after the overturning of Roe v. Wade.
From Canada Free Press, let's buys some electric vehicles that we can't afford.
From TeleSUR, Uruguay's Single Construction Union goes on strike.
From TCW Defending Freedom, abortionists and coronavirus disciples have become cohorts in unspeakable cruelty.
From Snouts in the Trough, dare we mention the unmentionable?
From Free West Media, some Americans turn to stealing gasoline.
From EuroNews, Turkey demands that Finland and Sweden extradite alleged "terrorists".
From Euractiv, how, according to an opinion column, Russia breathed new life into NATO.
From ReMix, Poland starts to build a coalition against the E.U.'s plan to ban cars powered by gasoline and diesel.
From Allah's Willing Executioners, two Afghans allegedly attack a man thought to be gay on a bus in Annecy, France. (If you read French, read the story at FDeSouche and Le Dauphiné.)
From Balkan Insight, the Romanian company Nuclearelectrika insists that its reactors, developed by a U.S. company, are safe.
From Morocco World News, Morocco announces the schedule for its upcoming school year.
From The North Africa Post, Morocco and Spain foil Algeria's attempt at blackmail involving natural gas.
From Libyan Express, according to U.N. official Rosemary DiCarlo, the U.N. is ready to "facilitate dialogue" between Libyan rival Prime Ministers Abdul Hamid Dbeibah and Fathi Bashagha.
From Hürriyet Daily News, Turkish authorities detain 250 suspects in an alleged fraud operation in the steel industry.
From Turkish Minute, former Ankara Mayor Melih Gökçek is ridiculed for believing a Tweet about the discovery of jelly bean reserves in Turkey.
From Rûdaw, Germany will evaluated whether to extend its military mission in Iraq, including the Kurdistan region.
From Armenpress, Canada opens an embassy in Armenia, its first in the South Caucasus.
From Public Radio Of Armenia, Armenia and the U.S. sign an agreement under which Armenia will receive $120 million from the U.S. (As I've recently read, foreign aid is a transfer of money from poor people in rich countries to rich people in poor countries.)
From In-Cyprus, police in Cyprus assist in the deportation of illegal aliens.
From The Syrian Observer, a U.S. drone strike in northwestern Syria sends an al-Qaeda-linked terrorist to his virgins.
From North Press Agency, Turkish forces resume shelling villages in the Syrian governorate of Aleppo.
From The961, Human Rights Watch urges Lebanon to enforce its law against torture.
From Arutz Sheva, Prime Minister Naftali Bennett decides against running in Israel's upcoming elections.
From The Times Of Israel, infighting within Israel's governing coalition delays the dissolution of the Knesset by another day.
From The Jerusalem Post, pressure from Israel's High Court of Justice leads police to reinstate a gay pride march in the town of Mitzpe Ramon.
From YNetNews, Israeli President Isaac Herzog meets with Jordanian King Abdullah II ahead of a planned visit to the region by U.S. President Joe Biden.
From the Egypt Independent, the World Bank approves $500 million in financing to Egypt to develop food security and its resilience to current global crises.
From Egypt Today, the Egyptian government issues a permit to build the first reactor at the Al Dabaa Nuclear Power Plant.
From the Sudan Tribune, a local NGO provides access to clean water in the South Sudanese state of Warrap.
From the Ethiopian Monitor, the Ethiopian government is set to establish an agricultural mechanization center.
From the Saudi Gazette, an Iraqi man living in the U.K. walks to Mecca, Saudi Arabia for 11 months in order to perform the Hajj.
From The New Arab, Morocco and Algeria trade accusations over the tragedy at the border of the Spanish enclave of Melilla.
From RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty, the increase in executions in Iran sends a warning against dissent. (What is this "freedom of speech" you speak of?)
From IranWire, Iran's tourism project hides its tyranny under turquoise domes.
From Iran International, according to Amnesty International, Iran is torturing rights activist Narges Mohammadi.
From Khaama Press, according to Taliban deputy prime minister Mawlawi Abdul Salam Hanafi, men will represent women in the organization's Grand Assembly. (What are these "equal rights" you speak of?)
From Pajhwok Afghan News, the Pakistani cabinet approves a new visa regime for Afghani citizens.
From the Afghanistan Times, Presidents Putin (Russia) and Rakhmon (Tajikistan) agree to boost border security between Afghanistan and Tajikistan.
From TimesNow, according to Bangladeshi author Taslima Nasreen, fanatics are so dangerous that Hindus aren't even safe in India.
From OpIndia, a video shows the beheading of a Hindu man, done because he spoke in support of accused blasphemer Nupur Sharma.
From Gatestone Institute, definitions of failed leadership in the U.S.
From The Stream, the truth about Roe v. Wade, and the blessings of life.
From The Daily Signal, now that Roe v. Wade has been overturned, the left suddenly remembers what a woman is.
From The American Conservative, pro-lifers can now go on offense.
From The Western Journal, in a primary pitting two incumbent Republican Illinois congresscritters who had been redistricted into the same district, the one backed by Trump defeats the one who voted to create the January 6th Inquisition Committee.
From BizPac Review, if January 6th witness Cassidy Hutchinson is to be believed, Trump stole the presidential limousine while Biden "can't even sit upright on a bike".
From The Daily Wire, Democrat congresscritters introduce a "transgender bill of rights".
From the Daily Caller, according to right-wing commentator Tucker Carlson, corporations are telling their employees to not have children.
From Breitbart, George Washington Law School rejects a demand from students that they fire Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas from his teaching position.
From Newsmax, tomorrow will be the last day at the Supreme Court for Justice Steven Breyer.
And from the New York Post, the last Medal of Honor recipient from World War II, Marine Corporal Hershel "Woody" Williams, passes away at age 98.
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