On a warm and mostly sunny Friday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, the White House plays some whataboutism with student loan "forgiveness".
From FrontpageMag, the novel The Da Vinci Code attacked the wrong religion, but got some things right.
From Townhall, according to an opinion column, here are some lessons from President Biden's plan to "forgive" student loans.
From The Washington Free Beacon, senatorial candidate John Fetterman (D-PA) opposes school vouchers for the poor, while he sends his own kids to one of Pennsylvania's most expensive prep schools.
From the Washington Examiner, Star Trek actress Nichelle Nichols's ashes will be launched into space.
From The Federalist, how the Nazis and eugenics led to chemical abortions in the U.S.
From American Thinker, the food company Goya rejects wokeness and sees its earnings soar.
From CNS News, according to congresscritter Steve Scalise (R-LA), indebted students from the colleges that failed them.
From LifeZette, Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson (D) fights to keep 26,000 dead people on the voter rolls.
From NewsBusters, Big Tech gets ready to again roll out the censorship.
From Canada Free Press, why some people hate former President Trump so much.
From TeleSUR, Peronists are mobilized in support of Argentinian Vice President Cristina Fernandez-Kirchner.
From TCW Defending Freedom, U.K. Chancellor Rishi Sunak's belated coronavirus confession.
From Snouts in the Trough, are most of the U.K.'s crises stupidly self-inflicted?
From Free West Media, mocking thousands of victims of imported crime, UNESCO awards former German Chancellor Angela Merkel its peace prize.
From EuroNews and the "stamp out franglais" department, lame duck U.K. Prime Minister Boris "the Spider" Johnson calls French President Emmanuel Macron a "très bon buddy".
From Euractiv, Europeans will have to decide whether to eat or heat.
From Balkan Insight, North Macedonians and Albanians are the most deported nationalities from Germany.
From The North Africa Post, Morocco and Germany plan to resume their energy cooperation.
From The New Arab, a Lebanese submarine finds the remains of seven refugees who died after their boat sank this past April.
From OpIndia, the Jammu and Kashmir and Ladakh High Court reopens the case of the 2003 massacre of 24 Kashmiri Pandits. (A Pandit is specialized teacher in Hinduism. The variant spelling "Pundit" has been borrowed into English.)
From Jewish News, a man allegedly travelsfrom the English county of Yorkshire to Stamford Hill in northern London to attack Jews.
From Gatestone Institute, the "Great Reset" is "a blueprint for destroying freedom, innovation, and prosperity".
From The Stream, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg reveals the FBI's role in censoring the Hunter Biden laptop story before the 2020 election.
From The Daily Signal, President Biden's bloated and high-spending government threatens economic freedom.
From Space Daily, China tests a space plane.
From The American Conservative, the military-industrial complex is getting a big break in Ukraine.
From BizPac Review, the White House plans to make federally funded research freely available to the public.
From The Daily Wire, a Pride parade in Charlotte, North Carolina is condemned after a video shows it to not be very family-friendly.
From the Daily Caller, the Department of Justice redacts its reasons for redacting information in the affidavit used to justify the warrant to search former President Trump's home at Mar-a-Lago.
From the New York Post, according to data, housing prices could fall by 20 percent in 183 cities.
From Breitbart, Senator Marsha Blackburn (R-TN) goes to Taiwan.
From Newsmax, Senator Socialism (I-VT) tops a poll for the Democratic nomination.
And from the The U.S. Sun, a mysterious purple cloud descends upon Pozo Almonte, Chile. (via the New York Post)
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