On a cloudy and relatively cool Monday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, former and current gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams (D-GA) inadvertently reveals the problem with the pro-abortion position.
From FrontpageMag, what's this about all our troubles being fixed in 2024?
From Townhall, the FBI's ransacking of former President Trump's home at Mar-a-Lago takes another irresponsible turn.
From The Washington Free Beacon, President Biden's withdrawal from Afghanistan, a year on.
From the Washington Examiner, Russian President Vladimir Putin and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un exchange friendly letters promising closer ties between their countries.
From The Federalist, records suggest that a bureaucrat's grievance spurred the raid at Mar-a-Lago.
From American Thinker, monkeypox and "don't say gay".
From CNS News, the FBI reportedly identified 81 classified email chains that were sent to or from Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's personal server.
From LifeZette, gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake (R-AZ) sets Twitter on fire with her comments on Florida Governor Ron DeSantis (R) and Trump.
From NewsBusters, CNN ignores FBI whistleblowers while hyping dubious claims about "right wing" terrorism.
From Canada Free Press, "everyone has a right to be stupid", but some people abuse it.
From TCW Defending Freedom, 2,226 people have reportedly died from adverse reactions to coronavirus vaccines.
From Snouts in the Trough, why are our ruling elites trying to bankrupt farmers?
From Free West Media, Finns who travel to Russia to buys its cheaper gasoline are accused of treason.
From EuroNews, rivals seeking to replace Boris "the Spider" Johnson as the U.K.'s prime minister are blasted over their economic plans.
From Euractiv, rain brings some relief to fire-stricken France.
From ReMix, former Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico has some choice words for Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky(y).
From Balkan Insight, thousands of protesters in Belgrade, Serbia hold an anti-pride march.
From The North Africa Post, two Israeli companies team up to launch intermittent renewable energy projects in Morocco and other signatories to the Abraham accords.
From The New Arab, three Egyptians are sentenced to six months in prison for filming and leaking a video showing the dead body of a murdered woman. (If you read Arabic, read the story at El-Watan.)
From Gatestone Institute, Iran's proxy war against Israel is fed by U.S. President Biden's weakness.
From The Stream, the genocide against Christians in Nigeria.
From The American Conservative, liberals are afraid of the rosary.
From The Daily Signal, a year after the Taliban captured Kabul, Afghanistan.
From The Western Journal, the FBI is terrified of a backlash from its raid at Mar-a-Lago.
From BizPac Review, according to congresscritter Jim Jordan, 14 FBI whistleblowers have come forward.
From The Daily Wire, Washington, D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser (D) dodges a question about not allowing unvaccinated students back into schools, which decision would disproportionally affect black students. (If you're wondering why black Americans might be skeptical about government-mandated injections, look up the Tuskegee Experiment.)
From the Daily Caller, an activist investment firm pushes an energy company, in which it owns a stake, to produce less gas and oil.
From the New York Post, a wrestling match takes place on a beach on New York's Fire Island, between a dangerous animal and a shark.
From Breitbart, Russian attorneys for WNBA player Brittney Griner appeal her nine-year sentence.
From Newsmax, two former Minneapolis police officers charged in relation to the death of George Floyd reject plea bargains.
And from The Babylon Bee, anonymous sources allege that former President Trump stole plans that reveal the White House's only weakness, its thermal exhaust port.
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