On a humid cloudy Saturday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, who pays for the special master in charge of reviewing documents seized in the FBI raid of former President Trump's home at Mar-a-Largo?
From Townhall, Vice President Harris blames the turmoil in the U.S. on abortion bans.
From The Washington Free Beacon, Los Angeles County District Attorney George Gascón's journey from good cop to bad prosecutor.
From the Washington Examiner, "ten thousand million jobs" and other recent feats by President Biden.
From The Federalist, the Amazon TV series The Rings of Power leaves many disappointed, but others hopeful.
From American Thinker, did the NIH delete coronavirus data at the request of Chinese researchers?
From Red Voice Media, teachers and a Disney employee are among 160 people arrested for alleged human trafficking in Florida. (via LifeZette)
From Newsbusters, MSNBC host Ali Velshi gets angry when a historian debunks him about British history.
From Canada Free Press, "it's not about Trump".
From TeleSUR, talks between the Ecuadorian government and indigenous leaders have not made much progress.
From TCW Defending Freedom, the U.K. is heading toward net zero ruin because their politicians don't know much science. (According to the article, Margaret Thatcher was the only British prime minister to have a science degree in the last 200 years. According to Wiki, she was the first U.K. PM to have a science degree, which you can read if you scroll down to the "Oxford: 1943-1947" subsection of the "Early life and education" section. This would make her so far the only one with a science degree.)
From Snouts in the Trough, please be careful that you don't commit a "heat crime".
From Free West Media, Americans now smoke more marijuana than tobacco. (For the record, I've never smoked either one. I tried chewing tobacco once, and that was it.)
From EuroNews, Charles III is proclaimed the U.K.'s new king.
From The North Africa Post, Morocco plans to irrigate 5,200 hectares of land in the region of Sahara.
From The New Arab, according to an Israeli spokesman, the Moroccan army will participate in an Israeli military conference.
From the Las Vegas Sun, three Afghan crew members die when their Black Hawk helicopter, left behind by the U.S., crashes. (I almost typed the last word of the site's title "Sin", which might make sense because Las Vegas is known as "Sin City".)
From Mirror Now, terrorists attack a polio vaccination team in the Pakistani province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. (Mirror Now appears to be a division of TimesNowNews.)
From RepublicWorld, a women's rights activist of Indian origin in Washington, D.C. confronts Pakistani Ambassador to the U.S. Masood Khan over rape and forced conversion of minority girls in Pakistan.
From Gatestone Institute, the Iran nuclear deal is reportedly "off the table", and would not have prevented war.
From The Stream, "the secret curriculum" in American schools.
From The Daily Signal, the Department of Education declines to explain how 160,000 comments on a proposed redefinition of "sex" in Title IX went missing.
From The American Conservative, yes, Provincetown, Massachusetts is the real America.
From The Western Journal, co-host Sunny Hostin of The View "viciously attacks" the late Queen Elizabeth on air.
From BizPac Review, Senator Rand Paul (R-KY) points out that no flood victims in his state of Kentucky asked him to send more money to Ukraine.
From The Daily Wire, South Carolina Republican state Senators block a proposed ban on abortion.
From the Daily Caller, the Department of Justice pushes for a Democrat donor to serve as the aforementioned special master.
From the New York Post, congresscritter Jerry Nadler (D-NY) becomes a "serial napper".
From Breitbart, right-wing journalist Laura Ingram debuts a clip from the movie My Son Hunter.
From Newsmax, according to former presidential advisor Dick Morris, the raid on Trump's home at Mar-a-Lago was not about Trump evading the FBI, but the FBI evading Trump. (The president whom Morris used to advise was Mr. Bill.)
And from The Peedmont, to honor the recently departed Queen Elizabeth, Virginia Governor Glenn Youngkin (R) will strip Powhatan County of its name.
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