On the first Monday of October, here are some things going on:
From National Review, congresscritter Adam Kinzinger (R-IL) "is a dishonest clown".
From FrontpageMag, U.C. Berkeley bans pro-Israel speakers.
From Townhall, Arizona gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake (R) flips the script on a reporter attempting an abortion "gotcha".
From The Washington Free Beacon, Governor Gretchen Whitmer's (D-MI) solution for Michigan's broken child system is consulting for "sexual orientation" and "gender identity".
From the Washington Examiner, according to a poll, Republicans in Nevada are doing slightly better than their Democrat rivals.
From The Federalist, if companies such as Google, Facebook and Twitter hide information on behalf of the world's elites, then elections are a sham.
From American Thinker, left-wingers election decry results in Brazil (which is headed for a runoff) and in Italy.
From CNS News, three MS-13 leaders in Virginia and Maryland are convicted of racketeering and other crimes.
From LifeZette, New York City Mayor Eric Adams has another "luxury" solution for housing illegal aliens.
From NewsBusters, billionaire Bill Gates admits that scolding people to consume less won't save the climate.
From Canada Free Press, green electricity will bring on a nightmare.
From CBC News, Canadian doctors sound the alarm over significantly undercounted maternal deaths.
From Global News, the Canadian province of Quebec holds elections today.
From CTV News, education workers in the Canadian province of Ontario vote 96.5 percent in favor of going on strike.
From TeleSUR, eight people in Haiti die of cholera.
From TCW Defending Freedom, the U.K.'s Tories need to face the catastrophe caused by their "anti-marriage appeasement" of the left.
From Snouts in the Trough, does no one out there take responsibility for anything anymore?
From the Express, new U.K. Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng rips E.U. bureaucracy and proposes bold tax cuts. (Since the U.K. is no longer in the E.U., why should anyone in the U.K. government give a rat's dupa about what the E.U. bureaucracy thinks?)
From the Evening Standard, King Charles III is hailed as the "people's King" at his first official reception as a monarch, at Holyroodhouse in Edinburgh, Scotland. (You might have to answer a question before you can read the full article.)
From the (U.K.) Independent, some centrist Tory parliamentcritters promise to block new U.K. Prime Minister Liz Truss's proposed spending cuts after she makes a U-turn on taxes.
From the (Irish) Independent, a tram line in Dublin is delayed after a dog gets trapped under a tram.
From the Irish Examiner, a woman from County Cork, Ireland is jailed for cussing out a garda and other offenses.
From VRT NWS, Belgian rail workers will go on a 24-hour strike, staring at 10:00 p.m. on Tuesday.
From The Brussels Times, how Brussels, Belgium is starting to embrace bike-riding.
From the NL Times, the number of asylum shelter spots in the Netherlands is decreasing. (If you read Dutch, read the story at NOS.)
From Dutch News, according to a campaign group, sex education in Dutch schools needs and update. (Once again, if you read Dutch, read the story at NOS.)
From Deutsche Welle, German politicians strike a somber tone on Germany's Unity Day.
From Free West Media, Berlin gets its first LGBT-friendly day care center.
From the CPH Post, if you're in Denmark and you want to get a coronavirus booster shot, it's gonna cost ya this time.
From Polskie Radio, the Polish foreign ministry summons the Russian ambassador over President Putin's purported annexation of Ukrainian territory.
From ReMix, Polish politician Jarosław Kaczyński calls for a modification of how votes are counted in Poland.
From Radio Prague, Czech Foreign Minister Jan Lipavský summons the Russian ambassador over Russia's purported annexation of Ukrainian territory.
From The Slovak Spectator, the Slovak state-run defense company Konštrukta Defense will produce 16 Zuzana mobile howitzers for Ukraine. (This artillery shares its name with Slovakia's president.)
From Daily News Hungary, according to Hungarian Interior Minister Sándor Pintér, protections of the Schengen area's external borders are crucial to its security.
From Hungary Today, Hungarian Prime Minister Orban pledges to "navigate Hungary to a safe port".
From About Hungary, according to Foreign Minister Szijjarto, the Hungarian government won't support sanctions that go against Hungary's interest.
From EuroNews, a look at election results in Bosnia, Bulgaria, Brazil and Latvia.
From Euractiv, leaks in the Nord Stream gas pipelines stop, with one possibly being used to resume supply.
From Balkan Insight, the Bulgarian party GERB, led by former Prime Minister Boyko Borissov, is projected to have won yesterday's parliamentary elections.
From The North Africa Post, Chad extends its period of transition to democracy.
From The New Arab, according to a "harrowing" new report, at least 30,000 people were "murdered" in the Syrian government's Sednaya Prison.
From PiPa, a disabled man accused of blasphemy is beaten to death in Mirpur Mathilo, Pakistan.
From Gatestone Institute, the "Inflation Reduction Act" doesn't reduce inflation, but redistributes wealth.
From The Stream, there is a global war on women, in which Western feminists are profiteers.
From The Daily Signal, according to the pro-family group Alliance Defending Freedom, California Governor Gavin Newsom (D) has awarded himself custody of all children with gender dysphoria.
From The American Conservative, ending "strategic ambiguity" on Taiwan would be disastrous.
From The Western Journal, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis (R) turns the table on a CNN reported who questioned his response to Hurricane Ian.
From BizPac Review, New Hampshire Democratic Party Chairman Raymond Buckley claims that the parents of trans kids outed at school will beat them to death.
From The Daily Wire, the pro-trans group in Virginia behind the school walkout plans to "rehome" gender-confused students who allegedly hate their parents. (Isn't that sort of thing called "kidnapping"?)
From the Daily Caller, Virginia congressional candidate Hung Cao (R) compares Democrat allegations of Republican "extremism" to the treatment of Muslims after 9/11.
From the New York Post, the Supreme Court starts its new term, including new Justice Katenji Brown Jackson.
From Breitbart, a high school football team in Yuba City, California ends its season after several players act out a slave auction.
From Newsmax, what if a court orders billionaire Elon Musk to buy Twitter for $44 billion, and he doesn't?
And from The Babylon Bee, looters are spotted trying to enter former President Trump's home at Mar-a-Lago in the aftermath of Hurricane Ian.
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