As the mostly sunny weather continues on a Monday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, Vice President Harris is the reason why President Biden is running for reelection.
From FrontpageMag, Democrats create a legalized transgender child kidnapping network.
From Townhall, a newspaper in California says the quite part about Senator Diane Feinstein (D-Cal) out loud.
From The Washington Free Beacon, how a left-wing group teamed up with big pharma to push gender ideology onto American hospitals.
From the Washington Examiner, Chicago starts its "let's go, Brandon" era.
From The Federalist, the left's "fake electors" story is itself fake news.
From American Thinker, the industrial revolution is not the main contributor to atmospheric carbon dioxide.
From MRCTV, a bill protecting women's sports passes the Ohio's House Higher Education Committee.
From Fox News, a reporter calls San Franciso "worst than the third world" because of its drug and homelessness problems. (via LifeZette)
From NewsBusters, MSNBC host Joe Scarborough warns against prematurely counting Florida Governor Ron DeSantis (R) out of the 2024 presidential race.
From Canada Free Press, it's an invasion, which we invited.
From TeleSUR, Venezuela's science and technology ministry plans to encourage scientific training for young people.
From TCW Defending Freedom, the U.K. does not have the materials, money or skill to achieve Net Zero during the current century.
From Snouts in the Trough, why are the U.K.'s elites doing these things to the people?
From Polskie Radio, according to Polish presidential aide Marcin Przydacz, Poland will take diplomatic action over a "military object" found in a forest near the city of Bydgoszcz. (If you read Polish better than I do, read the story at Polska Agencja Prasowa.)
From Radio Prague, President Petr Pavel becomes the first Czech head of state to attend an annual memorial to the Roma and Sinti victims of the Holocaust, in the city of Lety.
From The Slovak Spectator, Slovakia has an "alarming" increase in homelessness.
From Daily News Hungary, the Hungarian government plans to release 700 foreign human traffickers from prison.
From Hungary Today, more on the Hungarian government's plan to release 700 convicted human smugglers. (This source calls these criminals "smugglers" while DNH above calls them "traffickers". I've come to believe that there is a difference between the terms in that "smugglers" take people where they want to go, while "traffickers" take people to places against their will. But that's just my view. These media sites might have their own opinions. If you read Hungarian, read even more about this story at Magyar Nemzet and Index.)
From About Hungary, according to Hungarian europarliamentcritter Tamás Deutsch, the European Commission is withholding development funds from Hungary for political reasons.
From Russia Today, the Russian government responds to French President Emmanuel Macron's claim that Russia is becoming dependent on China.
From Sputnik International, earlier today, Ukraine used two Storm Shadow missiles in an attack on the city of Lugansk.
From EuroNews, Russia claims to have shot down a Storm Shadow missile.
From The Moscow Times, acts of sabotage this year in Russia have more than doubled from a year ago. (If you read Russian, read a related story at Izvestia.)
From The Sofia Globe, Bulgarian Prosecutor-General Ivan Geshev refuses to resign and claims that politicians are interfering with his office's work.
From Radio Bulgaria, Bulgarian parliamentcritters comment on Geshev's refusal to resign.
From Balkan Insight, the airports for Belgrade, Serbia and Skopje, North Macedonia are reportedly "hubs for illicit activities".
From The North Africa Post, Moroccan King Mohammed VI presents a model from the first Moroccan car maker and a prototype hydrogen-powered car developed by a Moroccan.
From The New Arab, members of Syrian civil society blame the Biden administration for the normalization of President Bashar al-Assad.
From Hürriyet Daily News, incumbent President Erdoğan garners the most votes in Turkey's presidential election, but will face a runoff later this month. (Due to Turkey's presidential election, I decided to skip over to this Turkish source, which appears to have recovered from the technical difficulties it was having yesterday.)
From News18, a Dalit is lynched in the Indian state of Kerala, in connection to which nine people are arrested. (via OpIndia)
From OpIndia, a Muslim boy in the Indian state of Uttar Pradesh is harassed for being friends with a Muslim girl.
From TradeWinds, police foil a suspected suicide bombing against Chinese shipyard workers at a port in Karachi, Pakistan.
From ABS CBN News, worshippers are attacked in a Coptic church near Khartoum, Sudan, for which each side in Sudan's civil war blames the other. (The last four links come via The Religion Of Peace.)
From Gatestone Institute, you might be surprised about who wants to destroy Israel.
From The Stream, a homeschooling mother starts a Christian resource center to combat California's education laws.
From The Daily Signal, the latest energy-efficiency mandate for appliances reduces customer choice and results in dirtier dishes.
From The American Conservative, "reparations are not amends".
From The Western Journal, Senator Chris Murphy (D-Con) calls the Supreme Court "illegitimate". (It seems that in the eyes of many Democrats, our federal governmental institutions are legitimate only to the extent that they support and impose policies favored by the Democrats.)
From BizPac Review, former Texas Governor Rick Perry (R) goes on CNN and teases at a presidential run.
From The Daily Wire, special prosecutor John Durham's investigation of the people who investigated alleged collusion between Russia and then-presidential candidate Trump comes to an end.
From the Daily Caller, a biologically male transgender disc golfer will not be allowed to compete against women.
From the New York Post, two members of congresscritter Gerry Connolly's (D-VA) staff are allegedly attacked by a man with a baseball bat.
From Breitbart, the Chicago Mercantile Exchange threatens to leave Chicago if new Mayor Brandon Johnson (D) taxes its financial transactions.
From Newsmax, the TSA starts testing facial recognition technology at more airports.
And from The Babylon Bee, for the first time ever, Biden draws a larger crowd than Trump.
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