On a warm cloudy Tuesday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, congresscritter Chip Roy (R-TX) confronts an abortion activist with her own words.
From FrontpageMag, the myth of American white supremacy.
From Townhall, FBI agent Peter Strzok isn't taking the report by special counsel John Durham well.
From The Washington Free Beacon, an aide to congresscritter Peter Schiff (D-Cal) reportedly threatened researchers to refused to investigate the false links between Russia and then-President Trump. (Or put another way, Schiff happens.)
From the Washington Examiner, five takeaways from the Durham report.
From The Federalist, the Durham report leaves no doubt that the FBI is a threat to democracy.
From American Thinker, former Attorney General Bill Barr again goes after former President Trump.
From MRCTV, New York City houses migrants in schools.
From NewsBusters, CBS "gushes" over former President Obama pushing Australia-style gun control.
From Canada Free Press, even with the release of the Durham report, justice has not been served.
From TeleSUR, Brazilians pay tribute to the late soccer star Pelé at his mausoleum in the city of Santos.
From TCW Defending Freedom, U.K. civil servants are far worse bullies than former Deputy Prime Minister Dominic Raab.
From EuroNews, who are Russia's mercenaries other than the Wagner group?
From ReMix, two Polish political parties form a coalition calling itself "Third Way". (If you want to learn how to say "Third Way" in Polish, look at the article's main picture.)
From the Greek Reporter, some places to see on the Greek island of Paros.
From Ekathimerini, according to Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis, a coalition government including the socialist party PASOK would be unstable.
From the Greek City Times, the French newspaper Le Monde sparks controversy by wrongly showing some Greek islands as Turkish territory on its map of Turkey's election results. (The paper's name translates to "The World".)
From Balkan Insight, E.U. border guards will target illegal immigration into Montenegro.
From FENA, Bosnian Finance Minister Zoran Tegeltija meets with IMF representative Alina Ianaku as inflation declines in Bosnia and Herzegovina. (Please welcome my newest source FENA.)
From Total Croatia News, a laptop lost in Zagreb, Croatia brings out the kindness of strangers.
From The Malta Independent, Malta's Criminal Court overturns the acquittal of three men accused of holding a group of journalists hostage. (Unlike in the U.S., some countries allow acquittals to be reversed on appeal.)
From Malta Today, according to Tourism Minister Clayton Bartolo, there will be 65 percent fewer deckchairs on the Maltese island of Comino this coming summer.
From ANSA, according to French President Emmanuel Macron, the E.U. can't leave Italy alone to deal with migrants.
From SwissInfo, despite a labor shortage, Swiss employers are often unwilling to hire refugees.
From France24, a relative of French First Lady Brigitte Macron is assaulted at a shop in Amiens, France.
From RFI, a leading Nigerian bank opens a subsidiary in Paris.
From The Portugal News, is Portugal's SEF forgetting to reunite families?
From The North Africa Post, the U.S. denounces Algeria's violations of religious freedom.
From The New Arab, France issues an arrest warrant for Lebanese central bank chief Riad Salameh.
From The Oldham Times, a former church in Blackburn, England becomes a mosque. (Has the building ever included any of the "4,000 holes in Blackburn, Lancashire" that John Lennon once sang about?)
From the International Business Times, over 850 missiles are fired from the Gaza Strip into Israel in 72 hours.
From Gatestone Institute, the other Palestinian jihad against Israel.
From The Stream, the Durham probe exposes elites as dictators and their allies as collaborators.
From The Daily Signal, Republican congresscritters point out the violence against pro-life people and pregnancy centers during the Biden administration.
From The American Conservative, opponents of American imperialism should dispute the moral foundations of the current humanitarian imperialism.
From The Western Journal, Green Bay Packers lineman David Bakhtiari calls out President Biden for his "cheat cards" used when dealing with reporters.
From Variety, a look at right-wing commentator Tucker Carlson's effort to trade his $20 million salary at Fox News for a show on the platform Twitter. (via The Western Journal)
From BizPac Review, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis (R) picks a side in the upcoming Kentucky Republican gubernatorial primary.
From The Daily Wire, a flashback showing the aforementioned Schiff happening.
From the Daily Caller, congresscritter Robert Garcia (D-Cal) moves to have congresscritter George Santos (R-NY) expelled from Congress.
From the New York Post, the Durham report points to a Clinton crony as the likely source of the claim that then-candidate Trump paid prostitutes to relieve themselves in his hotel room.
From Breitbart, members of the Mississippi Hospital Association leave the group after it donates $250,000 to gubernatorial candidate Brandon Presley. (This would give yet another meaning to the phrase "let's go, Brandon".)
And from SFGate, members of a church in Memphis, Tennessee pray for the thieves who stole their organ pipes in hopes that they will repent.
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