On a very warm and partly sunny Friday which is the anniversary of the storming of the Bastille prison in Paris, here are some things going on:
From National Review, the Biden administration comes up with another student loan bailout forgiveness plan.
From FrontpageMag, Vice President Harris has an unknown language.
From Townhall, did you hear what the Secret Service said about drugs other than she-don't-lie found in the White House?
From The Washington Free Beacon, according to experts, an array of offshore bird choppers in New Jersey will raise electricity bills. (Since when have the backers of intermittent renewable energy been concerned about its costs?)
From the Washington Examiner, congresscritter Eli Crane (R-AZ) puts his foot into his mouth big time.
From The Federalist, leftists are lying about Senator Tommy Tuberville (R-AL) and "white nationalists".
From American Thinker, in defense of (believe it or not) First Son Hunter Biden.
From MRCTV, President Biden mobilizes military reserves to "defend NATO's eastern flank".
From NewsBusters, two hosts on The View claim that Republicans planted the she-don't-lie in the White House.
From Canada Free Press, while some allege that polar bears are in danger from climate change, their existence as a species is a result of climate change - which occurred 140,000 years ago.
From TeleSUR, a cyclone in Brazil leaves one person dead and 24 others injured.
From TCW Defending Freedom, under Prime Minister Rishi Sunak or Labour Party leader Keir Starmer, things can only get worse in the U.S.
From EuroNews, despite U.S. sanctions, Serbia denies any connection between its spy chief Aleksandar Vulin and Russia. (In other words, Vulin has his own "Russian collision" controversy.)
From Voice Of Europe, the European Commission files a lawsuit against Poland over its ban on pharmacy advertizing. (I would have a serious problem with unelected bureaucrats being able to file suits that could nullify laws created by my country's elected legislators.)
From ReMix, the Polish conservative governing party PiS faces a growing challenge from the right-wing Confederation party.
From Balkan Insight, Croatian opposition parliamentcritters quit over the handling of the "gas affair".
From The North Africa Post, a Tunisian court imposes a gag order on media reports on cases involving "plots against state security".
From The New Arab, as fighting in Sudan rages, the internet and mobile device service in the capital city of Khartoum are cut.
From Israel Hayom, according to Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, Israel has foiled 50 terror attacks ordered by Iran in recent years.
From Gatestone Institute, is Turkish President Erdoğan hoping to send 84 million Turks into Europe?
From The Stream, after Vatican II, the Catholic Church started supporting globalism and a world government.
From The Daily Signal, 13 examples of the 2nd Amendment being used in self-defense.
From The American Conservative, Bastille Day should be mourned, not celebrated.
From The Western Journal, Biden loses his cool while talking to a Finnish reporter.
From BizPac Review, former President Trump rejects the story on she-don't-lie in the White House. (We can only imagine the uproar which would have happened had that drug been found in the White House during Trump's presidency.)
From The Daily Wire, the House vote to block funding for military women seeking travel to get abortions.
From the Daily Caller, Senator Eric Schmitt demands that Education Secretary Miguel Cardona explain the Biden administration's legal authority for its latest student loan gambit.
From the New York Post, the strike by SAG-AFRA explained in 10 memes.
From Breitbart, presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy (R) claims that 4 out of 10 donations to his campaign are from "first-ever donors to the GOP in any form".
From Newsmax, Biden and the DNC have raised $72 million in campaign donations.
And from SFGate, pollen has turned the land around Lake Tahoe in California yellow.
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