On a warm partly sunny Friday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, the investigation of First Son Hunter Biden yields some "jaw-dropping" revelations.
From FrontpageMag, a self-identified Jewess defends presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (D).
From Townhall, guess where President Biden's former communications director found her new job.
From The Washington Free Beacon, a group of right-wingers meets to define "freedom conservatism".
From the Washington Examiner, how Democrats will try to outlaw your car.
From The Federalist, why the left attacks the movie Sound of Freedom.
From American Thinker, a new study shows that Greenland at one time really was green.
From MRCTV, a pitcher who made a "homophobic" Tweet refuses to renounce his beliefs in order to return to Major League Baseball.
From NewsBusters, the media go Sgt. Schultz on covering bribery allegedly coerced the Biden family.
From Canada Free Press, will history be preserved or purged?
From TeleSUR, Colombian President Gustavo Petro proposes a national agreement to move his country forward.
From TCW Defending Freedom, more "infernal nonsense" from the climate fearmongers.
From Snouts in the Trough, British journalist Justin Rowlatt needs to understand that it still isn't hot.
From EuroNews, Spain could undergo some major economic and social changes if its conservatives win the upcoming election.
From Voice Of Europe, according to Polish retired General Leon Komornicki, the Ukrainian counteroffensive is a myth. (If you read Polish better than I do, read the story at Do Rzeczy.)
From ReMix, Germany sees its lowest birth rate in 10 years.
From Balkan Insight, two Bosnians are jailed for covering up evidence pertaining to an unexplained death.
From The North Africa Post, Burkina Faso fights terrorism by raising taxes.
From The New Arab, Saudi Arabia will reportedly allow an Israeli delegation to attend a UNESCO meeting in its capital of Riyadh.
From Arutz Sheva, hundreds of Israeli Air Force reserve pilots intend to not report for reserve duty in response to proposed judicial reforms.
From The Times Of Israel, thousands of demonstrators in Israel continue marching toward Jerusalem to protest against proposed judicial reforms.
From The Jerusalem Post, Israel's proposed judicial reform hits another inflection point with its reasonableness standard bill.
From YNetNews, the complex legacy of Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir.
From the Egypt Independent, Egypt refunds the permit money to U.S. rapper Travis Scott after canceling his concert which was set to be put on in front of the pyramids in Giza.
From Egypt Today, according to European Bank for Reconstruction and Development official Maya Hennerkes, Egypt is on the right track for a green and sustainable energy transition.
From the Ethiopian Monitor, the World Bank approves a $730 million project to upgrade the corridor between Addis-Ababa, Ethiopia and Djibouti.
From the Saudi Gazette, 17 manipulators and five investors in Saudi Arabia are ordered to pay back money gained illegally.
From DohaNews, Qatar summons the ambassador from Sweden over attacks on the Koran.
From RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty, Iranian activists urge U.N. human rights commissioner Volker Turk to intervene in order to stop the execution of boxer Mohammad Javad Vafaei Sani.
From IranWire, Iranian Sunni cleric Molavi Abdulhamid denounces "coercive measures" against women who don't wear hijabs.
From Iran International, Iranian officials pass the buck over the return of the hijab police.
From News18, three daughters of a Pakistani Hindu businessman are forcibly converted to Islam and married to Muslim men.
From Gatestone Institute, Turkish President Erdoğan's new spymasters.
From The Stream, five serious conversations to have with your child to prepare him or her for college.
From The Daily Signal, a Harvard law school professor forgets why judicial review exists.
From The American Conservative, Canada offers work permits to holders of H-1B visas in the U.S.
From The Western Journal, left-wing elites tell Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas that he's doing a "wonderful job" as 40 percent of released illegal aliens go missing.
From BizPac Review, Vice President Harris mischaracterizes Florida's education about slavery.
From The Daily Wire, Republican Senators tear into Biden's "open border policies" and his alleged lack of caring about 85,000 missing kids.
From the Daily Caller, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg's social media platform Threads continues to crash in popularity.
From the New York Post, how to watch the U.S. women's national soccer team in their World Cup opener against Vietnam.
From Breitbart, transgender HHS officials Rachel Levine warns against "wrong puberty".
From Newsmax, former FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried is accused of witness tampering.
And from Variety, pop singer Tony Bennett dies at age 96.
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