On a warm partly sunny Monday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, why the movie Barbie didn't undergo the same anti-woke backlash that Bud Light did.
From FrontpageMag, the Southern Poverty Law Center shows off its double standards.
From Townhall, things looking worse for the Bidens - and the FBI.
From The Washington Free Beacon, the Biden administration gives a group backed by leftist billionaire George Soros to teach young men in Puerto Rico about "toxic masculinities".
From the Washington Examiner, why the group No Labels threatens Democrats in the 2024 election.
From The Federalist, there is more evidence to impeach President Biden than there ever was to impeach then-President Trump.
From American Thinker, the real story of election interference in Michigan.
From MRCTV, singer Jason Aldean doesn't back down.
From NewsBusters, The Washington Post is on its way to losing $100 million this year.
From Canada Free Press, the Biden administration's war on consumers.
From TeleSUR, descendants of immigrants from Russia, Belarus and Ukraine keep their culture alive in Argentina.
From TCW Defending Freedom, welcome to England and your all-inclusive cabin.
From the Daily Mail, Muslim cleric Anjem Choudary is charged with three terror-related offenses, including directing a terrorist group.
From EuroNews, Spain's parliamentary election results in gridlock.
From Voice Of Europe, the Czech Republic needs workers.
From Reuters, 62 people are arrested in a crackdown by Europol and Interpol against human trafficking. (via Voice Of Europe)
From ReMix, members of the right-wing Austrian party FPÖ oppose the E.U.'s "scandalous" plan to increase funding for Ukraine.
From Balkan Insight, firefighters continue to battle wildfires in Greece. (I've said this before but it might bear repeating. Since Greece has many archaeological sites such as ancient theaters, many located in forested areas, could someone get in trouble for yelling "theater!" in a crowded fire?)
From The North Africa Post, the International Center for Research on the Prevention of Child Soldiers strongly condemns the recruitment of child soldiers in the Tindouf camps in Algeria.
From The New Arab, the Jordanian army shoots down a drone carrying crystal meth from Syria.
From Khaama Press, former Afghani President Hamid Karzai and E.U. envoy Raffaella Lodice discuss education for women and girls in Afghanistan.
From Hasht e Subh, a man in Herat, Afghanistan is beaten and detained, allegedly because his wife was wearing the wrong type of coat.
From the Afghanistan Times, farmers in Afghanistan struggle due to the Taliban's ban on growing opium.
From The Express Tribune, on the other hand, the party Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz has named its candidate for caretaker prime minister.
From Pakistan Today, a 14-year-old domestic worker is allegedly tortured by the wife of judge in Islamabad, Pakistan.
From Swarajya, the Waqf Board in the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh declares Ahmaddiyas to be non-Muslim.
From The Hans India, according to rice exporters in the Indian state of Telangana, the U.S. has enough rice.
From the Hindustan Times, a 108-foot-high statue of the Hindu deity Ram will be built in Kurnool, Andhra Pradesh, India.
From ANI, the Indian federal government with draws a bill on DNA technology and introduces three new bills.
From India Today, what American physicist J Robert Oppenheimer did when Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru offered him Indian citizenship.
From the Dhaka Tribune, Bangladeshi Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina calls for a climate-smart agri-food revolution.
From New Age, Bangladeshi intellectuals predict political conflict.
From Gatestone Institute, speaking to the American Congress, Israeli President Isaac Herzog delivers a message of hope.
From The Stream, the same leftists who called Trump a "dictator" call on Biden to act like one.
From The Daily Signal, according to a conservative group launched by former Vice President Pence, the Supreme Court should strike down the Chevron Deference.
From The American Conservative, illiberalism in Ukraine and in the U.S.
From The Western Journal, congresscritter Thomas Massie (R-KY) has the perfect response to the Biden administration's latest green energy push.
From BizPac Review, a restaurant in California attempts to make its workers confess their workplace "sins" to a priest, and gets fined by a secular authority.
From The Daily Wire, Hunter Biden's best friend will testify that Hunter had his father Joe on the phone multiple times when talking to foreign business partners.
From the Daily Caller, the IRS will no longer send armed agents to the homes of taxpayers unannounced.
From the New York Post, police discover a "massive" walk-in vault while searching the home of the suspect in the Gilgo Beach murders.
From Breitbart, according to a poll, a quarter of democrats have doubts about President Biden's mental fitness.
From Newsmax, the athletic apparel company Adidas gets $565 million in orders for 4 million pairs of unsold Yeezy shoes.
And from The Babylon Bee, the Chief Twit rebrands Twitter as X, after rejecting a different proposed name change.
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