On a very warm and mostly cloudy (with some rain) Friday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, hoping for the best and preparing for the worst from the upcoming summit between Presidents Trump (U.S.) and Putin (Russia).
From FrontpageMag, journalist Rachel Maddow imagines a dictatorship.
From Townhall, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals rules against California's "one-gun-per-month" law.
From The Washington Free Beacon, how big companies bankrolled a Qatari influence operation.
From the Washington Examiner, Border Czar Tom Homan explains the degree of cooperation between ICE and the Washington, D.C. police.
From The Federalist, emails released by Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard expose the fraud that sabotaged the 2018 meeting between the aforementioned Trump and Putin.
From American Thinker, election fraud and maintaining clean voter rolls.
From NewsBusters, CNN loses a pro-2nd Amendment contributor.
From Canada Free Press, Trump's actions in Washington, D.C. are not "weaponized anti-blackness". (Criminals who commit violent crime generally attack victims of their own race. This means that getting black criminals off the streets of D.C. would benefit the law-abiding black people there.)
From TeleSUR, Ecuadorians rally in the capital city of Quito to defend the judges on the country's Constitutional Court.
From TCW Defending Freedom, when a Tweet results in a harsher sentence than a rape does, free speech is strangled.
From EuroNews, a man is killed and other is injured in a shooting outside a mosque in Örebro, Sweden.
From ReMix, refugees in Austria are accused of deliberately failing German language courses in order to avoid low-paying jobs. (If you, allegedly unlike these refugees, read German, read the story at Kosmo.)
From Balkan Insight, clashes escalate between protesters and members of the governing Serbian Progressive Party, the latter protected by police.
From The North Africa Post, Morocco is close to acquiring 32 American F-35 fighter jets.
From The New Arab, according to Syria's interior ministry, remnants of the former government of President Bashar al-Assad attacked a Syrian army vehicle in the province of Latakia.
From The Jewish Chronicle, according to a report, Gazans could be resettled in Ethiopia, Libya, or South Sudan.
From Arutz Sheva, some questions about the "Palestinian state" that Europe wants to create.
From Gatestone Institute, Hamas has left Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu no choice but to occupy the Gaza Strip.
From The Stream, when Muslims tried and failed to take Constantinople, about 380 years before the Crusades started. (See this blog's archives from August 2013 for a related story.)
From The Daily Signal, congresscritter Jerry Nadler (D-NY) faces a young primary challenger.
From The American Conservative, what could go wrong in the aforementioned summit between Trump and Putin.
From The Western Journal, CNN anchor Abby Phillip's attempt to insult Trump as "Batman" instead makes him sound "cool".
From BizPac Review, a woman tells her story of being sexually assaulted in Washington, D.C. five years ago and the attack reportedly being covered up by the police.
From The Daily Wire and the "believe it or not" department, former First Lady/Senator (D-NY)/Secretary of State Hillary Clinton says that she'll nominate Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize if he ends the war between Russia and Ukraine.
From the Daily Caller, Washington, D.C. Attorney General Brian Schwalb (D) files a federal lawsuit against the Trump administration's takeover of the D.C. police force.
From the New York Post, the IDF sends another Hamas terrorist commander to his virgins.
From Breitbart, under the Trump administration's takeover of D.C., times for permitting and registering guns is reduced from months to days.
From Newsmax, according to FBI Director Kash Patel, 120 arrests have been made since the Trump administration's takeover of D.C.
And from Mediaite, ooops!
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