Friday, May 29, 2026

Friday Phenomena

On a warm and sunny Friday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, the online abortion pill business is like the wild west.

From FrontpageMag, "George Floyd Square" in Minneapolis has a gift shop, a restaurant, a bar, and a self-cleaning station for getting relief.

From Townhall, the White House isn't saying it's aliens, but.....

From The Washington Free Beacon, in a post that was later deleted, senatorial candidate Graham Platner (D-ME) questions whether there was an Armenian genocide.

From the Washington Examiner, Polish President Nawrocki moves to strip Ukrainian President Zelensky of the Order of the White Eagle, Poland's highest state honor.

From The Federalist, two lives upended by vindictive prosecutors show why the anti-weaponization fund is necessary.

From American Thinker, whom does New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani (D) support?

From NewsBusters, Pope Leo XIV needs President Trump to tame AI.

From Canada Free Press, the stuff found in the home of a CIA agent.

From TeleSUR, Ecuadorian scientists publish the results of 30 years of research on cedar trees.

From TCW Defending Freedom, why won't the U.K. police release their bodycam footage of the murder of Anglo-Polish man Henry Nowak?

From Snouts in the Trough, who are the greatest supporters of the "Manchester Messiah" Andrew Burnham?

From EuroNews, a Russian drone carrying explosives reportedly strikes an apartment building in GalaĊ£i, Romania.

From ReMix, according to new polling, French right-wing politician Marine Le Pen would defeat every major rival in a presidential runoff election if she become eligible to run next year.

From Balkan Insight, Bulgarian Prime Minister Rumen Radev bans U.S. military aircraft from refueling at the Vassil Levski Airport in Sofia, Bulgaria because the U.S. won't let Bulgarians visit without a visa.

From The North Africa Post, a Chinese medical technology company builds its first plant in Africa in Morocco.

From The New Arab, 27 civilians are killed in attacks by the Rapid Support Forces in the Sudanese state of North Kordofan.

From the Daily Mail, British authorities decide against giving two brothers accused of assaulting a police officer at Manchester Airport a third trial.

From Afghanistan International, the U.N. confirms that Taliban officials and fighters have committed sexual violence against Afghan women.

From Gatestone Institute, the Muslim Brotherhood's efforts to destroy the U.S. from within, Part I: the jihad in Texas.

From The Daily Signal, how the IRS is taking on the networks that might be funding ProFa.

From The American Conservative, Prime Minister "two-tier" Keir Starmer divides the United Kingdom.

From The Western Journal, congresscritter Frederica Wilson (D-FL) abruptly decides against running for reelection.

From BizPac Review, Trump announces that a "final determination" is underway to secure a peace deal with Iran.

From the Daily Caller, an ICE agent is arrested over a non-fatal shooting in Minnesota.

From the New York Post, a South Carolina man suspected of killing a hospital worker in 2001 kills himself after being questioned about the case by police.

From Breitbart, U.S. Customs and Border Protection stop an attempt to smuggle $1.1 million worth of she-don't-lie into Texas.

From Newsmax, according to former U.S. Ambassador to NATO Kay Bailey Hutchison, the proposed peace deal with Iran is a "good beginning".

And from SFGate, a record-breaking amount of rain in San Francisco could push back the start of peak fire season in California.

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