On a warm and cloudy Monday, when we pay tribute to those who gave their final measure of devotion, here are some things going on:
From National Review, Memorial Day at America's 250th year.
From FrontpageMag, the red-pilling of Monty Python actor John Cleese.
From Townhall, according to an opinion column, the 2028 Republican presidential nominee will probably be Vice President Vance.
From The Washington Free Beacon, TWFB wishes its readers a "happy Memorial Day". (However, there are reasons why you shouldn't put it that way.)
From the Washington Examiner, Pope Leo XIV calls for the regulation of AI.
From The Federalist, according to the Department of Justice, the Yale School of Medicine, by its own admission, discriminates against white and Asian applicants.
From American Thinker, the facts about President Trump's anti-weaponization fund.
From NewsBusters, MS NOW attacks the Pentagon over alleged war crimes.
From Canada Free Press, the greatest proof of God's existence is sin.
From TeleSUR, Mexico is willing to host Iran's national soccer team during the World Cup, to allow them to play in the U.S.
From TCW Defending Freedom, why the U.K. must not let anyone destroy its jury system.
From EuroNews, Russia tells diplomats and foreign residents to get out of Kyiv, Ukraine.
From Balkan Insight, admirers of the late Yugoslavian strongman Josip Broz Tito pay their annual tribute to him in Belgrade, Serbia.
From The North Africa Post, almost 80 Moroccan companies receive their first "Made in Morocco" labels.
From The New Arab, according to the Iraqi Observatory for Human Rights, about 400 people died in Iraqi prisons during 2025.
From Jewish News Syndicate, U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio slams Iran for sending money to Hamas "rapists and murderers".
From The Jerusalem Post, a Gaza flotilla participant admits that its main goal was not humanitarian aid but engaging the IDF.
From Pajamas Media, the classic film The Great Escape, and Islam.
From Gatestone Institute, Islamic terrorists conquer western Africa.
From The Daily Signal, according to an opinion column, some of the American military dead have often been forgotten.
From The American Conservative, the right needs to be realistic about AI.
From The Western Journal, more disastrous comments resurface from senatorial candidate Graham Platner (D-ME).
From the Daily Caller, how Texas and the federal Department of Justice won a victory against the sex-change industry.
From the New York Post, The Mandalorian and Grogu has the weakest debut of Disney-era Star Wars movies, opening below 2018's Solo: A Star Wars Story.
From Breitbart, a Jewish charity leader decides to leave the U.K. due to rising antisemitism.
And from Newsmax, some Republican Senators refuse money from the aforementioned anti-weaponization fund.
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