As the warm and sunny weather continues on a Tuesday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, Los Angeles mayoral candidate Spencer Pratt's (R) first big test.
From FrontpageMag, everyone starts walking back their 2030 "emissions" pledges.
From Townhall, Senator John Fetterman (D-PA) slams senatorial candidate Graham Platner (D-ME) over explicit text messages.
From The Washington Examiner, Platner's top campaign strategist admits sharing explicit pictures of himself and is accused to threatening women who exposed Platner's texting past. (I'm sure that lots of feminists, especially the "believe all women" crowd, will soon start denouncing Platner. Yes, I know. When Democrats do such things, the real evil is when a non-Democrat points it out. Never mind.)
From the Washington Examiner, WE columnist Joe Concha blasts The View for its "blue no matter who" mentality. (Concha is not the author of the article.)
From The Federalist, "Pride Month" is proof that institutions are not neutral. (When are the months for the other six deadly sins?)
From American Thinker, President Trump's crackdown on fraud is "America First" for the upcoming midterms.
From NewsBusters, Senator Mike Lee (R-UT) mocks Washington, D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser's (D) claims that her city is the world's "gayest" and will become the "51st state".
From Canada Free Press, violence from the left is "par for the course".
From TeleSUR, Bolivians gather in the city of El Alto to demand the resignation of President Rodrigo Paz.
From TCW Defending Freedom, the sickening footage of Polish-British student Henry Nowak as he was dying shows how twisted the U.K. police have become.
From Snouts in the Trough, an urgent appeal for money by Unicef UK.
From EuroNews, how drone incursions in Europe went from rare to all too common.
From ReMix, exposing the U.K.'s migrant grooming gang scandal. (Reader discretion is advised.)
From Balkan Insight, seven Greek parliamentcritters from the left-wing party Nea Aristera quit, leaving it without a parliamentary group.
From The North Africa Post, the separatist group Polisario is excluded from the Korea-Africa ministerial meeting in Seoul, South Korea.
From The New Arab, which countries in the Middle East and North Africa have nuclear programs?
From Arutz Sheva, Mayor Zohran Mamdani (D) claims to be "offended" by the participation of several Israeli government officials in New York City's Israel Day Parade. (Genuine Israelis should not participate is a parade that honors Israel?)
From Jewish News Syndicate, Hezbollah's ceasefire against Israel lasts about three hours.
From Palestinian Media Watch, Palestinian Authority TV broadcasts a call to kill the Jews.
From Gatestone Institute, the E.U. sanctions Israel and welcomes the Taliban.
From The Daily Signal, Congress investigates the effects of California's sanctuary policies.
From Radio Free Asia, the Chinese government bans families of the victims of the Tianenmen Square massacre from visiting their graves. (If you read Mandarin, read the Mandarin version of the story here.)
From The American Conservative, some disturbing links between the wars in Ukraine and Iran.
From The Western Journal, Trump chooses an acting Director of National Intelligence to succeed Tulsi Gabbard.
From BizPac Review, left-wing comedian Bill Maher can't stop praising the aforementioned Spencer Pratt.
From the Daily Caller, although Trump claims that congresscritter Tom Kean Jr. (R-NJ) has been "working tirelessly", he has missed 100 floor votes since March.
From the New York Post, a fake store in San Diego had an entrance to a tunnel to Tijuana, Mexico.
From Breitbart, the Spanish government claims that migrants are "healthier" than Spanish citizens.
And from the Genesius Times, a statue of former President Obama performing an abortion on the Statue of Liberty is unveiled at his presidential library.
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