On a warm and cloudy Wednesday, here are some things going on:
From National Review, California's regulations drive another business away.
From FrontpageMag, George Orwell's Animal Farm celebrates its 80th birthday.
From Townhall, there's an update on the crash by an illegal alien truck driver in Florida that will [bleep] you off.
From The Washington Free Beacon, according to a lawsuit filed by a Washington, D.C. police sergeant, D.C. police misclassified some deaths as "accidental" to bring down the number of murders.
From the Washington Examiner, a federal judge rules against a Texas law that requires the Ten Commandments to be displayed in public schools.
From The Federalist, the left gets [bleep]ed as President Trump wants immigrants to be pro-America.
From American Thinker, California Governor Gavin Newsom (D) seems to think that some things are OK when Democrats do it.
From NewsBusters, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt takes the media to the cleaners for their opposition to Trump's actions in D.C. and his peace talks over Russia and Ukraine.
From Canada Free Press, Trump practices pragmatic diplomacy while the U.N. speaks hollow rhetoric.
From TeleSUR, an Argentine judge ends a civil case against former President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner.
From TCW Defending Freedom, a film gives a voice to the censored and vilified victims of coronavirus vaccines.
From EuroNews, a Russian drone crashes and explodes in a cornfield in eastern Poland.
From ReMix, Germans invade the Polish city of Wrocław. (Germans and Russians have both been pestering Poland for a very long time. If you read Polish, read the story at wPolityce.)
From Balkan Insight, Kosovo parliamentcritters again fail to elect a speaker.
From The North Africa Post, Morocco becomes the U.K.'s top supplier of blueberries.
From The New Arab, Syria arrests a former security officer for alleged war crimes in the province of Hama.
From Arutz Sheva, the grave of the biblical figure Elazar the Priest in Awarta, Samaria (West Bank) is desecrated with Arabic graffiti. (His name is also spelled "Eleazar". He was a son of the priest Aaron, the brother of Moses.)
From The Jerusalem Post, a massacre of Christians in the Democratic Republic of the Congo shows the rising influence of ISIS in central Africa.
From Gatestone Institute, against trying to reach a "deal" with Russia.
From The Stream, on today's date in 636 AD, Islam started to swallow up Christendom.
From The Daily Signal, Vice President Vance encounters anti-Israel protesters at Union Station in Washington, D.C.
From The American Conservative, the sentence given to the man who fatally stabbed four University of Idaho students is worse than death.
From The Western Journal, Governor J.B. Pritzker (D-IL) is accused of betraying Illinois citizens by signing a bill to give illegal aliens financial aid to attend college.
From BizPac Review, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem unveils the illegal alien detention center "Cornhusker Clink" in Nebraska, and helps paint a section of the border wall black. (Will the "Cornhusker Clink" have pictures of this guy? Perhaps singer Mick Jagger will approve of Noem's painting.)
From The Daily Wire, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard moves to reduce the size of her office by nearly 50 percent.
From the Daily Caller, Senator Amy Klobuchar (D-Min) doesn't appreciate a fake video of her opining on American Eagle's jeans ad with actress Sydney Sweeney.
From the New York Post, former President Obama comes out in favor with the aforementioned Gavin Newsom's redistricting plan for California.
From Breitbart, ICE arrests of illegal aliens in Georgia increase by 367 percent.
From Newsmax, Senator and former football coach Tommy Tuberville (R-Ala) rails against the Minnesota Vikings male cheerleaders.
And from the Genesius Times, London Mayor Sadiq Khan bans "assault bacon".