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Space War? Please No

So the Pentagon is concerned about the fact that other nation-states aren’t simply surrendering to American hegemony on account of our threat to nuclear bomb them three times as much into oblivion as they will bomb us into oblivion?  America builds a robust first-strike force, so Russia makes a couple hypersonic missiles to sort of kind of maintain Mutually Assured Destruction?  Now the Pentagon is calling it a “space war”?

How about just not messing up space with so much debris that we can never get up there ever again?  Forget having a future (not to mention a present).

How about admitting that MAD is a thing, and total spectrum dominance, total hegemony, aren’t going to happen?  America might have to pay the market price of Tungsten.  Our dysfunctional social, economic, and political front domestically might need actual reforms.  We might actually have to compete with other nations on a fair playing field.  Imagine that!

Nah!  More battlefields, more weapons, more money, more general officer positions to be filled.  Omnicide is someone else’s problem, right?  Dante, you may have to open up a new, deeper circle of hell.

This Week in Congress Wrap-Up

This Week in Congress Wrap-Up

Here is the roll-call vote on S.J.Res. 7, the resolution calling on the U.S. to end involvement in the Yemen Civil War. The vote was 247-176. Every Democrat plus 15 Republicans voted for the bill. Representative Justin Amash (MI-03) voted “present” because he objected to the use of the War Powers Act to bring the bill to the floor.

Amash and Thomas Massie (KY-04) were the only Republicans to vote against a Republican motion to recommit, which added language allowing states to refuse to do business with supporters of the boycott, sanctions, and disinvestment movement. This represents an attempt to use government power to silence critics of U.S. policy toward Israel.

Five Democrats joined very other Republican in voting for the motion.

They are:

Josh Gottheimer (NJ-05)

Jefferson Van Drew (NJ-02)

Anthony Brindisi (NY-22)

Joe Cunnigham (SC-01)

Elaine Luria (VA-02)

One-Hundred and Fifty-Eight Republicans voted against reauthorization of the Violence Against Women Act. Most Republicans opposed it because of provisions examining the bill’s language denying certain individuals from owning firearms.

One Democrat, Collin Peterson (MN-07), voted against the bill.

Here is the roll-call vote.

Peterson was also the lone Democrat to vote “no” on H.Res 271, the resolution condemning President Trump for fronting the effort to repeal ObamaCare.

Also last week, only 24 Republicans voted against H.R. 1616, which commits the U.S. government to make Europe independent of energy from Russia.

You can see that vote here.

Eight Republicans voted for the resolution. They are:

Brian Fitzpatrick (PA-01)

John Katko (NY-24)

Tom Reed (NY-23)

Denver Riggleman (VA-05)

Chris Smith (NJ-04)

Pete Stauber (MN-08)

Elise Stefanik  (NY-21)

Fred Upton (MI-06)

Only eighteen representatives voted against H.R. 1593, which establishes a “school security council” in the Department of Homeland Security, furthering federal intrusion into public education and leading to (further) violations of student rights.

You can view that vote here.

Last week, 14 Republicans voted to overturn President Trump’s veto of the resolution overturning his emergency declaration at the border. You can see that vote here.

Republished from campaignforliberty.org.

Julian Assange ‘Arrested’ by UK, Extradition to US Imminent

Update: U.S. indictment here.

Update: The DoJ press release makes it clear he’s only being accused of journalism. The NYT has no choice but to defend him now, the rat bastards.

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