• Cyrus Draegur
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    156 months ago

    BUT HOW ARE THEY GOING TO PAY FOR IT

    funny how that question only fucking matters when it’s about something that might actually help actual American citizens -_-

    • auth
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      6 months ago

      they are going to print money but either way its fucked up… why help Israel kill citizens…

  • Nster908
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    136 months ago

    Really wish we would stay out of this war and use that money for something here.

    • @GreyEyedGhost@lemmy.ca
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      6 months ago

      I’m not sure where you think the money goes, but buying munitions from American companies and shipping them elsewhere doesn’t take money out of the country. Moreover, this is probably a handy way to get rid of old military stockpiles. “Here, have these last-gen rockets. They cost $x. Meanwhile, we will buy current-gen rockets for $x for ourselves. And now we can (rightly) say we donated $x to the war.”

      Whoops, didn’t see this was for Israel. While I don’t agree with their stance, the financial principles still apply.

  • btaf45
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    6 months ago

    Complete waste of time. Senate waste pass idiotic bill. Biden wont’ sign idiotic bill. The could have played video games and been just as productive. An actual bill must include aid to Ukraine and Gaza as well. And not include an unrelated ploy to make it easy for billionaire elites to cheat on taxes.

  • AutoTL;DRB
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    06 months ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    And it provided a preview of how Johnson — the mild-mannered Louisiana lawmaker who skyrocketed to the Speakership amid GOP chaos — plans to steer the House through a number of legislative lifts in the weeks and months to come.

    Johnson’s decision to isolate the Israel funding — and marry it to IRS cuts — was an olive branch to conservatives wary of deficits and overseas spending, and it united virtually all of his conference.

    From the White House, President Biden is pushing a much larger $106 billion emergency aid package that features funding for Israel, Ukraine, border security and allies in the Indo-Pacific.

    House Republicans’ measure pairs the $14.3 billion in foreign aid with the same amount in cuts to IRS funding that was approved in the Democrats’ marquee spending bill — dubbed the Inflation Reduction Act — last year.

    Hamas’s attack on Israel last month has highlighted the long-established Democratic divisions over Middle East policy, pitting pro-Israel lawmakers, who are supportive of the nation’s efforts to defend itself, against pro-Palestinian liberals, who have charged Israeli leaders with human rights abuses and war crimes in Gaza.

    Johnson, for his part, rejected the notion that he tied the Israel aid to spending cuts as a political play, insisting that the move was intended to “get back to the principle of fiscal responsibility.”


    The original article contains 900 words, the summary contains 220 words. Saved 76%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!