Seattle’s Link Light Rail service was suspended after a driver somehow ended up on the tracks at Mount Baker Station, an elevated platform roughly 30 feet above street level.
Here is a clip of Nashua Town Hall on Chinese Nongfu Spring & Daniel Webster College purchases.
It was a well-attended NH style Town Hall where the concerned citizens come together across the party line to discuss the issues & offer solutions.
Watch here: https://t.co/7xcl8UOboM
CALL TO ACTION: Tell your House Rep to Remove Military Collaboration with Israel from this Year’s Defense Bill
❌ Section 224: US-Israel Defense Technology Cooperation
CALL YOUR HOUSE REP: 202-224-3121
SIGN THE LETTER: Link in 2nd Post
Members of Congress concerned about U.S. interests, regional stability, and democratic accountability should act now.
The first step is simple:
Reject Section 224 from the NDAA.
Stop the U.S.-Israel military-industrial merger before it starts.
And the timing could not be worse.
Israel has repeatedly used U.S. weapons in Gaza in ways that human rights groups and journalists have linked to violations of international humanitarian law.
This is not the moment to deepen integration with Israel’s military.
That disconnect is striking:
The public is asking for more restraint and accountability with Israel.
Congress is proposing deeper, less transparent military integration.
That’s not democracy. That’s the military-industrial complex doing what it does best.
All of this is happening while the American public is increasingly skeptical of unconditional support for Israel.
A recent poll found just 16% of Americans support continuing to supply Israel with weapons without new restrictions.
We’ve already seen Israeli defense production footprints in places like Mississippi and Arkansas.
Section 224 could turbocharge that model — making the Israeli military-industrial base even more embedded in U.S. politics.
It would also create powerful new political incentives inside the U.S.
If Israeli defense firms expand co-production facilities here, they can claim to create jobs in congressional districts — and gain more allies in Congress.
That’s how military-industrial influence grows.
That shift matters A LOT.
Traditional military aid is at least somewhat visible and politically accountable.
But moving the relationship into defense acquisition, co-production, and joint tech development risks pushing it further into the shadows.
The U.S. already gives Israel extraordinary military support.
Israel has received more than $200 billion in inflation-adjusted U.S. military assistance since 1948.
But Section 224 would mark a shift from aid to integration.
One of the most alarming phrases in the bill: “network integration” and “data fusion.”
Put plainly, the U.S. military’s data could soon be the Israeli military’s data.
That is not normal defense cooperation. That is something much deeper.
We’re talking bilateral R&D, weapons co-production & deep defense-tech integration. It also names emerging technologies like AI, quantum, autonomous systems, directed energy, cyber, biotech, and more. In other words: the battlefields of the future.
Buried in the House’s 2027 NDAA is Section 224: the “United States-Israel Defense Technology Cooperation Initiative," which would dramatically expand U.S.-Israel military cooperation far beyond the current aid model.
"At a time when the American public is expressing unprecedented levels of distrust in the Israeli government, Congress just proposed tying the U.S. to the Israeli military more than ever before."
Here's the story: 🧵
Section 224 of the 2027 NDAA - National Defense Authorization Act integrates the U.S. military with the Israeli military.
This is what complete capture to a foreign government looks like and there hasn’t been a single shot fired.