SENATE JUST SHOCKED TRUMP 79-18!

The chamber fell silent before the numbers flashed on the screen. Bernie Sanders lost, and the bombs will keep flowing. A $20 billion arms deal to Israel survived by a crushing margin, even as images of Gaza’s ruins flood the world. Some called it security. Others called it complicity. The vote split the country, exposed Congress, and left one question burning: when does “allyship” become enabling? As civilian deaths rise past 43,000, Sanders’ warning about U.S. law and moral responsibility hangs in the air, unanswered, unfinished, and unbearably urgen

The defeat of Sanders’ resolutions was decisive, but the unease they surfaced will not fade quickly. By insisting that Congress confront the human cost of U.S.-supplied weapons, he forced senators to go on record: not just about Israel, but about how far America will go in the name of partnership and power. Supporters of the sale framed it as a lifeline to a vital ally under threat. Opponents saw a blank check for a war already defined by staggering civilian loss and shattered neighborhoods.

What remains is a deepening fracture between the language of values and the reality of policy. The vote preserved the arms deal, yet amplified a national reckoning over complicity, law, and conscience. In the end, Sanders did not stop the weapons. He did something harder to reverse: he made it impossible to say, “We didn’t know.”

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