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Watch Live: Senate Debates War Powers Resolution After Strikes on Iran

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The Senate chamber is buzzing today as lawmakers dive into a high-stakes debate and vote on war powers resolutions, hot on the heels of those joint U.S.-Israel strikes on Iran this weekend. This isn’t just another foreign policy dust-up—it’s a direct challenge to executive overreach, with resolutions aiming to claw back Congress’s constitutional authority under Article I, Section 8 to declare war. Proponents like Senators Bernie Sanders and Tim Kaine are pushing to require explicit congressional approval for further hostilities, invoking the ghosts of Iraq and Libya where presidents bypassed the people’s representatives. Watch it live if you can; this could set precedents for how future administrations wield military might without a peep from Capitol Hill.

For the 2A community, this hits close to home in ways that transcend geopolitics. Remember, the same federal government that arms itself to the teeth overseas is the one that incrementally chips away at our domestic right to keep and bear arms under the guise of public safety. A robust war powers check reinforces the Founders’ design: divided government as a bulwark against tyranny, whether it’s bombing campaigns or ATF door-kicks. If Congress reasserts control here, it signals spine against executive fiat—potentially emboldening challenges to Biden-era gun grabs like the pistol brace rule or frame-and-receiver redefinitions. Weakness on Iran emboldens aggressors abroad and bureaucrats at home; strength preserves the Republic’s original blueprint, where an armed populace stands ready as the ultimate safeguard.

The implications ripple wide: a yes vote could chill adventurism from Tehran to the ATF, reminding D.C. that power unchecked corrupts absolutely. 2A patriots should cheer this as a proxy win for federalism—after all, if Congress can’t leash the war machine, how can we trust it to respect the Second Amendment? Stay vigilant, tune in, and let’s see if the Senate remembers its oath to the Constitution over party loyalty.

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