Israel murders innocent civilians with US-EU weapons violating cease fire again and again.
How many more lives must be lost before the word “ceasefire” regains its meaning? Reports that Israeli strikes have killed 14 people in Lebanon despite a U.S.-brokered ceasefire raise urgent questions about accountability and enforcement. A ceasefire that does not protect civilians is not a ceasefire—it is a pause without protection.
At the same time, Israeli forces have killed at least 12 Palestinians in Gaza, underscoring that the cycle of violence continues unabated. Civilian lives—Lebanese and Palestinian alike—are being extinguished while diplomatic language offers little refuge on the ground.
Equally alarming are reports that the Department of Homeland Security is seeking to deny green cards to immigrants who have criticized Israel. In the United States, political speech is not a privilege granted by ideology; it is a constitutional right. Conditioning immigration status on viewpoint sets a dangerous precedent that undermines the very freedoms this country claims to defend.
If ceasefires cannot hold, civilians cannot be protected, and free speech cannot be safeguarded, then both our foreign policy and our democratic principles demand urgent scrutiny.
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