I have some bad news - buried in the appropriations bill being voted on this week is a terrible new gun policy rider that significantly rolls back the firearms background check system.
1/ You need to know about this - it’s bad enough that I will vote against the entire bill.
2/ Republicans (and one or two Democrats) pushed for the new rider that allows, for the first time in 30 years, veterans judged by the VA to be mentally incompetent to buy guns.
These are very very mentally ill veterans - those at the highest risk of suicide.
3/ I can’t sugarcoat this: this provision - which could result in 20,000 new seriously mentally ill individuals being able to buy guns each year - will be a death sentence for many.
It’s unacceptable this provision was pushed by Republicans. Democrats shouldn’t have acquiesced.
4/ I voted for this appropriations bill when it cleared the Senate, hopeful I could later eliminate or modify the provision.
I was unsuccessful and now I cannot vote for final passage. Not with this many lives in the balance.
5/ The gun safety movement wins more than we lose now. The 2022 gun bill, which led to a historic 12% on year reduction in urban violence, is proof of our strength. More wins are ahead.
But this setback is evidence that we must stay vigilant. Maybe we let our guard down here.
6/ I’m voting no because I do not accept a return to a time when the gun lobby could bury gun riders in appropriations bills (which happened frequently before Sandy Hook).
This cannot happen again. And it won’t. If we keep organizing and growing.
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Minutes ago, the text of the bipartisan national security funding bill was released. It:
-funds Ukraine, Israel, and humanitarian relief
-secures our border and reforms our asylum law
1/ As the co-author of the immigration provisions, here's a THREAD on the key elements:
2/ First - it would be easy to just keep immigration and border policy as a political cudgel for another 40 years. But politics at its best is about finding bipartisan compromise on the toughest issues. That's what we've done here.
Here's a snapshot of what's in the bill.
3/ A quicker, fairer asylum process. No more 10 yr wait. Claims processed in a non-detained, non-adversarial way in 6 months.
A slightly higher asylum screening standard at the border.
Also, no more waiting for work permits. Most asylum seekers can work immediately.
I support Israel in its mission to seek justice for the worst terrorist attack in their history.
1/ That means providing funding and weapons. But it also means making sure they don't repeat our mistakes in Afghanistan when we invaded after our nation's worst terrorist attack.
2/ We were too permissive of civilian casualties, and we did not understand that our operations were creating two Taliban recruits for everyone we eliminated.
You cannot defeat a movement if you are constantly providing it bulletin board material for recruitment efforts.
3/ War planning is not complete without a realistic endgame.
Shutting down all ungovernable space, creating a western style Afghan democracy, and killing every Taliban member were not realistic goals. Had we admitted this at the start, our war plan would have been different.
The UAW fight is so important because it strikes at the heart of America's spiritual crisis.
The hollowing out of workers' economic power has been devastating for American families. So many people feel not in control of their lives, because they work so hard and get so little.
Both parents work. Child care is outsourced to strangers. There's not enough money coming in to do anything other than pay the bills. No vacations. No college savings. One big medical bill away from insolvency. No breathing room.
It's an exhausting existence.
And all the while, these families watch the mega-rich, including the executives at the companies they work for, get richer. They know that the system is rigged against them. And the anxiety and anger that was already there boils over.
2/ Conversation, composition, creativity, discovery, in person connection - these are the things that make us human and fill our lives with meaning and value.
What happens when AI writes our e-mails, composes our music, creates our art? What happens as machines replace teachers?
3/ I know it's not black and white. I know there are huge benefits to AI and machine learning. Yes, AI could enhance our creativity, make our composition better, help us find new friends, improve educational experience.
2/ Only people "engaged in the business" of selling firearms have to conduct background checks on buyers. In the era of gun shows and , with thousands of part time sellers making big profits off selling guns, the pre-internet definition had become outdated.armslist.com
3/ The 2022 Bipartisan Safer Communities Act changed the definition of "engaged in the business" to clarify that selling guns didn't need to be your "livelihood". You just had to be selling guns in order to make a profit.
It was a big, important - but largely unnoticed - change.
1/ It’s useful to explain why, bc this critique hits all the highlights of the neocon, Iran hawk, anti-diplomacy argument (the policy that keeps failing)
2/ For the last time, it’s so hacky to say it’s a “ransom”. It’s not. The fact that Iran is our enemy doesn’t change the law. And the law says the $6B is Iran’s money that we were holding.
And it can only be used to buy oil and food for people in need.
3/ Even worse, it’s just made up to suggest the $3B from Iraq is a “cash payment” for hostages. It’s a commercial debt Iraq owes for Iran for energy imports. Iraq has to pay it. Even Trump authorized these transactions bc he knew Iraq can’t exist without Iranian energy.