Defense Bill Passes Senate Without Big Tech Regulations, Trump Still Threatening Veto

With all that’s going on in the world, it’s good to see the government is still capable of remembering what’s most important.

RT:

The annual Department of Defense funding bill passed the Senate on Friday despite facing Republican-led opposition. It includes sanctions on the Nord Stream 2 pipeline and on Turkey, for its acquisition of S-400 missiles.

The $740-billion legislation previously passed the House of Representatives, with 40 Republicans opposing the effort.

Sen. Rand Paul (R-Kentucky) was particularly critical of the bill, specifically an amendment stating that American troops cannot be withdrawn from Afghanistan without congressional approval, a move, he stated, that promotes “perpetual war.”

President Donald Trump has been critical of other aspects of the bill. He has stated it should include a repeal of Section 230, which legally protects social media companies by labeling them third-party publishers, for “national security purposes.” He also wants the bill to more firmly allow for the withdrawal of troops overseas.

The president has promised to veto the legislation, and he has 10 days to do so. If he chooses to, it will go back to the House of Representatives and the Senate. It will require two-thirds support from both to override the veto and become law.

Passing in the Senate with a 84-13 vote and in the House with with 335 to 78, the bill is considered by many to be close to ‘veto-proof’ due to its high bipartisan support.

The NDAA includes an expansion of sanctions, many of them aimed at Russia and countries that deal with the nation, including Turkey, for its purchase of S-400 missiles from Moscow. There will also be expanded sanctions against the Nord Stream 2 project, an $11 billion natural-gas pipeline running from Russia to Germany. The US has sought to halt production on the pipeline, and the bill is the latest attempt at pressuring Europe into abandoning the project, as it targets individuals or companies that provide support to Nord Stream 2.

Trump has finally made internet censorship the most important issue in government, like he should have done when I was banned from everything in 2017 and it was obvious that we’d just hopped on a slippery slope.

I think he’ll probably stick with this. He doesn’t have anything to lose.

It’s just incredible how transparent it is that the Congress is bought off by big tech.

Why else would they risk a veto over this? Who on earth supports these companies having unlimited power, other than people who have been bribed?

How is campaign finance not obvious legalized bribery?

How is the US capable of accusing other countries of corruption, when this is the way our government functions?