I learned something new in this video. Josh says that "suicide weekend" was about NoName. Apparently, the timing aligned. You'll find this towards the very end of the video when they're going through the Rumble Rants.
It's not the first of its kind. See Martin Luther King Jr's statue in D.C.:
https://cherryblossomwatch.com/exploredc/martin-luther-king-national-memorial/
Q 916:
We are saving ISRAEL FOR LAST.
Very specific reason not mentioned a single time.
Now, go 12 mins into this Badlands video:
https://rumble.com/v7am6lk-q-after-hours-ep.-27.html?e9s=src_v1_eh_cs
And, the very next post after this one is:
PRESIDENT TRUMP FUMED AND OVERTURNED THE ISRAELI INVASION OF LEBANONβ¦ 47 successfully called PM Netanyahu, reportedly got FIRED UP, and got the Israeli troops to turn aroundβ¦
https://greatawakening.win/p/1ASsiXmvNo/president-trump-fumed-and-overtu/c/
You need to stop dooming, fren, and do some more research.
The word "of" is missing: "Many Great American Patriots were made to pay a very big price only for the love their Country."
"of" in the killbox:
No, the U.S. and Israeli militaries are not "combining" or merging into a single force.
Section 224 of the House draft of the FY2027 NDAA (National Defense Authorization Act) proposes a "United States-Israel Defense Technology Cooperation Initiative." This expands existing defense cooperation but does not create a unified military command, shared forces, or full integration.
What Section 224 actually does
It directs the Secretary of Defense to designate an executive agent to coordinate and accelerate bilateral efforts in:
Research, development, testing, evaluation, and integration of defense technologies.
Industrial cooperation, including joint ventures, co-production of weapons/systems, licensing agreements, and related activities.
Areas like AI, quantum computing, cyber defense, biotech, autonomous systems, directed energy, missiles, counter-drones, and "network integration"/"data fusion."
This builds on long-standing U.S.-Israel ties (e.g., joint missile defense like Iron Dome, intelligence sharing, and exercises). It shifts emphasis toward deeper industrial and tech collaboration rather than traditional grant aid.
Current status
This is only in the House Armed Services Committee's draft (chairman's mark), released around May 27, 2026.
The full NDAA must pass the House, be reconciled with the Senate version, and be signed by the President. It is not yet law.
Critics (e.g., Responsible Statecraft/Quincy Institute) call it a step toward "fusing" the defense sectors or giving Israel more influence via U.S. jobs and data sharing. Supporters see it as strengthening a key partner against shared threats (e.g., Iran) and boosting U.S. capabilities.
Context on U.S.-Israel military ties
The U.S. and Israel already cooperate extensively but remain separate sovereign forces. Israel is not a NATO ally and does not fall under integrated command structures like those with European partners. Past NDAAs have included similar cooperative provisions (e.g., industrial base working groups, counter-UAS, etc.).
Instead of being binned, the police needed to be sacked.