* Guest: Lowell Nelson - CampaignForLiberty.org, RonPaulInstitute.org
* Why Should We Fight Wars for Ukraine and Israel? - Ron Paul.
"When you take on the role of the world’s policeman, don’t be surprised when countries who cannot fight their own wars call “911.” That is exactly what is happening to the United States on two fronts and it is bankrupting our country, depleting the military that should serve our own national interest, and threatening to drag the US into World War III."
* "Washington’s response to Israel trying to drag us into its war with Iran should be just like with Ukraine: “No more weapons, no more money. You’re on your own. Make peace.” That is what a pro-America foreign policy looks like. Our Founders understood it very well and wrote about it often. It’s called “non-intervention.”
this underscores one of the objectives in the five-fold mission of the Campaign for Liberty, which is "to promote and defend the great American principles of individual liberty, constitutional government, sound money, free markets, and a noninterventionist foreign policy...."
* War and the Constitution (Judge Andrew Napolitano)
"Can the president fight any war he wishes? Can Congress fund any war it chooses? Are there constitutional and legal requirements that must first be met before war is waged?"
* India and China Declare Truce — a Lesson in Diplomacy for the West.
"Ahead of the BRICS summit in Russia, India and China announced an end to the four-year military standoff between the two countries along the Line of Actual Control (LAC) in eastern Ladakh. The Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Chinese President Xi Jinping will have their first official bilateral meeting in five years!
* American Healthcare Workers Plead For End To Gaza Bombing - Rep. John Duncan.
* 65 Doctors, Nurses and Paramedics: What We Saw in Gaza - Dr. Feroze Sidhwa, NYT.
* War Prayer - Mark Twain, WarPrayer.org
“The War Prayer” is a short story written by Mark Twain (Samuel Langhorne Clemens) in 1905. The story is an antiwar parable that satirizes the prayers of Americans during wartime. It tells the story of a patriotic church service where a stranger enters and warns the congregation that their prayers for victory are also prayers for the destruction of human life.