Congress says the quiet part out loud
I wanted to bring this to everyone's attention.
The US House Foreign Affairs Committee has voted to advance a bill that would expand existing anti-boycott laws in the country, amid a surge of pro-Palestine activism in the country over Israel's military assault on Gaza.The bill, named the IGO Anti-Boycott Act, passed through the Foreign Affairs Committee by a near-unanimous 42-3 vote, sending it to the House floor for a vote on whether to pass the legislation.
The bill expands upon the existing Anti-Boycott Act, legislation that requires US citizens to refuse participation in boycotts organised by foreign governments against countries friendly to the US.
Let's not overlook that it's the House Foreign Affairs Committee. making policy for domestic laws regarding our free speech rights.
How is this not an admission of demanding allegiance to a foreign nation?
One thing for certain is that economics is the ONLY price Israel will pay for their ethnic cleansing. of Gaza. Israel's economy is taking a huge hit from the war and it is filtering down to the average citizen. This is before the Houthi attacks on Israeli shipping is included.

Comments
How does this not violate 1st Amendment free-speech rights? n/t
Not sure that this is a speech issue, or how to attack it.
here's the government summary of existing law
Not sure what "support means", but I believe it is intended to prohibit compliance with such boycotts. There is or was existing tax law under which companies complying with boycott requests would lose certain tax credits and other tax benefits. Commerc also penalized such behavior, but I don't know exactly how.
It seems fundamental that one has the right to buy from whomever one sees fit and, likewise, to sell to whomever one sees fit so long as one does not discriminate against any US persons in an illegally discriminatory manner. However, I'm not sure there is a constitutional provision guaranteeing such a right. One has to look to the language of the 9th and 10th amendments.
Sadly, Article 1, Section 8, of the Constitution grants Congress the power:
, as well as the power:
.
Many years ago the city of Berkeley, CA instituted a Boycott against South Africa. It was slapped down by at least one federal court on the grounds that the Constitution granted the powers to engage in foreign affairs strictly to the feds. I forget the details or the wording, but, iirc, concluded that citizens were still free to engage in boycotts, just not any level of state or local government. However, I was looking at what a specific case prohibited, and not at whether any such citizen's right was guaranteed.
be well and have a good one
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
Went to look for the case and couldn't find it, but
did find one that slapped down a City of Berkeley boycott of Burma on those grounds.
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
the courts are tied to the docket
so what if it is illegal as proven in a court of law
that does not stop the people from becoming aware
of the issue and reacting. the fed can slap down the state
which slaps down the county or local municipality
so just do it
Thought is the wind, knowledge the sail, and mankind the vessel.
-- August Hare
5th Amendment Communists
From wiki:
Nothing new in the world.
I cried when I wrote this song. Sue me if I play too long.
It’s exactly what it is
,
How have the courts ruled on this? I’m pretty sure that some people who have been either forced to sign on or get fired have tried to sue over it.
But how will congress endorse it? Make everyone who stops going to Starbucks return? Or any of the other products Israeli sells.
Again just imagine if we exchange Israel with Russia.
Here in the USA arming and funding Israeli genocide and mass murder is perfectly OK, but objecting to it will get you expelled, arrested or deported.
I wonder if this would impact the boycott of Bud Light? NT
Heh, I'm assuming that's humor, but, if not, that boycott
is not requested or supported by any foreign power, so, no.
be well and have a good one
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
Oil Embargo Act of 1973
Did the Oil Embargo Act punish US companies if they embargoed oil or refused to do business with Israel due to specific requests by foreign countries? Even if the country retaliated?
Well, Facebook doesn't respect your free speech rights
Meta Is Systematically Censoring Pro-Palestine Posts, Human Rights Watch Finds
that's for sure
"To watch the leader of the most powerful nation on earth endorse and finance a genocide prompts not a passing kind of disgust or anger, but a severance." -- Omar el Akkad