The recent U.S. military strikes against Iranian assets reaffirm the principle that national sovereignty is defended only through decisive action against those who attack American forces.
Following the deaths of two U.S. service members in Jordan, the United States Central Command has conducted eight consecutive nights of strikes targeting Iranian coastal surveillance, air defense, and Revolutionary Guard facilities, degrading the IRGC’s ability to threaten global shipping.
While Iranian state media attempts to claim drone strikes on U.S. bases in Kuwait, the American response remains focused exclusively on military targets, unlike the Iranian regime’s continued endangerment of civilian infrastructure, underscoring the need for a limited government response that protects liberty without overreach.
At the same time, the European Union’s new Entry Exit System has tripled processing times for British nationals despite a €12 million investment in automated kiosks, with airport officials reporting waits of up to two hours and criticizing the rollout as bureaucratic overreach and technical incompetence.
President Trump has warned of new tariffs on Canada, citing nearly 1,000 active wildfires that have sent hazardous smoke into northern U.S. cities, triggering health alerts from Minnesota to New York and accusing Canadian leadership of willful negligence in forest management, a stance echoed by lawmakers John James and John Moolenaar who say their patience has run out.
In Hungary, the Tisza party’s constitutional amendment that removed President Tamás Sulyok, ousted the head of the Constitutional Court, and imposed term limits disqualifying more than half of the former Fidesz deputies demonstrates how a sovereign nation can dismantle authoritarian remnants and restore the rule of law; the United States should likewise uphold limited government, defend liberty, and hold accountable those who threaten its sovereignty at home and abroad.
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