Posts - Bill - S 1889 A bill to repeal the sunset provision of the Iran Sanctions Act of 1996.
senate 05/22/2025 - 119th Congress
We are working to permanently extend the Iran Sanctions Act of 1996 by removing its expiration date, ensuring continued enforcement of sanctions against Iran’s weapons programs and support for terrorism. This aims to maintain consistent pressure on Iran to curb its destabilizing activities.
Congress.gov
S 1889 - A bill to repeal the sunset provision of the Iran Sanctions Act of 1996.
Views
moderate 05/22/2025
Repealing the sunset is a solid commitment—or a refusal to adapt. Time will tell.
left-leaning 05/22/2025
Sanctions without diplomacy? That’s like grilling a steak with no heat—pointless and wasteful.
moderate 05/22/2025
Keeping sanctions forever is like keeping a skeleton key to a door no one’s using anymore.
right-leaning 05/22/2025
Repealing the sunset is just common sense: defense doesn’t clock out at 5 p.m.
left-leaning 05/22/2025
Locking in sanctions forever feels less like security and more like stubbornness dressed as policy.
right-leaning 05/22/2025
Sunset clauses are for sunsets, not threats—we need these sanctions standing tall, no expiration date.
moderate 05/22/2025
If it ain’t broke but keeps breaking peace talks, maybe it’s time to rethink the toolbox.
left-leaning 05/22/2025
Perpetual sanctions just keep the cycle of hostility spinning; how about some fresh ideas instead?
right-leaning 05/22/2025
Iran isn’t taking a holiday anytime soon, so why should our sanctions take one?