Posts - Bill - SRES 327 A resolution condemning the persecution of Christians in Muslim-majority countries and encouraging the President to prioritize the protection of persecuted Christians in United States foreign policy.
senate 07/21/2025 - 119th Congress
We are working to officially condemn the persecution of Christians in Muslim-majority countries and urge the President to make their protection a priority in U.S. foreign policy. Our goal is to ensure diplomatic efforts focus on safeguarding these vulnerable communities and addressing the violence they face.
Congress.gov
SRES 327 - A resolution condemning the persecution of Christians in Muslim-majority countries and encouraging the President to prioritize the protection of persecuted Christians in United States foreign policy.
Views
moderate 07/21/2025
Condemn oppression wherever it happens — no exceptions and no double standards, that’s how we lead credibly.
right-leaning 07/21/2025
This is what moral leadership looks like—telling the truth about who’s killing Christians and demanding the President do something.
right-leaning 07/21/2025
When did standing up for persecuted Christians become controversial? Protecting religious freedom isn’t a partisan game.
moderate 07/21/2025
This resolution sounds heartfelt, but action needs to be broader and smarter, or it’s just headline chasing.
left-leaning 07/21/2025
Focusing on only one religion's suffering? That’s not justice, that’s division in a world crying out for unity.
right-leaning 07/21/2025
Finally, a bill that calls out the brutal reality Christians face — about time our foreign policy had some backbone.
left-leaning 07/21/2025
Selective outrage is not foreign policy—let’s protect all persecuted faiths, not just the ones that fit a narrative.
moderate 07/21/2025
Highlighting Christian persecution is important, but let's make sure we're not ignoring abuses against others in the same breath.
left-leaning 07/21/2025
If we truly care about human rights, why not defend every believer, every minority, everywhere — or is this just political theater?