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Trump just made the greatest speech in the defense of Israel, evar!

Spike

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Walk-outs? BWAHAHAHA

Nothing but standing ovation after standing ovation after standing ovation! He knocked it out of the park! He had them screaming!!!

**** yeah!

48619287.cached.jpg



Priority #1. Trump vows he will ‘dismantle the disastrous deal with Iran’ at Aipac conference

{transcipt}

Good evening. I speak to you today as a lifelong supporter and true friend of Israel. I am a newcomer to politics but not to backing the Jewish state.

In late 2001, weeks after the attacks on New York City and Washington – attacks perpetrated by Islamic fundamentalists, Mayor Giuliani visited Israel to show solidarity with terror victims. I sent him in my plane because I backed the mission 100%.

In Spring 2004, at the height of violence in the Gaza Strip, I was the Grand Marshal of the 40th Salute to Israel Parade, the largest single gathering in support of the Jewish state.

It was a very dangerous time for Israel and frankly for anyone supporting Israel – many people turned down this honor –I did not, I took the risk.

I didn’t come here tonight to pander to you about Israel. That’s what politicians do: all talk, no action. I came here to speak to you about where I stand on the future of American relations with our strategic ally, our unbreakable friendship, and our cultural brother, the only democracy in the Middle East, the State of Israel.

My number one priority is to dismantle the disastrous deal with Iran. I have been in business a long time. I know deal-making and let me tell you, this deal is catastrophic – for America, for Israel, and for the whole Middle East.

The problem here is fundamental. We have rewarded the world’s leading state sponsor of terror with $150 billion and we received absolutely nothing in return.

I’ve studied this issue in greater detail than almost anybody. The biggest concern with the deal is not necessarily that Iran is going to violate it, although it already has, the bigger problem is that they can keep the terms and still get to the bomb by simply running out the clock, and, of course, they keep the billions.

The deal doesn’t even require Iran to dismantle its military nuclear capability! Yes, it places limits on its military nuclear program for only a certain number of years. But when those restrictions expire, Iran will have an industrial-size military nuclear capability ready to go, and with zero provision for delay no matter how bad Iran’s behavior is. When I am president, I will adopt a strategy that focuses on three things when it comes to Iran.

First, we will stand up to Iran’s aggressive push to destabilize and dominate the region. Iran is a very big problem and will continue to be, but if I’m elected President, I know how to deal with trouble. Iran is a problem in Iraq, a problem in Syria, a problem in Lebanon, a problem in Yemen, and will be a very major problem for Saudi Arabia. Literally every day, Iran provides more and better weapons to their puppet states.

Hezbollah in Lebanon has received sophisticated anti-ship weapons, anti-aircraft weapons, and GPS systems on rockets. Now they’re in Syria trying to establish another front against Israel from the Syrian side of the Golan Heights.

In Gaza, Iran is supporting Hamas and Islamic Jihad – and in the West Bank they are openly offering Palestinians $7,000 per terror attack and $30,000 for every Palestinian terrorist’s home that’s been destroyed.

Iran is financing military forces throughout the Middle East and it is absolutely indefensible that we handed them over $150 billion to facilitate even more acts of terror.

Secondly, we will totally dismantle Iran’s global terror network. Iran has seeded terror groups all over the world. During the last five years, Iran has perpetrated terror attacks in 25 different countries on five continents. They’ve got terror cells everywhere, including in the western hemisphere very close to home. Iran is the biggest sponsor of terrorism around the world and we will work to dismantle that reach.

Third, at the very least, we must hold Iran accountable by restructuring the terms of the previous deal. Iran has already – since the deal is in place – test-fired ballistic missiles three times. Those ballistic missiles, with a range of 1,250 miles, were designed to intimidate not only Israel, which is only 600 miles away but also intended to frighten Europe, and, someday, the United States.

Do you want to hear something really shocking? As many of the great people in this room know, painted on those missiles – in both Hebrew and Farsi – were the words “Israel must be wiped off the face of the earth.”

What kind of demented minds write that in Hebrew? And here’s another twisted part – testing these missiles does not even violate the horrible deal that we made!

The deal is silent on test missiles but those tests DO violate UN Security Council Resolutions. The problem is, no one has done anything about it. Which brings me to my next point – the utter weakness and incompetence of the United Nations.

The United Nations is not a friend of democracy. It’s not a friend to freedom. It’s not a friend even to the United States of America, where as all know, it has its home. And it surely isn’t a friend to Israel.

With President Obama in his final year, discussions have been swirling about an attempt to bring a security council resolution on the terms of an eventual agreement between Israel and Palestine. Let me be clear: An agreement imposed by the UN would be a total and complete disaster. The United States must oppose this resolution and use the power of our veto. Why? Because that’s not how you make a deal.

Deals are made when parties come to the table and negotiate. Each side must give up something it values in exchange for something it requires. A deal that imposes conditions on Israel and the Palestinian Authority will do nothing to bring peace. It will only further delegitimize Israel and it would reward Palestinian terrorism, because every day they are stabbing Israelis – and even Americans.

Just last week, American Taylor Allen Force, a West Point grad who served in Iraq and Afghanistan, was murdered in the street by a knife-wielding Palestinian. You don’t reward that behavior, you confront it!

It’s not up the United Nations to impose a solution. The parties must negotiate a resolution themselves. The United States can be useful as a facilitator of negotiations, but no one should be telling Israel it must abide by some agreement made by others thousands of miles away that don’t even really know what’s happening.

When I’m president, believe me, I will veto any attempt by the UN to impose its will on the Jewish state. You see, I know about deal-making – that’s what I do. I wrote The Art of the Deal, one of the all-time best-selling books about deals and deal making. To make a great deal, you need two willing participants.

We know Israel is willing to deal. Israel has been trying to sit down at the negotiating table, without pre-conditions, for years. You had Camp David in 2000, where Prime Minister Barak made an incredible offer – maybe even too generous. Arafat rejected it.

In 2008, Prime Minister Olmert made an equally generous offer. The Palestinian Authority rejected it. Then John Kerry tried to come up with a framework and Abbas didn’t even respond, not even to the Secretary of State of the United States of America!

When I become President, the days of treating Israel like a second-class citizen will end on Day One. I will meet with Prime Minister Netanyahu immediately. I have known him for many years and we will be able to work closely together to help bring stability and peace to Israel and to the entire region.

Meanwhile, every single day, you have rampant incitement and children being taught to hate Israel and hate the Jews. When you live in a society where the firefighters are the hero’s little kids want to be firefighters.

When you live in a society where athletes and movie stars are heroes, little kids want to be athletes and movie stars. In Palestinian society, the heroes are those who murder Jews – we can’t let this continue. You cannot achieve peace if terrorists are treated as martyrs. Glorifying terrorists is a tremendous barrier to peace.

In Palestinian textbooks and mosques, you’ve got a culture of hatred that has been fermenting there for years, and if we want to achieve peace, they’ve got to end this indoctrination of hatred. There is no moral equivalency. Israel does not name public squares after terrorists. Israel does not pay its children to stab random Palestinians.

You see, what President Obama gets wrong about deal making is that he constantly applies pressure to our friends and rewards our enemies. That pattern, practiced by the President and his administration, including former Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton, has repeated itself over and over and has done nothing but embolden those who hate America. We saw that with releasing $150 billion to Iran in the hope that they would magically join the world community – It’s the same with Israel and Palestine.

President Obama thinks that applying pressure to Israel will force the issue, but it’s precisely the opposite. Already, half the population of Palestine has been taken over by the Palestinian ISIS in Hamas, and the other half refuses to confront the first half, so it’s a very difficult situation but when the United States stands with Israel, the chances of peace actually rise. That’s what will happen when I’m president.

We will move the American embassy to the eternal capital of the Jewish people, Jerusalem – and we will send a clear signal that there is no daylight between America and our most reliable ally, the state of Israel.

The Palestinians must come to the table knowing that the bond between the United States and Israel is unbreakable. They must come to the table willing and able to stop the terror being committed on a daily basis against Israel and they must come to the table willing to accept that Israel is a Jewish State and it will forever exist as a Jewish State.

Thank you very much, its been a great honor to be with you.
 
Trump just made the greatest speech in the defense of Israel, evar!
Great, he should run for office there, he'd surely get elected.
 
Meanwhile, in Utah, Bernie gives his first major foreign policy speech. If you're interested in a correct and fair interpretation of middle east affairs, Bernie is spot on, as he is on most issues.

Consistent with his ongoing critique of economic inequality, Sanders, who is Jewish and spent time at a kibbutz after college, offered a plea for a more humane handling of the Israel–Palestine conflict. "To be successful, we have to be a friend not only to Israel, but to the Palestinian people, where in Gaza, they suffer from an unemployment rate of 44 percent—the highest in the world—and a poverty rate nearly equal to that," Sanders said, according to a prepared text of his remarks.

Israel, he argued, is compounding the suffering with its own aggressive policies. Sanders called on Israeli Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu to pull back settlements in the West Bank and turn over hundreds of millions of shekels in tax revenue to Palestinians. Peace, he also said, "will mean a sustainable and equitable distribution of precious water resources so that Israel and Palestine can both thrive as neighbors…Right now, Israel controls 80 percent of the water reserves in the West Bank. Inadequate water supply has contributed to the degradation and desertification of Palestinian land. A lasting a peace will have to recognize Palestinians are entitled to control their own lives, and there is nothing human life needs more than water."

http://www.motherjones.com/mojo/2016/03/bernie-sanders-foreign-policy-speech-utah
 
**** Bernie - he was too chickenshit to even show up - he's a Palestinian supporter and they know it


Donald slammed the Iran deal. STANDING OVATION

My number one priority is to dismantle the disastrous deal with Iran.

We have rewarded the world's leading state sponsor of terror with $150 billion and we received absolutely nothing in return.




He slammed Iran STANDING OVATION

Do you want to hear something really shocking? As many of the great people in this room know, painted on those missiles – in both Hebrew and Farsi - were the words “Israel must be wiped off the face of the earth.”

What kind of demented minds write that in Hebrew? And here's another twisted part - testing these missiles does not even violate the horrible deal that we made!



He slammed the Palestinian jihadist terrorists STANDING OVATION

In Palestinian textbooks and mosques, you’ve got a culture of hatred that has been fermenting there for years, and if we want to achieve peace, they’ve got to end this indoctrination of hatred. There is no moral equivalency. Israel does not name public squares after terrorists. Israel does not pay its children to stab random Palestinians.


He slammed the UN - STANDING OVATION

When I'm president, believe me, I will veto any attempt by the UN to impose its will on the Jewish state.


He slammed Obama - STANDING OVATION, BROUGHT DOWN THE HOUSE!

When I become President, the days of treating Israel like a second-class citizen will end on Day One. I will meet with Prime Minister Netanyahu immediately




A good day's work - I think he just won the Jewish vote
 
He slammed Obama - STANDING OVATION, BROUGHT DOWN THE HOUSE!

When I become President, the days of treating Israel like a second-class citizen will end on Day One. I will meet with Prime Minister Netanyahu immediately

Bammy won't even have lunch with Netanyahu since it forbidden for Muslims to break bread with Jews.
 
Trump is getting some lessons and coaching from Gingrich now. He's going to stomp on Hillary
 
Dammit - I wish Bernie wasn't such a chicken - the sight of 20,000 Jews booing him out of the building when he defended the Palestinians would have made a great show.
 
Israeli News



Trump wins over AIPAC audience with strong pro-Israel stance

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump was met with an enthusiastic reception in the AIPAC conference in Washington on Monday, as he took a strong pro-Israel stance, blasting everyone from President Obama and the Palestinians to the UN and Iran.

"President Barack Obama is the worst thing to happen to Israel," the Republican frontrunner told the audience at the Verizon Center, castigating the U.S. president and his former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton for "pressuring our friends and rewarding our enemies."

Trump delivered broadsides against his likely rival in the general election, Hillary Clinton, calling her a “total disaster” and blaming her for last year’s Iran nuclear deal. The line earned laughter and applause, although Clinton’s speech, earlier in the day, was well received.

Trump’s biggest applause line was when he began a sentence, “President Obama, in his final year – yay!”

http://www.haaretz.com/world-news/u-s-election-2016/1.710188
 
Meanwhile, in Utah, Bernie gives his first major foreign policy speech. If you're interested in a correct and fair interpretation of middle east affairs, Bernie is spot on, as he is on most issues.

Get over it TIbs.

Bernie isn't relevant anymore. He's going to crawl back to his communist hole any day now. Doesn't even matter what he says. He's not in the race and he won't be our President.
 
Great recap.

Donald Trump’s First Major Foreign Policy Speech Is Completely Devoid Of Substance
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/donald-trump-aipac_us_56f044f8e4b09bf44a9e1437?section=politics

“Believe me, believe me,” he repeated after every vague promise to resolve threats to Israel.

WASHINGTON — Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump promised 18,000 attendees at the American Israel Public Affairs Committee’s annual conference Monday evening that he wouldn’t pander to them about Israel.

“That’s what politicians do. All talk, no action,” Trump told the pro-Israel lobbying group.

Then he spent the next 25 minutes pandering to Israel.

The real estate tycoon offered the usual Republican Party bromides: The Iran nuclear deal was terrible, the United Nations was an anti-Israel joke, and the Palestinians were to blame for the failure to reach a two-state solution. But what set him apart from other presidential hopefuls, who aren’t rhetorically all that different, was the shallowness of his pander. Listing various failed efforts at reaching a two-state solution, Trump sounded as if he was reading an abridged version of the Wikipedia page on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

The speech was billed as the self-proclaimed billionaire’s first scripted, focused foreign policy address, coming hours after he revealed his foreign policy team, which includes a former Blackwater executive and a former adviser to a Lebanese warlord.

In a shift from his usual meandering, unscripted riffs, Trump largely adhered to the pre-drafted speech his campaign released in advance — with the exception of a dozen repetitions of “believe me,” apparently added to emphasize the trueness of his commitment. And while he managed not to drift into blanket denigrations of any gender, nationality or religion, his speech was largely a list of problems facing Israel, an insistence that President Barack Obama is to blame, and a promise to solve everything. He didn’t explain how he would do so.

It was a speech just unsophisticated enough to inspire bipartisan shoulder-shrugging.

“It was really a recitation of canned Republican talking points, designed to get applause from the crowd he was talking to,” Jeremy Ben-Ami, president of the liberal pro-Israel group, J Street, said after the speech.

“As a policy speech, it’s meaningless,” conservative columnist Charles Krauthammer, a Trump critic, said on Fox News. “I don’t think it gives you any idea of what he would do as president.”

Indeed, if a Trump doctrine emerged from the AIPAC address, it was to trust in Trump. He said he earned his chops by agreeing to march in the Salute to Israel Parade in 2004 in New York as the grand marshal. “It was a very dangerous time for Israel, and frankly for anyone supporting Israel — many people turned down this honor. I did not, I took the risk,” Trump said.

And on Monday, he asked attendees to give him a chance to reshape the Middle East.

On Iran, Trump said his first priority is to “dismantle” the deal that has downsized Iran’s nuclear infrastructure to the point where it incapable of producing a nuclear weapon, reversing his earlier calls to strictly enforce the nuclear agreement between Iran, the U.S., and other nations. But he didn’t explain what he would do to prevent Iranians from moving to acquire a nuclear weapon in the absence of the international agreement. And later in the speech, he went off script and said, “We will enforce it like you’ve never seen a contract enforced before, folks, believe me.”

On issue of confronting Iran’s support for groups like Hezbollah and Hamas, Trump’s prescription was comforting, perhaps, but comically simplistic. “We will totally dismantle Iran’s global terror network, which is big and powerful, but not powerful like us … We will work to dismantle that reach,” he assured the crowd, adding, “believe me, believe me.”

On the stalled peace process between Israelis and Palestinians — a complex geopolitical crisis with inflamed religious tensions and a long history of bloodshed that has vexed numerous presidents — Trump’s recipe for a breakthrough was his own strategic brilliance.

“Deals are made when parties come together, they come to a table and they negotiate,” he explained. “Each side must give up something.” But aside from boasting about his book Trump: The Art of the Deal, he gave no explanation how he would broker a compromise. His only concrete proposal on how he would advance a two-state solution is to use American veto power at the United Nations Security Council “100 percent” to block any resolution that lays out the parameters for an agreement between Israelis and Palestinians.

Though Trump’s speech was vague enough to confuse, his mere appearance was enough to offend some. Just before he took the stage, several rabbis stood up and silently exited the massive Verizon Center sports arena, congregating outside to study Jewish texts about human dignity.

“This particular candidate has crossed such lines of bigotry, racism, and xenophobia, of misogyny, that are out of bounds,” said Rabbi Jonah Pesner, director of the Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism, who was among the rabbis who walked out. “He’s legitimating hate. And we are the Jews … who have the memory of the Holocaust and the memory of the refugee experience. We can’t stand idly by.”

Pesner, like other objecting rabbis, insisted his gripe is with Trump, not AIPAC, which, as a lobbying organization, has reason to nurture ties with anyone who could be the next president. (The group made an exception in 2012, when it did not invite GOP presidential candidate Ron Paul because of his opposition to foreign aid to Israel.)

Others, however, said the organization did a disservice by allowing Trump to speak.

“Over the last few months, Trump has preyed on people’s fear and anger, pointing the finger at different groups, whether it be Latinos, Muslims, or women across the United States,” said Ethan Miller, a spokesman for If If Not Now, a Jewish group that organized a protest against Trump and AIPAC’s decision to host him. “As Jews, we know the consequences of blaming one group for the ills of society — the fact that AIPAC was welcoming him with open arms, we knew we had to speak up and make sure our voices are heard too.”

Stephen Spitz, a 69-year-old Jewish man based in Virginia, tagged along with the If Not Now protesters carrying a sign of his own, which read, “Love Trumps Hate,” a quote he attributed to Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), a Democratic presidential candidate.

“That is anathema — should be anathema — to any American who understands what this country was based on. It doesn’t matter what the religion, once you go down that road, you change the whole nature of the country,” Spitz said.
 
Doesn't surprise me that Bernie stayed on a kibbutz after graduation....anything to get out of having a real job.....
 
Jews love Trump because he tells the truth

12321252_1133314056688033_902535078089352502_n.jpg
 
Great recap.

Donald Trump’s First Major Foreign Policy Speech Is Completely Devoid Of Substance
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/donald-trump-aipac_us_56f044f8e4b09bf44a9e1437?section=politics

“Believe me, believe me,” he repeated after every vague promise to resolve threats to Israel.

WASHINGTON — Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump promised 18,000 attendees at the American Israel Public Affairs Committee’s annual conference Monday evening that he wouldn’t pander to them about Israel.

“That’s what politicians do. All talk, no action,” Trump told the pro-Israel lobbying group.

Then he spent the next 25 minutes pandering to Israel.

The real estate tycoon offered the usual Republican Party bromides: The Iran nuclear deal was terrible, the United Nations was an anti-Israel joke, and the Palestinians were to blame for the failure to reach a two-state solution. But what set him apart from other presidential hopefuls, who aren’t rhetorically all that different, was the shallowness of his pander. Listing various failed efforts at reaching a two-state solution, Trump sounded as if he was reading an abridged version of the Wikipedia page on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

The speech was billed as the self-proclaimed billionaire’s first scripted, focused foreign policy address, coming hours after he revealed his foreign policy team, which includes a former Blackwater executive and a former adviser to a Lebanese warlord.

In a shift from his usual meandering, unscripted riffs, Trump largely adhered to the pre-drafted speech his campaign released in advance — with the exception of a dozen repetitions of “believe me,” apparently added to emphasize the trueness of his commitment. And while he managed not to drift into blanket denigrations of any gender, nationality or religion, his speech was largely a list of problems facing Israel, an insistence that President Barack Obama is to blame, and a promise to solve everything. He didn’t explain how he would do so.

It was a speech just unsophisticated enough to inspire bipartisan shoulder-shrugging.

“It was really a recitation of canned Republican talking points, designed to get applause from the crowd he was talking to,” Jeremy Ben-Ami, president of the liberal pro-Israel group, J Street, said after the speech.

“As a policy speech, it’s meaningless,” conservative columnist Charles Krauthammer, a Trump critic, said on Fox News. “I don’t think it gives you any idea of what he would do as president.”

Indeed, if a Trump doctrine emerged from the AIPAC address, it was to trust in Trump. He said he earned his chops by agreeing to march in the Salute to Israel Parade in 2004 in New York as the grand marshal. “It was a very dangerous time for Israel, and frankly for anyone supporting Israel — many people turned down this honor. I did not, I took the risk,” Trump said.

And on Monday, he asked attendees to give him a chance to reshape the Middle East.

On Iran, Trump said his first priority is to “dismantle” the deal that has downsized Iran’s nuclear infrastructure to the point where it incapable of producing a nuclear weapon, reversing his earlier calls to strictly enforce the nuclear agreement between Iran, the U.S., and other nations. But he didn’t explain what he would do to prevent Iranians from moving to acquire a nuclear weapon in the absence of the international agreement. And later in the speech, he went off script and said, “We will enforce it like you’ve never seen a contract enforced before, folks, believe me.”

On issue of confronting Iran’s support for groups like Hezbollah and Hamas, Trump’s prescription was comforting, perhaps, but comically simplistic. “We will totally dismantle Iran’s global terror network, which is big and powerful, but not powerful like us … We will work to dismantle that reach,” he assured the crowd, adding, “believe me, believe me.”

On the stalled peace process between Israelis and Palestinians — a complex geopolitical crisis with inflamed religious tensions and a long history of bloodshed that has vexed numerous presidents — Trump’s recipe for a breakthrough was his own strategic brilliance.

“Deals are made when parties come together, they come to a table and they negotiate,” he explained. “Each side must give up something.” But aside from boasting about his book Trump: The Art of the Deal, he gave no explanation how he would broker a compromise. His only concrete proposal on how he would advance a two-state solution is to use American veto power at the United Nations Security Council “100 percent” to block any resolution that lays out the parameters for an agreement between Israelis and Palestinians.

Though Trump’s speech was vague enough to confuse, his mere appearance was enough to offend some. Just before he took the stage, several rabbis stood up and silently exited the massive Verizon Center sports arena, congregating outside to study Jewish texts about human dignity.

“This particular candidate has crossed such lines of bigotry, racism, and xenophobia, of misogyny, that are out of bounds,” said Rabbi Jonah Pesner, director of the Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism, who was among the rabbis who walked out. “He’s legitimating hate. And we are the Jews … who have the memory of the Holocaust and the memory of the refugee experience. We can’t stand idly by.”

Pesner, like other objecting rabbis, insisted his gripe is with Trump, not AIPAC, which, as a lobbying organization, has reason to nurture ties with anyone who could be the next president. (The group made an exception in 2012, when it did not invite GOP presidential candidate Ron Paul because of his opposition to foreign aid to Israel.)

Others, however, said the organization did a disservice by allowing Trump to speak.

“Over the last few months, Trump has preyed on people’s fear and anger, pointing the finger at different groups, whether it be Latinos, Muslims, or women across the United States,” said Ethan Miller, a spokesman for If If Not Now, a Jewish group that organized a protest against Trump and AIPAC’s decision to host him. “As Jews, we know the consequences of blaming one group for the ills of society — the fact that AIPAC was welcoming him with open arms, we knew we had to speak up and make sure our voices are heard too.”

Stephen Spitz, a 69-year-old Jewish man based in Virginia, tagged along with the If Not Now protesters carrying a sign of his own, which read, “Love Trumps Hate,” a quote he attributed to Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), a Democratic presidential candidate.

“That is anathema — should be anathema — to any American who understands what this country was based on. It doesn’t matter what the religion, once you go down that road, you change the whole nature of the country,” Spitz said.
can you tell the class precisely what The Big O, The Great Divider, The Messiah of Community Organizing, The Conqueror of Bigfoot, has done FOR Israel in his going-on 8 years?
 
which makes Bomma look like a ... community organizer.
 
Trump's words for Isreal tower above Obama's who told Isreal to go back to 1948 borders and went on an apology tour in the middle east, skipping Isreal.

Jewish American's need to re-examine why they are Democrats and Republicans need to court them.

Trump worked with 100's of Jews in New York for years before mentioned becoming a politician. If he was anti-Jewish, the stories would have come out in droves by now. Yet it has not, because it's untrue.

All I see if the bogus Hitler nonsense.
 
So what does Israel do for the United States, that makes you all so pro-Israel?
It's a careless subject for me. Israel has nothing to do with my life.
 
Hmmmm.....not so fast with gloating over Trumpy's Israeli speech.

AIPAC condemns Trump attack on Obama
http://www.politico.com/story/2016/03/aipac-trump-slams-obama-221081#ixzz43e9L1DCp

'We take great offense to those that are levied against the United States of America from our stage,' AIPAC's president says on Tuesday.

The leaders of the largest American pro-Israel lobby distanced themselves on Tuesday morning from Donald Trump’s attacks on President Barack Obama at their policy conference.

Trump addressed the annual Washington gathering of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee on Monday night, and some of his biggest applause lines were his characteristically blunt critiques of Obama, who he said “may be the worst thing to ever happen to Israel, believe me, believe me.”

AIPAC president Lillian Pinkus read a statement from the stage on Tuesday to disavow Trump’s remarks.

“We say unequivocally that we do not countenance ad hominem attacks, and we take great offense to those that are levied against the United States of America from our stage,” Pinkus said. “While we may have policy differences, we deeply respect the office of the president of the United States and our president, Barack Obama.”

She also castigated attendees who responded positively to Trump’s comments.

“There are people in our AIPAC family who were deeply hurt last night, and for that, we are deeply sorry,” Pinkus said. “We are disappointed that so many people applauded a sentiment that we neither agree with or condone.”

In his remarks, Trump attacked the Iran deal, as well as Obama and Hillary Clinton. Both, he said, “have treated Israel very, very badly.”

Trump’s speech at AIPAC put the group in an awkward position for many reasons. His harsh rhetoric has prompted consternation among American Jews, many of whom see echoes of Holocaust-era anti-Semitism in his attacks on Muslims and immigrants. Ahead of the conference, supporters of Israel were concerned about his previously stated plans to take a neutral position in negotiations between the Israelis and Palestinians.

At the same time, Trump’s skill at channeling anger was once again on display at AIPAC. While the American Jewish community tends to skew Democratic on most issues, Israel has become a growing point of contention, and Obama has fought perceptions that he’s insufficiently supportive of the Jewish state. AIPAC had lobbied against his signature Iran deal.

Pinkus said that Trump’s comments hurt the group’s efforts to broaden the base of the pro-Israel movement.

“Let us take this moment to pledge to each other that in this divisive and tension-filled political season, we will not allow those who wish to divide our movement from the left or from the right will not succeed in doing so,” she concluded.
 
because for some reason most american jews can't or don't give a flying **** about israel.
 
because for some reason most american jews can't or don't give a flying **** about israel.

For the most part they are Liberals first and Jews second. Remember, the Holocaust was a big government program.
 
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