Maybe the "peacekeepers" should advise Hezbollah to stop storing and firing missiles right outside the peacekeepers camp. Otherwise they may get hurt when Israel takes out the missiles.
You hate Trump but love Bibi,but because of Bibi you are going to get 4 more years of Trump,funny how that works.
Let's start with the "four more years of Trump part". Come tell us about this after November 5th. Secondly I have regularly criticized Netanyahu and have stated Israel needs to more moderate government to allow a ceasefire and eventual two-state solution. However the first step towards any peace is to eliminate Hezbollah and Hamas as militant and governing entities.
Will definitely do !!! Lets say Biden does lose,and election analysis shows Gaza was a major reason why,was it worth it for Biden to support Netanyahu when it cost The US a 2nd Trump presidency?
Most of the U.S. population does not give two hoots about Gaza. It ranks so low down the list of issues that Americans care about -- the word "Gaza" cannot normally be found as a listed issue on polling material.
Stein leads Harris among Muslim voters in several swing states, new analysis finds A new report from the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) shows that Jill Stein, the Lexington, Massachusetts, resident and Green Party candidate for president, is leading Democratic nominee Kamala Harris among Muslim voters in several key swing states. The analysis expands on a survey conducted late last month that showed Muslim voters nationally split between Harris and Stein, even thought 69% of the respondents said they usually vote for the Democratic Party. The new analysis dug deeper into the data, specifically looking at voters in swing states. In Michigan, 40% of Muslim voters said they plan to vote for Stein, compared to just 12% who said they plan to vote for Harris. Stein also received significant support from Muslim voters in Wisconsin, where 44% said they plan to vote for her compared to 39% who said they’ll back Harris. And in Arizona, Stein draws support from 35% of Muslim voters, compared to 29% for Harris. Opinion: Jill Stein hammers Harris on Israel – and Trump reaps the benefit The vice president is in a statistical tie with the former president in the 'blue wall' states of Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. But serious trouble is brewing for her in one of them. The most likely path to the White House for Vice President Kamala Harris runs through the "blue wall" states of Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. Harris is in a statistical tie with former President Donald Trump in those three states, according to a collection of polling compiled by RealClearPolitics. But serious trouble is brewing for her in Michigan, home to one of the largest populations of Arab Americans, where angst about the scale of death and destruction in Gaza is growing to now include Lebanon during this week's observance of the first anniversary of the terrorist attacks Hamas launched on Israel. Arab Americans, who used to back Democrats over Republicans by a ratio of 2-to-1, now are closer to an even split between the parties. That is not growing enthusiasm for Trump. America's support of Israel as an ally, through shipments of weapons used to kill Hamas but also tens of thousands of civilians in Gaza, is driving this disengagement. But within that division there are more fractures. Abandon Harris, a new Muslim American organization seeking to defeat the vice president in swing states, on Monday endorsed Jill Stein of the Green Party for president. Stein has made criticism of President Joe Biden's administration about Israel and Gaza a key component of her campaign. Jill Stein's Chances of Blocking Kamala Harris Win in Key Swing States Published Oct 13, 2024 at 11:27 AM EDT While Green Party candidate Jill Stein is unlikely to win the presidency, her support in key "Blue Wall" battleground states could be decisive, with razor-thin margins between Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump, according to polls. Stein, who is on the ballot in key swing states, including Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Wisconsin, has drawn criticism from Democrats in recent weeks as the race tightens, amid claims she is giving Trump, the GOP nominee, an edge. On Friday, the Democratic National Committee (DNC) released a new ad titled "Crucial," targeting voters in those three states and accusing Stein of siphoning support from Harris, the Democratic nominee. The ad shows Stein's face morphing into Trump's, with the message: "A vote for Stein is really a vote for Trump." The ad also features a video segment of Trump speaking at a June campaign rally in Philadelphia, saying: "Jill Stein, I like her very much. You know why? She takes 100 percent from them [Democrats]." 2024 Elections What the ‘uncommitted’ vote says about Biden’s reelection Hundreds of thousands of Democrats voted for options such as “uncommitted” over the last four months. By Jessica Piper 06/05/2024 01:09 AM EDT With nearly every ballot cast in the Democratic presidential primary, the message for Joe Biden is clear: A small but repeated share of the party’s base is not happy with him. Tuesday’s primaries saw the final states cast presidential votes in the Democratic primary. More than 650,000 Democrats voted against Biden over the last four months by choosing options such as “uncommitted,” with others protesting in other states through write-ins, blank ballots, votes for other candidates and other means. Together, the hundreds of thousands of protest votes underscore the president’s political weakness with five months until Election Day. The protest votes were often from areas that voted for him heavily four years ago, including among Arab American voters in Michigan and among young voters on college campuses across key battleground states. Those primary holdouts come from Biden’s electoral base, suggesting he may be able to win them back before the general election, especially since former President Donald Trump is even less aligned with those voters on many of the issues motivating those protest votes. But the risks are enormous for Biden if even a small segment of the coalition that powered him to the White House stays home or chooses a third-party candidate instead.