Showing posts with label Middel East Politics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Middel East Politics. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 7, 2024




BUY 25 SMCI AND NVDA BUT ONLY ON SHARP DIPS AND THEN AGAIN ON FURTHER DIPS.
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I am in the process of  initiating an entire economic system based on oil and gas because so much of everything we consume is made from these two sources.

I WILL LIST 12 CATEGORIES AND EVERY MONTH WILL ROTATE THESE 12 CATEGORIES  OF OIL AND GAS AND ADJUST THEM ACCORDINGLY IF THEY EXCEED 5%

OVER A 12 MONTH PERIOD 100% OF OIL AND GAS WILL HAVE ROTATED .
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lETS DO A REVIEW OF WHAT IS HAPPENING. TRUMP ALWAYS TALKS ABOUT USING COMMON SENSE.  THEN WHAT THE HELL IS HE DOING ATTACKING GOVERNOR HARRIS.  THAT IS NOT COMMON SENSE. IT IS STUPID. ONCE AGAIN HE CANNOT CONTROL HIS EGO.

ON THE OTHER HAND HIS MORE THAN HOUR LONG PRESS CONFERENCE, WHERE HE TOOK ALL QUESTIONS AND ANSWERED THEM, WAS EXCELLENT.

SOME WERE REPITITOUS AND LONG BUT THAT IS HIS STYLE

ALSO. HIS STYLE IS HE LIVES IN A WORLD OF GOOD AND BAD AND FAILS TO UNDERSTND MOST PEOPL LIVE IN A GREY WORLD. HE ALSO LOVES TO TAG PEOPLE WITH NAMES. WELL HERE ARE TWO NAMES THAT COVER BOTH KAMALA  AND  WALZ. 

SOMETHING FOR EVERYBODY.
MOSCOW KAMALA AND WHITE WASH GANZ.  

GANZ KNEW, WHEN HE LOOKED IN THE MIRROR. TRUMP DID NOT EMBRACE PROPOSITION 2050, SO HE CHOSE TO LIE TO HIMSELF AND VOTERS. HE ALSO KNEW THE RNC HAD REJECTED 2050 AND THE AUTHOR HAD BEEN REMOVED.

I SUBMIT, You cannot hold public office without having a conscience. Moscow kAMALA does not own a conscience because She believes, SHE is a magician, and can stand before a mirror and turn a lie it into a fact both to HERSELF as well as voters.

SHE knew Trump rejected Proposition 2025, that the RNC has also done so and the person who drafted it was no longer involved. Yet "Moscow KAMALA" lied thinking She could get away with doing so because the unwashed would buy HER lie. Obviously if She will lie to you and HERSElf campaigning what would She do if elected?

Blackboard Kamala also believes she is a magician and can turn lies into facts. She knew Biden's health was deteriorating as well as his mental acuity.  However, she denied it both to herself and you, the voter.  Why did she believe she could get away with doing this? Because she wanted to become president, gain power and rule over her subjects like a monarch.

Is this the kind of president we want to rule our republic?

Let's look at Trump who, we know, lacks a presidential persona.  Trump stretches the truth but when he said more were present at his inauguration he was not doing so as a magician. Yes, he stretched the truth but that is not the same as lying.

Lying is destroying truth and replacing it, not stretching it with something else. That is what Democrats have been doing for years. They have weaponized politics, turned their lying projections into imputing they are those of their opponents so they can retain power at any cost. Their projections are a shameless act of bald face lying and are unconscionable FRAUDLENT acts.

By doing so, they impute lies they tell to their opposition in the hope they can get voters to buy their version of the truth.WHTE WASH WALZ and Blackboard Kamala  believe they are magicians.
Josh Shapiro and the unmaking of a vice president
The successful campaign to keep the Jewish GOVENOR of Pennsylvania off the Democratic ticket is a watershed moment for Democrats and American Jews.
By Jonathan S. Tobin

There was probably more than one reason why Vice President Kamala Harris chose Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz rather than Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro to be her running mate. It may well be that Shapiro rubbed Harris the wrong way in their interviews when she was auditioning potential candidates. The same factors that led Sen. John Fetterman (D-Pa.) to advise her against picking Shapiro might have influenced her. Shapiro does not have a reputation as a team player. His steady rise through Pennsylvania politics has been fueled by genuine talent as well as the sort of naked self-interested ambition that would have to be put on hold if he were to be the No. 2 in a campaign  administration.

But there’s little doubt the decision to bypass a popular governor who could have played a decisive role in winning a key battleground state that Harris must have if she is to beat former President Donald Trump in November wasn’t made solely because of Shapiro’s healthy ego. As we all know, that is a quality that hardly marks him as an outlier among politicians. Instead, it was his identity as a Jew and an unabashed supporter of Israel that sparked an ultimately successful campaign among Democrats to spike the Shapiro boomlet.

His positions on Israel and the war on Hamas are not, in fact, very different from those of the other men Harris was considering, including Walz and Arizona Sen. Mark Kelly. They, too, support Israel’s right to exist and condemned the Oct. 7 terrorist attacks on Israel, as well as expressed concern about the pro-Hamas demonstrations that have become the hallmark of a surge in American anti-Semitism during the last 10 months. And like them, Shapiro supports proposals for a two-state solution to the Middle East conflict that is hopelessly out of touch with what Palestinians want; all are critics of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Choosing Dearborn over Pennsylvania

But only the possibility of Shapiro being a heartbeat away from the presidency caused leftist magazines like The New Republic and Slate to denounce him for being “egregiously bad on Palestine.” 

As reports in The New York Times and other publications also made clear, his willingness to stand up on the issue in recent months was seen in a different light than that of other pro-Israel Democrats. The fact that he had rightly compared the pro-Hamas anti-Semites to members of the Ku Klux Klan, while Harris had voiced understanding and sympathy for them, was seen as disqualifying.

Indeed, it got so bad that when an op-ed Shapiro wrote for his college newspaper in 1993 popped up, in which he voiced skepticism about the Oslo Accords and doubted whether the Palestinians would ever choose peace, he was forced to back away it. Of course, everything he wrote at that time was subsequently proven correct. But when confronted with it, Shapiro acted as if it was a youthful indiscretion. “Something I wrote when I was 20, is that what you’re talking about? I was 20.”

This is an election in which leading Democrats believe they are going to need a united party with their left-wing activist base fully on board with the national ticket. That’s why President Joe Biden sent officials to bend their knees to Dearborn, Mich., earlier this year to the pro-Hamas mayor of the city known as America’s “jihad capital.” Shapiro being an affiliated synagogue member who attended Jewish day school and sends his own children to them, AND has a record of support for Israel dating back to his youth, made him unacceptable to that crucial wing of the party.

That put Harris in something of a dilemma.

If winning the election and “saving democracy,” from alleged threats by former President Donald Trump and the Republicans were primary goals, then Shapiro was her best bet. Naming him gave her the best chance of tipping Pennsylvania, where Trump has led for most of the year, back into the Democratic column. And his centrist approach would have expanded the Democratic coalition, giving it a better chance to win over independent voters who have also favored Trump this year.

Indeed, his gracious and respectful attitude to the victims of the attempted assassination of Trump in Butler, Pa., last month struck a chord with both Republicans and Democrats at a time when most politicians seem determined to drive us farther apart.

Sending a message

It also would have also shored up Jewish support, both in terms of votes and campaign contributions. It’s not clear whether that would have won Harris any more Electoral College votes. But in a year when there are some signs that even the most partisan Jewish Democrats have been shocked by the way left-wing anti-Semites have been allowed to run amuck on college campuses and in the streets of U.S. cities spouting hate for Jews and Israel since Oct. 7, it would have sent a message to Jews that they still have a home in a Democratic Party, even though many in its left-wing base think that they are intersectional villains who are guilty of “white” privilege.

More than that, it would have given Harris a “Sister Souljah moment” like the one Bill Clinton seized in 1992 when he criticized a black artist for saying there was nothing wrong with blacks killing whites, and in doing so, demonstrated both his centrist bona fides and a willingness to take on extremists within his own party.

But Democrats don’t believe in Sister Souljah moments anymore. Harris, who supported a fund that bailed out Black Lives Matter rioters in 2000, had no appetite for confronting the anti-Semitic, anti-Israel wing of her party. While there are still far more votes to be won in the pro-Israel center of American politics than on the pro-Hamas left, choosing the person that leftists have now dubbed “Genocide Josh” would have guaranteed dissension inside the Democratic National Convention in Chicago and riots outside of it.

Walz IS the most left-leaning of all the potential vice-presidential nominees that were finalists for the Democrats. That’s why members of the far-left congressional “Squad” and Socialist Democrats like Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) celebrated Harris’s choice. Though Democrats are rebranding him as being no different from Shapiro in most respects, he’s clearly the favorite of “progressives.” He’s a supporter of the anti-Semitic Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.), imposed draconian COVID-19 lockdowns on his state and dithered for three days before finally agreeing to the anguished pleas of Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey to send in the National Guard to stop Black Lives Matter rioters from burning down the city.

Walz is a capable politician, and there are some Democrats who think his experience as a Midwestern high school football coach is exactly the kind of résumé line that Harris needs to balance her reputation as a San Francisco liberal. It’s also true that most Republicans breathed a sigh of relief when they heard of her decision. Putting Shapiro on the Democratic ticket might not have guaranteed them victory, but it would have made the task for Trump and the GOP in battleground states a lot harder. That would have also been the case if Harris had picked Kelly, a former astronaut and U.S. Navy combat pilot with centrist appeal.

Had Harris chosen Shapiro, it would have signaled that she was determined to steer the Democrats back into the political center on not just Israel but other issues like school choice, though Shapiro’s stand on that topic is also anathema to the Teachers Unions that hold so much sway among Democrats.

A lot has changed since 2000

Above all, the rejection of Shapiro after he was bashed by so many on the left serves as a reminder of how much the Democratic Party has changed in the last 24 years.

At this moment, August 2000 seems like a very long time ago. When then Vice President Al Gore choose Connecticut Sen. Joe Lieberman to be his running mate, the decision was hailed as a brilliant political move by the Democratic Party’s nominee. It both solidified the hold of moderates on the Democratic Party and marked the first time a Jew was named to a national ticket. Like Shapiro is now, Lieberman’s views were liberal on most issues. But he was also a well-respected centrist Democrat as well as an observant Jew, whose piety and plain-speaking manner was admired by people of all faiths.

As is true of almost all vice-presidential nominees, neither Lieberman nor his Republican counterpart Dick Cheney played a decisive role in determining the outcome of an election that was razor-close and decided in favor of George W. Bush by a mere 553 votes in Florida. Lieberman’s nomination was a milestone in American history that seemed to prove that Jews were accepted virtually everywhere in the United States and could aspire to the nation’s highest offices without being subjected to anti-Semitic invective.

The attacks on Shapiro illustrate that this is no longer the case.

That is not to say that Shapiro has no future in national politics. Should Harris lose this year, he will immediately be classified as among the likely Democratic presidential contenders in 2028. Perhaps political fashions will shift in the next four years in a way that will ease his path. For now, though, it’s hard to imagine the Democrats picking someone who is considered a centrist and well as seen as a throwback to an earlier era where pro-Israel Democrats were the rule and Israel-haters were the exception in the party.

Radical Islamist SHOES finallyHAVE begun dropping.

And:

Tim Walz; “A Radical Liberal Socialist” “An Unaccomplished Nobody From No Where”


Our republic NO Longer enjoys the benefits of a guard rail FROM THE MASS AND SOCIAL MEDIA and that is dangerous. 

Finally:

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I read Rufo's latest book. Bright and on top of what is happening.
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The Hollow Kingdom
A dispatch from London on the brink of chaos
By Christopher F. Rufo

I have spent the past week in London. The city’s transformation, which I had followed only abstractly in the newspapers, has prompted a visceral shock.

“I haven’t been to London since I was a student,” I told a group of British journalists. “What the hell happened?”

“The fact that you would ask such a question,” one responded, “is an act of racism.” The others laughed.

The unstated premise of the joke was that everyone knows what the hell happened—mass immigration—but no one is allowed to speak about it. The statistics reveal the general trend. Since my last visit nearly two decades ago, the white British population of London has declined from 60 percent to 37 percent. Meantime, the Muslim population of London has nearly doubled, and migrants from South Asia and Africa have entrenched themselves throughout the city.

Anglos have been a minority for more than a decade. What I’ve observed in the city this week has amazed me. Women’s eyes peering through the slit of black niqabs. A procession of sub-Saharan Africans traversing Westminster Bridge, waving the flags of their homelands and demanding reparations. Street corners that could be confused for Peshawar or Islamabad. Districts in which one could pass an entire day with barely a glimpse of an Englishman.

These are facts. There is nothing inherently racist or antiracist about them. The question is one of perspective. England’s progressives would have one believe that these snapshots represent the triumph of diversity. But this position appears increasingly untenable.

For good reason. England, unlike the United States, does not have a long history of assimilating others. And many of the country’s migrants—in particular, the large Muslim population—are among the most difficult populations to integrate.

From a critical perspective, the history of mass migration in Britain is a history of civil tension, punctuated by violence: riots, terrorism, murder, rape. Events of this week have brought this suppressed conflict to the surface once again.

The day after my conversation with the British journalists, England broke out in another round of riots. A first-generation Rwandan teenager had stabbed three young girls to death, prompting British nationalists and Muslim counter-protesters into the streets. The resulting clashes led to significant property damage and nearly 400 arrests. The country’s left-wing prime minister, Keir Starmer, has signaled his support for suppressing the nationalists.

A question lies buried under these events: What makes a nation? And what is the relationship between its content and its form?

It’s easy to understand why migrants from Somalia or Pakistan would select England as their destination. The political, economic, and cultural form of their home countries is a disaster. In England, by contrast, these migrants are able to secure an income, often including public benefits, and enjoy the fruits of a developed, modern, peaceful country.

The predominant theory among Western elites is that the content of mass migration—the particular people, and the culture they bring—is irrelevant. All groups are equal. Individuals are interchangeable. To think otherwise is to engage in bigotry.

This logic has a whiff of liberalism, but only in the most reductive, naïve sense. The truth is that, even if we believe in the principle that all men are created equal, this does not mean that all cultures are equal or interchangeable—far from it. The structure of a civilization is a delicate thing. Changing its citizens will, over time, change its form.

This process is underway in London. The buildings, avenues, and palaces look the same as before; there is still a parliament, a king, and the pound. But the central city feels hollowed out. The old connection between citizen and nation has been altered. The old bonds of culture have been frayed.

The situation in London recalls the Ship of Theseus, a thought experiment that asks whether, if every part of a ship is replaced, it is the same ship in the end. The answer, in our case, is a confident “no.” England without the Englishman would no longer be England. The form—parliamentary democracy, economic growth, liberal culture—might hold for a time, but eventually, it would give way, too.

To engage in violence is not the answer. But neither is the answer to pretend that this conflict, or this re-composition, does not exist. Sooner or later, Britain will have to answer some hard questions. Reality has a way of breaking through.

Christopher F. Rufo is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support HIS work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

In a previous memo, I wrote about Democrats and money.  

They believe the more campaign funds the merrier and they seem to prove they generally raise more funds, spend more funds and, thus, win more races

The political ad market is expected to reach record spend levels this year.

 




Seconds After Kamala Leaks Her VP - His Dirty Laundry Comes Spilling Out
She really can pick 'em!

Harris VP Pick Tim Walz Faces Scrutiny Over Past Actions Amid 2024 Election
By Mick Farthing

For a while, it looked as if Kamala Harris would pick Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro as her vice president running mate. But the anti-Semitic progressives must have had their way because word is that Kamala is picking another governor to be her patsy. Gov. Tim Walz of Minnesota has been slotted to carry Harris’ baggage through November.

This isn’t a monumental surprise, given how Minnesota is another must-win swing state. Harris’ people are probably banking on Walz’s popularity to help her win Minnesota.

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But how popular is Walz in his home state? While he might enjoy support from liberal voters, he is far from a slam dunk for Harris. The Democrat nominee has to convince Americans she won’t be as big of a disaster as her boss—even though she promises the exact same administration. But by bringing along Walz, Harris is proving her administration will be as corrupt and incompetent as the one she is currently serving in.

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz (D)… failed in 2020 to anticipate and react to riots in Minneapolis after the death of George Floyd at police hands.

The violence led to the destruction of a police precinct, widespread looting, and the spread of riots nationwide.

The Minneapolis Star Tribune reported that Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey blamed Walz for failing to respond.

In addition to this major issue, stories are surfacing of a DUI Walz committed years ago. One that hasn’t been properly addressed to the public.

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz (D), who emerged Tuesday as Vice President Kamala Harris’s running mate, will likely face new scrutiny over a 1995 DUI arrest after court records emerged to suggest he had misled the public about the case.

Walz and the BLM Riots

In the lead-up to the 2024 election, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz is under fire for his handling of past events that are now resurfacing with a vengeance. The dual controversies include his failure to effectively manage the Black Lives Matter (BLM) riots and his past DUI arrest, both of which are casting a long shadow over his political aspirations.

As the BLM riots swept through Minnesota, Walz’s leadership came under intense scrutiny. Critics argue that his lack of decisive action allowed the chaos to escalate. Kamala Harris’s involvement didn’t help matters; she was busy soliciting bail money for arrested protesters, adding fuel to the fire. This dual-pronged approach from key political figures left many Minnesotans feeling abandoned and betrayed as their communities suffered.

A prominent critic said, “Governor Walz had a chance to protect his constituents, but instead, he chose to stand by and watch as the city burned.”

The DUI Scandal

Adding to his woes, Walz’s past DUI arrest has resurfaced, raising questions about his character and judgment. The details of the incident are murky, with conflicting claims about what transpired. This lack of clarity is only making matters worse for Walz, as voters question his integrity and ability to lead. During a congressional run in 2006, Walz seemed to lie about the arrest, claiming it was a “misunderstanding.” Did the cops misunderstand that he was driving drunk? I don’t think so.

Fallout for 2024

Why did Harris reportedly pick this man with so much baggage? Did she think people would see her in a better light compared to this governor? That’s not a winning strategy. But we are not surprised she picked a controversy-ridden politician with little credit to his record. Harris is the vice president of an administration full of incompetent people unqualified for their jobs. She is sure to continue that legacy if she becomes president.

Key Takeaways

BLM Riots: Walz was criticized for failing to control the riots, and Kamala Harris’s actions complicated the situation.

DUI Arrest: Past DUI arrest raises questions about Walz’s character, with conflicting claims damaging his credibility.

Election Impact: Both controversies are likely to influence voter perception and impact his 2024 election campaign
Source: All Breitbart

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You cannot hold public office without having a conscience. Moscow Waltz does not own a conscience because he believes, he is a magician, and he can stand before a mirror and turn a lie it into a fact both to himself as well as voters.

He knew Trump rejected Proposition 2025, that the RNC has also done so and the person who drafted it was no longer involved. Yet "Moscow Walz" lied thinking he could get away with  doing so because the unwashed would buy his lie. Obviously if he will lie to you and himself campaigning what would he do if elected?

Blackboard Kamala also believes she is a magician and can turn lies into facts. She knew Biden's health was deteriorating as well as his mental acuity.  However, she denied it both to herself and you, the voter.  Why did she believe she could get away with doing this? Because she wanted to become president, gain power and rule over her subjects like a monarch.

Is this the kind of president we want to rule our republic?

Let's look at Trump who we know lacks a presidential persona.  Trump stretches the truth but when he said more were present at his inauguration he was not doing so as a magician. Yes, he stretched the truth but that is not the same as lying.

Lying is destroying truth and replacing it, not stretching it with something else. That is what Democrats have been doing for years. They have weaponized politics, turned their lying projections into imputing they are those of their opponents so they can retain power at any cost. Their projections are a shameless act of bald face lying and are unconscionable acts..

By doing so, they impute lies they tell to their opposition in the hope they can get voters to buy their version of the truth. Moscow Walz and Blackboard Kamala  believe they are magicians.
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Josh Shapiro and the unmaking of a vice president
The successful campaign to keep the Jewish governor of Pennsylvania off the Democratic ticket is a watershed moment for Democrats and American Jews.
By Jonathan S. Tobin

There was probably more than one reason why Vice President Kamala Harris chose Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz rather than Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro to be her running mate. It may well be that Shapiro rubbed Harris the wrong way in their interviews when she was auditioning potential candidates. The same factors that led Sen. John Fetterman (D-Pa.) to advise her against picking Shapiro might have influenced her. Shapiro does not have a reputation as a team player. His steady rise through Pennsylvania politics has been fueled by genuine talent as well as the sort of naked self-interested ambition that would have to be put on hold if he were to be the No. 2 in a campaign and an administration.

But there’s little doubt that the decision to bypass a popular governor who could have played a decisive role in winning a key battleground state that Harris must have if she is to beat former President Donald Trump in November wasn’t made solely because of Shapiro’s healthy ego. As we all know, that is a quality that hardly marks him as an outlier among politicians. Instead, it was his identity as a Jew and an unabashed supporter of Israel that sparked an ultimately successful campaign among Democrats to spike the Shapiro boomlet.

His positions on Israel and the war on Hamas are not, in fact, very different from those of the other men Harris was considering, including Walz and Arizona Sen. Mark Kelly. They, too, support Israel’s right to exist and condemned the Oct. 7 terrorist attacks on Israel, as well as expressed concern about the pro-Hamas demonstrations that have become the hallmark of a surge in American antisemitism during the last 10 months. And like them, Shapiro supports proposals for a two-state solution to the Middle East conflict that is hopelessly out of touch with what Palestinians want; all are critics of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Choosing Dearborn over Pennsylvania

But only the possibility of Shapiro being a heartbeat away from the presidency caused leftist magazines like The New Republic and Slate to denounce him for being “egregiously bad on Palestine.” As reports in The New York Times and other publications also made clear, his willingness to stand up on the issue in recent months was seen in a different light than that of other pro-Israel Democrats. The fact that he had rightly compared the pro-Hamas antisemites to members of the Ku Klux Klan, while Harris had voiced understanding and sympathy for them, was seen as disqualifying.

Indeed, it got so bad that when an op-ed Shapiro wrote for his college newspaper in 1993 popped up, in which he voiced skepticism about the Oslo Accords and doubted whether the Palestinians would ever choose peace, he was forced to back away it. Of course, everything he wrote at that time was subsequently proven correct. But when confronted with it, Shapiro acted as if it was a youthful indiscretion. “Something I wrote when I was 20, is that what you’re talking about? I was 20.”

This is an election in which leading Democrats believe they are going to need a united party with their left-wing activist base fully on board with the national ticket. That’s why President Joe Biden sent officials to bend their knees to Dearborn, Mich., earlier this year to the pro-Hamas mayor of the city known as America’s “jihad capital.” Shapiro being an affiliated synagogue member who attended Jewish day school and sends his own children to them, as well as has a record of support for Israel dating back to his youth, made him unacceptable to that crucial wing of the party.

That put Harris in something of a dilemma.

If winning the election and “saving democracy” from alleged threats by former President Donald Trump and the Republicans were primary goals, then Shapiro was her best bet. Naming him gave her the best chance of tipping Pennsylvania, where Trump has led for most of the year, back into the Democratic column. And his centrist approach would have expanded the Democratic coalition, giving it a better chance to win over independent voters who have also favored Trump this year.

Indeed, his gracious and respectful attitude to the victims of the attempted assassination of Trump in Butler, Pa., last month struck a chord with both Republicans and Democrats at a time when most politicians seem determined to drive us farther apart.

Sending a message

It also would have also shored up Jewish support, both in terms of votes and campaign contributions. It’s not clear whether that would have won Harris any more Electoral College votes. But in a year when there are some signs that even the most partisan Jewish Democrats have been shocked by the way left-wing anti-Semites have been allowed to run amuck on college campuses and in the streets of U.S. cities spouting hate for Jews and Israel since Oct. 7, it would have sent a message to Jews that they still have a home in a Democratic Party, even though many in its left-wing base think that they are intersectional villains who are guilty of “white” privilege.

More than that, it would have given Harris a “Sister Souljah moment” like the one Bill Clinton seized in 1992 when he criticized a black artist for saying there was nothing wrong with blacks killing whites, and in doing so, demonstrated both his centrist bona fides and a willingness to take on extremists within his own party.

But Democrats don’t believe in Sister Souljah moments anymore. Harris, who supported a fund that bailed out Black Lives Matter rioters in 2000, had no appetite for confronting the anti-Semitic, anti-Israel wing of her party. While there are still far more votes to be won in the pro-Israel center of American politics than on the pro-Hamas left, choosing the person that leftists have now dubbed “Genocide Josh” would have guaranteed dissension inside the Democratic National Convention in Chicago and riots outside of it.

Walz is no leftist, but he was definitely the most left-leaning of all the potential vice-presidential nominees that were finalists for the Democrats. That’s why members of the far-left congressional “Squad” and Socialist Democrats like Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) celebrated Harris’s choice. Though Democrats are rebranding him as being no different from Shapiro in most respects, he’s clearly the favorite of “progressives.” He’s a supporter of the anti-Semitic Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.), imposed draconian COVID-19 lockdowns on his state and dithered for three days before finally agreeing to the anguished pleas of Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey to send in the National Guard to stop Black Lives Matter rioters from burning down the city.

Walz is a capable politician, and there are some Democrats who think his experience as a Midwestern high school football coach is exactly the kind of résumé line that Harris needs to balance her reputation as a San Francisco liberal. It’s also true that most Republicans breathed a sigh of relief when they heard of her decision. Putting Shapiro on the Democratic ticket might not have guaranteed them victory, but it would have made the task for Trump and the GOP in battleground states a lot harder. That would have also been the case if Harris had picked Kelly, a former astronaut and U.S. Navy combat pilot with centrist appeal.

Had Harris chosen Shapiro, it would have signaled that she was determined to steer the Democrats back into the political center on not just Israel but other issues like school choice, though Shapiro’s stand on that topic is also anathema to the Teachers Unions that hold so much sway among Democrats.

A lot has changed since 2000

Above all, the rejection of Shapiro after he was bashed by so many on the left serves as a reminder of how much the Democratic Party has changed in the last 24 years.

At this moment, August 2000 seems like a very long time ago. When then Vice President Al Gore choose Connecticut Sen. Joe Lieberman to be his running mate, the decision was hailed as a brilliant political move by the Democratic Party’s nominee. It both solidified the hold of moderates on the Democratic Party and marked the first time a Jew was named to a national ticket. Like Shapiro is now, Lieberman’s views were liberal on most issues. But he was also a well-respected centrist Democrat as well as an observant Jew, whose piety and plain-speaking manner was admired by people of all faiths.

As is true of almost all vice-presidential nominees, neither Lieberman nor his Republican counterpart Dick Cheney played a decisive role in determining the outcome of an election that was razor-close and decided in favor of George W. Bush by a mere 553 votes in Florida. Lieberman’s nomination was a milestone in American history that seemed to prove that Jews were accepted virtually everywhere in the United States and could aspire to the nation’s highest offices without being subjected to anti-Semitic invective.

The attacks on Shapiro illustrate that this is no longer the case.

That is not to say that Shapiro has no future in national politics. Should Harris lose this year, he will immediately be classified as among the likely Democratic presidential contenders in 2028. Perhaps political fashions will shift in the next four years in a way that will ease his path. For now, though, it’s hard to imagine the Democrats picking someone who is considered a centrist and well as seen as a throwback to an earlier era where pro-Israel Democrats were the rule and Israel-haters were the exception in the party.
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Radical Islamist shoe finally has begun dropping.



By Sara Fischer

Politics & Policy

Money still pouring into election ads


Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios


Political advertising around the 2020 election is expected to reach $6.7 billion this cycle, up 12% from initial projections of around $6 million, according to a new report. Nearly $2 billion will be spent on digital video, primarily on Facebook and Google.


Why it matters: The pandemic has forced campaigns to shift budgets from in-person campaign events, like canvassing and town halls, to digital advertising and virtual events. This has expedited a growing shift from traditional campaign marketing to dgital.


Technology

Joe Biden surges past Trump on Facebook and Google spending

i

Adapted from Advertising Analytics; Chart: Andrew Witherspoon/Axios

Why it matters: For a while, Trump was dominating online advertising spend on Google and Facebook, giving his campaign an unprecedented early lead in drumming up grassroots support ahead of 2020. Now, Democrats — led by Joe Biden and Kamala Harris — are catching up.


Go deeper (1 min. read)

By Sara Fischer


Economy

2020 candidates are mostly focusing their advertising spending online

A phone with a dollar bill as a screen.

Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios


The 2020 presidential election is being fought online at a level we've never seen before, eclipsing television's traditional dominance.


Why it matters: Television is still one of the most important vehicles for candidates to message during a presidential election, especially during the general election, but its dominance is quickly being eaten by digital, and that's including digital alternatives of television, like commercials on Hulu.

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Much Ado About Nothing

 

By Sherwin Pomerantz

 

Well, everyone here has been hunkered down since the weekend waiting for the big attack by Iran and its proxies (i.e. Hamas, Hezbollah, the Houtis, and even Palestinians living in Judea & Samaria/the West Bank), yet, except for a drone here and there from Lebanon …..nothing.   It actually seems now that all the supplies we put in to our “safe rooms” in case we were attacked may not be needed after all. So, what happened?

 

Frankly a lot of things because nobody anywhere in this region except Iran really wants a regional war to break out and that is a feeling shared by other countries of influence as well.  

 

Som observations from a lay person……

 

First. the United States sent two strike forces (i.e. each is an armada of warships led by an aircraft carrier or two) to the eastern Mediterranean and parked them right off Israel’s coastline.  The appearance of that much naval firepower along with fighter aircraft ready to launch was a message to Iran & Co. that perhaps they better think twice before attacking us lest they suffer the wrath of the US’ show of strength, joined by the UK as well.  

 

No doubt this made the Iranians think twice about unleashing their own firepower.  They clearly remember that when they tried this the last time on April 13th, 98% of the 300+ drones and missiles that they launched in that barrage were shot down in mid-air, and not just by us.  The US, UK, France and even Jordan and Saudi Arabia joined in our defense.  

 

Second, Russia’s Putin travelled to Tehran earlier this week to meet with the Iranian leadership as well.  According to reliable press reports he told the Iranians that if they did attack Israel, they should make sure not to go after civilians in Israel but stick to military targets only.  The Iranians, of course, don’t want to get the Russians angry as Russia is a huge buyer of Iranian oil and a political ally as well.   Of course, the Russian instructions to Iran are also very difficult to follow technologically, as the Iranian missiles are not so accurate as to be able to differentiate targets very well.   If they try to comply there will be a lot of “oops” moments for sure.

 

Third, Jordan’s foreign minister also paid a visit to Tehran this week, the first time there has been such a high-level Jordanian in Iran in twenty years.   His purpose in going there was to make it clear to the Iranians that Jordan will not permit Iran to use its air space in order to attack another country (read:  Israel).  Given that the biggest physical obstacle between Iran and Israel’s eastern border is Jordan, that would make it impossible for Iran to lob missiles directly at Israel from the east, unless they go via Saudi Arabia but…….

 

Fourth, not to be outdone, shortly after Jordan made its point to the Iranians, the Saudis said “us too,” and took the same position as the Jordanians, warning Iran that Saudi air space is also closed to Iranian missiles aimed at a third country (again, read:  Israel).

 

A cursory look at the map of the Middle East will show that once you eliminate the possibility of launching missiles at Israel via Jordan and Saudi Arabia, the only border left is the northern border with Lebanon whose access is only possible via Iraq and Syria.   That provides a very narrow geographical window of opportunity and it is not 100% clear that Hezbollah, although it is a proxy of Iran, would be able to convince the Government of Lebanon to permit this. While their government is not very strong the people of Lebanon as a whole are not happy with the presence there of Hezbollah so this kind of permission cannot be assumed.

 

As a result, my guess is we will see a very very muted response from the Iranians, in spite of all their bluster over the last ten days.  They will try something for sure but it may be simply a series of drones launched from Lebanon or even a missile or two that they will apologize to the Jordans about and which will be neutralized enroute.  

 

This does, of course, still leave us with the issues on our northern border with which we have been dealing since October 8th.  It is not clear where that will end up but it would be good to be able to limit the fronts where we are fighting to two rather than the present seven.

 

Let’s hope that the Iranians are as smart and strategic as people give them credit for.  They won’t walk away from this loving us, but defanged enemies are much easier to deal with than those who actually mean what they say and have the wherewithal to act out their threats without any restraints.  And if it works out this way, once again us believers will have seen the hand of the Lord in all its glory.

++++

President Herzog's message to world Jewry as Israel is threatened by Iran


As Israel faces threat of attack, President Herzog sends a message to Jewish communities around the world

 


President Isaac Herzog today, Wednesday, sent a message to Jewish communities around the world, as Israel continues to face the ongoing threat of imminent attack from the Iranian regime and its terrorist proxies across the region.


In his message, President Herzog spoke of the importance of the resilience of the Israeli people, of the great capabilities of the defense and security services, and of the centrality of the steadfast alliance with Israel’s allies – especially, the United States of America. The President said that the Israeli people and Jewish communities shared in the tensions and anxieties surrounding the threats of today, and noted that the concern and care between Israel and Jews around the world was mutual and deep.


Herzog began, “Dear Jewish sisters and brothers from around the world, these are difficult moments for the State of Israel and the Jewish people. These very days, we mark 10 months since the brutal massacre of October 7. It coincides with another heartbreaking moment in time, the fifth anniversary of Ariel Bibas, the little red-headed boy from Kibbutz Nir Oz who was abducted from his home by Hamas terrorists on that dark day, along with his mother, Shiri, his father, Yarden, and his baby brother, Kfir."


He contonued, “At the same time, our enemies, poisoned by hatred, blinded by radicalism and antisemitism, have vowed to attack us again. We all feel the tension, the anxiety, and the vulnerability of these moments. These feelings are natural. But my friends, rest assured. I want to state clearly, we have the capacity to confront our enemies and to defeat them. The State of Israel is blessed with many resources, most importantly incredible human resources. We have an excellent and highly motivated military, air force, intelligence services, and others. We have advanced air-defense systems. We have strong and enduring alliances that are committed to protecting not only Israel but the rules-based world ord

++++er we are fighting for, and we are so grateful to them – especially to our closest ally and friend, the United States of America, which is leading the coalition actively defending the values of life and liberty."


“But beyond all of that, we carry another most precious resource, the remarkable resilience of our people. A resilience which is rooted in the deep sense of connection and shared destiny that we have shared all across the ages. It is what has enabled us to get back up and rebuild after even the worst tragedies, and it is what we lean into right now," Herzog said.


“I want to say to our sisters and brothers everywhere that the depth of our connection and our caring is mutual. We in Israel also see the anxieties, concerns and vulnerability of Jewish communities around the world. And just as you carry us in your hearts, we carry you in our hearts too.


“Dear friends, Am Yisrael Chai,” Herzog concluded.

++++

Veterans Will Not Be Fooled by Tim Walz

 

Friday, April 6, 2012

Always In A Fitful State! New Smokes Come In A Pack Of Lies! Minister Friend!

Krauthammer hammer away at Obama's attack on The Supreme Court. (See 1 below.)
---
Elliot Abrams writes about Palestine not being a state. What his article failed to 'state' is that Palestine is not a state because Palestinians remain in a 'fitful state. '  that prevents them obtaining  legal status. (See 2 below.
---
You are probably not very interested in any used farm equipment but thought you might like to see this ad taken from Craigs List: "Fifty-year old manure spreader. Not sure of brand. Said to have been produced in Kenya . Used for a few years in Indonesia before being smuggled into the US via Hawaii . Of questionable pedigree. Does not appear to have ever been worked very hard. Apparently it was pampered by various owners over the years. It doesn't work very often, but when it does it can really spread the manure and sling it for amazing distances. I am hoping to retire this manure spreader next November. But I really don't want it hanging around getting in the way. I would prefer a foreign buyer that is willing to relocate this manure spreader out of the country. I would be willing to trade this manure spreader for a nicely framed copy of the United States Constitution."

And then:

The problem with political jokes is
they get elected.
~ Henry Cate, VII

We hang the petty thieves
and appoint the great ones to public office.
~ Aesop

If we got one-tenth of what was promised to us
in these acceptance speeches
there wouldn't be any inducement to go to heaven.
~ Will Rogers

Those who are too smart to engage in politics
are punished by being governed
by those who are dumber.
~ Plato

When I was a boy I was told
that anybody could become President;
I'm beginning to believe it
~ Clarence Darrow

Why pay money to have your family tree traced;
go into politics and
your opponents will do it for you.
~ Author Unknown

If God wanted us to vote,
he would have given us candidates.
~ Jay Leno

Politicians are people who,
when they see light at the end of the tunnel,
go out and buy some more tunnel.
~ John Quinton

Politics is the gentle art of
getting votes from the poor
and campaign funds from the rich,
by promising to protect each from the other.
~ Oscar Ameringer

I offer my opponents a bargain:
if they will stop telling lies about us,
I will stop telling the truth about them.
~ Adlai Stevenson
Campaign Speech, 1952

A politician is a fellow who
will lay down your life for his country.
~ Texas Guinan

Any American who is prepared to run for president
should automatically, by definition,
be disqualified from ever doing so.
~ Gore Vidal

Politics is supposed to be the second-oldest profession .
I have come to realize that it
bears a very close resemblance to the first.
~ Ronald Reagan

Politics:
[Poly "many" + tics "blood-sucking parasites"]
~ Larry Hardiman

Instead of giving a politician the keys to the city,
it might be better to change the locks.
~ Doug Larson

Don't vote, it only encourages them.
~ Author Unknown

There ought to be one day
-- just one --
when there is open season on senators.
~ Will Rogers

What, if anything, do the postings above have to do with our current president who smokes a brand that also comes in a 'pack of lies.'

Hope and Change - Despair and racial discord

Govern all the people - divide and conquer

Energy independence - oppose it

Alternate energy - consecutive bankruptcies

America will be loved and respected - Iran, Syria, Egypt, N Korea, Russia

Reduce Unemployment - now higher

Balance budget - More debt than ever

Open government - Chicago cronyism back in style

Protect borders - Sue Arizona

Cheaper/better health care - 2800 pages of bureaucracy

By now you get the point - like a stick in the eye!
---
Now for some humor and cartoons:

THE BLONDE WHO MARRIED A  CATHOLIC

On their honeymoon, the blonde bride slipped  into a sexy nightie and, with great anticipation, crawled into bed,only to find her Catholic husband had settled down on the couch.

When she asked him why he was apparently not going to make love to her, he replied, 'It's Lent.'

In tears, she sobbed, 'Well, that is the most ridiculous thing I've ever heard!
Who did you lend it to, and for how long?"



---
Yesterday I had lunch with my favorite Minister and, as always, we discussed the state of affairs.  I mentioned these had to be very fertile times for sermons and someone in his profession because there was so much change taking place in the world of public and personal morality.

The conversation then turned to the episodic events shaking the foundations of our Republic and whether America would really be able to survive in recognizable form or were we going the way of all once great nations.

The elite media and artistic types have turned against God and traditional family structure, our country is  being led by a pandering  divisive incompetent who is outside  the mainstream and is drowning us in a divide and conquer strategy that appeals to the nation's growing number of uneducated and unreasoning. Those increasingly dependent upon government whose feelings of resentment make them ripe for the demagogue's siren song message.

My minister friend could not understand why those who lived in the greatest nation on earth,  enjoyed the greatest freedoms and upward mobility of any peoples, lived in a nation that  had overcome the ravages of a Civil War and had healed and moved forward,were so discontent and easily swayed.

I responded  the less traveled have no idea of how bad it is somewhere else.

As always a pleasure to be with this truly decent man who is very much and justifiably loved by those in his congregation.  I introduced him to another friend who was having lunch in the same room and he asked: 'Dick has he converted you yet?' and I responded: ' we do not go there.'
---
Black pride went the way of dependency according to this black author.Trade aspirations of improvement for political slavery.(See 3 below.)
---
An interesting take on Romney's persona and reserved charisma. I attribute Romney's public uncomfortablness to his Mormon religion and middle west upbringing.

I believe the more America comes to really know Romney they will warm to him and the contrast between this decent and competent man and our narcissistic incompetent president will become increasingly evident and more appealing.(See 4 below.)
---
Laffer:  Obama gets it, he just does not care because he is hell bent on our destruction (change) through wealth transference under the guise of being for the under-dog.. (See 5 below.)
---

My computer guru friend and fellow memo reader  assists a major Israeli Newspaper with their IT needs.  He recently wanted to get their take on the mood in Israel towards Obama's statement about having 'Israel's back.'  My friend told me last night Israelis overwhelmingly do not trust Obama. (See 6 and 6a below.)

And finally the knife in the back?  It was only a matter of time.  (See 6b below.)
---
---
Dick
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1) Charles Krauthammer: Obama v. SCOTUS 


“I’m confident that the Supreme Court will not take what would be an unprecedented, extraordinary step of overturning a law that was passed by a strong majority of a democratically elected Congress.”

— Barack Obama, on the constitutional challenge to his health-care law, April 2



“Unprecedented”? Judicial review has been the centerpiece of the American constitutional system since Marbury v. Madison in 1803. “Strong majority”? The House has 435 members. In March 2010, Democrats held a 75-seat majority. Obamacare passed by seven votes.

In his next-day walk back, the president implied that he was merely talking about the normal “restraint and deference” the courts owe the legislative branch. This concern would be touching if it weren’t coming from the leader of a party so deeply devoted to the ultimate judicial usurpation — Roe v. Wade, which struck down the abortion laws of 46 states — that fealty to it is the party’s litmus test for service on the Supreme Court.

With Obamacare remaking one-sixth of the economy, it would be unusual for the Supreme Court to overturn legislation so broad and sweeping. On the other hand, it is far more unusual to pass such a fundamentally transformative law on such a narrow, partisan basis.

Obamacare passed the Congress without a single vote from the opposition party — in contradistinction to Social Security, the Civil Rights Act, the Voting Rights Act, Medicare and Medicaid, similarly grand legislation, all of which enjoyed substantial bipartisan support. In the Senate, moreover, Obamacare squeaked by through a parliamentary maneuver called reconciliation that was never intended for anything so sweeping. The fundamental deviation from custom and practice is not the legal challenge to Obamacare but the very manner of its enactment.

The president’s preemptive attack on the court was in direct reaction to Obamacare’s three days of oral argument. It was a shock. After years of contemptuously dismissing the very idea of a legal challenge, Democrats suddenly realized there actually is a serious constitutional argument to be made against Obamacare — and they are losing it.

Here were highly sophisticated conservative thinkers — lawyers and justices — making the case for limited government, and liberals weren’t even prepared for the obvious constitutional question: If Congress can force the individual into a private contract by authority of the commerce clause, what can it not force the individual to do? Without a limiting principle, the central premise of our constitutional system — a government of enumerated powers — evaporates. What, then, is the limiting principle?

Liberals were quick to blame the administration’s bumbling solicitor general, Donald Verrilli, for blowing the answer. But Clarence Darrow couldn’t have given it. There is none.

Justice Stephen Breyer tried to rescue the hapless Verrilli by suggesting that by virtue of being born, one enters into the “market for health care.” To which plaintiffs’ lawyer Michael Carvin devastatingly replied: If birth means entering the market, Congress is omnipotent, authorized by the commerce clause to regulate “every human activity from cradle to grave.”

Q.E.D.

Having lost the argument, what to do? Bully. The New York Times loftily warned the Supreme Court that it would forfeit its legitimacy if it ruled against Obamacare because with the “five Republican-appointed justices supporting the challenge led by 26 Republican governors, the court will mark itself as driven by politics.”

Really? The administration’s case for the constitutionality of Obamacare was so thoroughly demolished in oral argument that one liberal observer called it “a train wreck.” It is perfectly natural, therefore, that a majority of the court should side with the argument that had so clearly prevailed on its merits. That’s not partisanship. That’s logic. Partisanship is four Democrat-appointed justices giving lock-step support to a law passed by a Democratic Congress and a Democratic president — after the case for its constitutionality had been reduced to rubble.

Democrats are reeling. Obama was so taken aback, he hasn’t even drawn up contingency plans should his cherished reform be struck down. Liberals still cannot grasp what’s happened — the mild revival of constitutionalism in a country they’ve grown so used to ordering about regardless. When asked about Obamacare’s constitutionality, Nancy Pelosi famously replied: “Are you serious?” She was genuinely puzzled.

As was Rep. Phil Hare (D-Ill.). As Michael Barone notes, when Hare was similarly challenged at a 2010 town hall, he replied: “I don’t worry about the Constitution.” Hare is now retired, having been shortly thereafter defeated for reelection by the more constitutionally attuned owner of an East Moline pizza shop. 
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2)Is Palestine A State?
Posted on April 4, 2012 11:18 am
by Elliott Abrams
Is Palestine a state?  The International Criminal Court answered this question this week, and said no.
The Palestinian Authority, apparently calling itself the “Government of Palestine,” tried to lodge a complaint against Israel at the ICC.  As American courts would do, the ICC first had to decide if it had jurisdiction.  As its statement notes, the ICC has jurisdiction over a matter only when the UN Security Council or a “state” provide it.  So is “Palestine” a state?
The Court’s answer was no, as it explained:
The Office has been informed that Palestine has been recognised as a State in bilateral relations by more than 130 governments and by certain international organisations, includingUnited Nation bodies. However, tthe current status granted to Palestine by the United Nations General Assembly is that of “observer”, not as a “Nonmember State”. The Office understands that on 23 September 2011, Palestine submitted an application for admission to the United Nations as a Member State in accordance with article 4(2) of the United Nations Charter, but the Security Council has not yet made a recommendation in this regard.
Two comments are worth making.  First, the ICC’s prosecutor, Luis Moreno Ocampo, should be congratulated for upholding legal standards despite obvious political pressures.  He went by the book.  Moreno Ocampo’s nine year term ends in June, and his successor, Fatou Bensouda of Gambia, should be equally careful and judicious. As she has been his deputy since 2004, one can hope that this will be the case.
Second, the Palestinian failure in the United Nations last year is what produced this dismissal of their complaint.  They did not seek the status of “non-member state” from the General Assembly but insisted on having full membership in the UN as a sovereign state accorded by the Security Council.  This the United States rightly blocked, preventing the PLO from attaining the necessary number of  Security Council votes even to require an American veto in order to block their plan. The PLO is reaping what its diplomacy sowed in 2011.
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3) What Happened to Black Pride?
By Kevin Jackson


For a few decades, black Liberals have settled for anything. Fake watches, fake purses, and especially fake leaders. If the black Liberal community were truthful, they would admit their disappointment in Barack Obama.

If Obama were a basketball player, he would be the equivalent of the guy who couldn't inbound the ball or constantly double-dribbles. He's the guy to whom you just quit passing the ball; because when he gets the ball, he always shoots and always misses.

What happened to black pride? There was a time when black people didn't settle for failures like Obama; they expected more from blacks who were blessed to get the opportunity for greatness. Whether it was sports, entertainment, or politics, blacks who were set up for something transcendental carried the expectation of the entire black race on their shoulders. Much was riding on his or her success, regardless of the role.

Each time the baton was passed, the next black understood the obligation to represent, to show the world that the black man had a contribution to make, and we would not squander it. We were to be among the best, and expected to be better than whites in terms of our humanity. Many blacks received the admonition that if you were to do a job that put you in the spotlight, do it "twice as good as a white person."

Blacks had known the shackles of slavery; thus we would work to see that no one was ever enslaved. We had witnessed the lack of civil rights at the hands of Democrats first-hand, so we would fight for the civil rights of all. Because of our struggles, blacks had a unique perspective passed on generation to generation as something that could unite us. Black knew something whites in America would never truly know -- the ability to rise above it all.

Every time there was black success, black people would say, "There's another example that you can't keep a black man down." How powerful is it to know that you can overcome anything? This is why black unemployment during the '50s was practically unheard of. Black people were the best employees, the most diligent, innovative and inventive of that time.

Yet in a few short decades, the Democrats managed to destroy that sense of pride in accomplishment in black America, trading it for pride in just being black, real pride of our glorious heritage stolen.

Liberal black "leaders" are the perpetrators of the theft. They victimize other blacks and the rest of the country in order to gain in stature and would sell their children to get ahead, and they have. Nevertheless, black Liberals want these circus clowns as their spokesmen, clowns who have convinced the black people they supposedly represent that a person is evil for simply having been born with slightly different DNA that makes them white.

The majority of blacks are employed by whites. But you won't see black ethno-centric '60s throwback radical quitting their jobs. Because in the time of the first black president, black unemployment is so high that these black radicals are lucky to have jobs. "Who are the real sellouts?"

Lovie Smith, the black coach of the Chicago Bears and member of "African-Americans for Obama" says, "Despite Obama's dismal record, we need to support him because he's black." Since Smith hasn't won a Super Bowl, can we assume that Smith isn't coaching as well as he would for a black owner? Or should we assume that the owner was forced to hire Smith based on the Affirmative Action, and Smith is simply another incompetent black Liberal in over his head.

When does truth trump color for black people? Black people in America have gotten almost everything we have asked of this country, yet it's still not enough for many blacks, Liberal Democrat racist blacks.

Our forefathers would be embarrassed at the outcome of the black community, and the fact that by now we have not overcome being the "black race" and risen to the level of being part of the "human race." Our forefathers pictured an America where faith in God, family, love of country, education and work-ethic were the core of what represented the black community. They expected by now that black people would represent the greatness of America, a country that despite its problems offered those once deemed lowest to rise to the top.

Instead of celebrating America's first recognized black president and all the strides black people have made however, there are those in the black community who want to make sure that black pride remains a thing of the past. Those black demagogues want America's first recognized black president to reset the clock on civil rights and oppress white people who had nothing to do with the past oppression of black people by Democrats.

Though a proud black man, I put no race above another. I believe in the human race above all things, as I believe God made man's essence in his own image, not his color. Color is merely a geographical trait and has no bearing on one's character. It's time black people concede to a higher calling, transcend race, and find the pride in having been a significant part in the building of the greatest country the world has ever known.

Kevin Jackson - The Black Sphere, LLC - All Rights Reserved.
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4)Mitt Romney, Antihero
By Malcolm Unwell


The presumptive GOP nominee Mitt Romney seems at first glance a lightening rod of un-enthusiasm, a man who is provocative for being unprovocative. This is of course a media-created illusion. In fact, Romney has the liberal media quaking in their boots. The media's weapons are smirk and scorn, derision and ridicule.

The left wants desperately to diminish Romney out of the fear that he will grow to become an even more formidable politician. They seek to alienate him -- to make him into what is known in psychobabble as "the other." This is the admitted strategy of the Obama campaign. Instead, Romney fits a paternalist archetype at a time when the country seriously needs a dad at the wheel. Think Don Draper without the sinister plot lines. This is why Romney is feared.

Professional critics always seem to parse their words. They cannot whole-heartedly embrace anything or anyone without caveats. Let's jettison that approach: Why not embrace Romney's candidacy with an uncritical eye, instead of the jaundiced, bored, critics' glance? No, I don't suggest we now drop our analytical functioning, but let's lose the cynicism.

When Romney explains that he does not want to "transform America", as does Obama, but rather to "restore America", rest assured that Governor Romney means to restore our country in the political, economic, and even ethnic sense (though of course he won't spell that out for his audience). This wistfulness for the past, and steel-hearted hope for the future is elegantly put. Let's internalize that slogan, and not forget what it really signifies.

Pundits shouldn't urge Romney to "be himself", with the assumption that a classy reserve is inauthentic. As broadcaster Mark Simone posited once on radio, perhaps America is ready for another patrician president. Historian and National Review editor Richard Brookhiser once identified the WASP culture as one that values a strong work ethic, and one that shuns public sensuality. Clearly Romney embodies these values. Richard Lowry, also of National Review, has deemed Romney "the last WASP, Mormon edition." Waspiness, as Brookhiser has pointed out, has less to do with actually being a Protestant at this point in history, and more to do with prudence and industriousness. It is no wonder that Romney seemed so at ease receiving the endorsement of the equally patrician George H.W. Bush. Both these men have a quiet dignity which is very becoming to the office of president.

This WASPish reserve, combined with his hyper-articulateness, is why Romney does not meet the pop-culture standard of "authentic." Romney does not conform to the new-age, baby-boomer practice of nauseating self-expression and shameless emoting. And why, we shouldn't want him to do so. After all, is there not a conservative backlash against the baby-boomers on the part of "Generation X'rs", of whom I count myself one?

We are too cynical a culture to put anyone up on a pedestal. As Paul Simon once asked, "where did you go Joe DiMaggio?" Simon also asked, "who will be my role model, now that my role model's gone." If these lyrics were relevant at the time of his music's publication, they are even more so today. For if we were to lionize an individual, whom would we choose? Those who have been deified in my generation have either killed themselves or turned out to be child molesters. Granted, those were bad choices for deities.

Romney is an antihero. Whereas an antihero used to signify a rebel, such as Holden Caulfield in the '50s, now a rebel is a generic type, and therefore not "anti" anything, really. With his patrician mannerisms and puritanical lifestyle, it would seem that Romney is the real rebel, a rebel against rebellion, if you will.

Romney presents himself as the archetypical leader of men. This in an age when, as columnist Rebecca Bynum recently put it, "everything is suited to satire, and nothing is sacred." Because of the unchecked cynicism of the electorate, Romney is yet to be taken as seriously as he deserves, and it is hoped that April 3rd's victories in Maryland, D.C., and Wisconsin will change that. But with the incompetence of both the Bush and Obama administrations, we are a country hesitant to sign on enthusiastically to the leadership of any individual.

Malcolm Unwell is that rare bird, a conservative educator.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
5)Art Laffer: Obama Doesn't Get It — 'Government Spending Destroys Jobs'
By Julie Crawshaw

Art Laffer, an economist and former adviser to President Ronald Reagan, says President Barack Obama's recent criticism of the Republican budget plan misses the mark.

"What Obama is missing is that government spending doesn't create jobs, it destroys jobs," Laffer told CNBC.

"The tooth fairy doesn't work on the Treasury staff," he said.

“When you cut government spending, you get a boom in the economy,” says Laffer.

“When you increase it, the economy collapses, and it’s exactly what happened under [President George W. Bush] and Obama. They were two peas in a pod.”

Former president Bill Clinton cut government spending as a share of GDP, Laffer notes. “Look at the boom that occurred under Clinton,” he says. “That’s what we’re talking about.”

The same thing happened after World War II, says Laffer, when a massive cut in government spending as a share of GDP sent the private economy "through the ceiling."

Moreover, to help ease the burden of entitlement spending Laffer thinks the age at which people can receive Social Security benefits should be extended “way out.”

“We’re living longer. We’re living much healthier,” Laffer says. “Let us be productive without being on Social Security.”

The Christian Science Monitor reports that In an election-year pitch to middle-class voters, Obama is denouncing the House Republican budget plan as a "Trojan horse," warning that it represents "an attempt to impose a radical vision on our country" that would hurt the pocketbooks of working families.
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6)Eve of Holiday with an Eve of War Atmosphere

Have you considered a scenario in which the Muslim Brotherhood wins the
elections, selects a religious president in Egypt, and de-facto cancels the
peace agreement with Israel? This is not farfetched. The IDF, which
decreased its forces in the south during the stable period during the
Egyptian peace process, must prepare for that scenario as well.

Eve of Holiday with an Eve of War Atmosphere

The IDF will try to reduce the number of Namer APCs by half despite
committing to a minimal acquisition level; the IDF's operational forum and
the forum of defense industries gathered on the eve of the holiday in a
non-festive atmosphere; and the new head of the Planning Branch faces a
near-impossible task

The chief task facing the newly appointed Head of the IDF’s Planning Branch,
Major General Nimrod Shefer, is to restart the debates in the General Staff
for consolidating the IDF’s new multi-year plan, codenamed “Halamish.”

The plan was supposed to enter effect at the start of 2012 and be
implemented at least by the end of 2016. However, its implementation was
postponed by a year due to the arguments over the defense budget and the
upheavals in the Middle East.

The arguments began as a result of the summer protests and the need to
allocate budgets for implementing the recommendations of the Trachtenberg
committee.

As with all the IDF's previous multi-year plans (the last one, Tefen, which
was intended for 2007-2011, was the first in decades to be materialized in
its entirety, without being cut in the middle), the Halamish plan is based
on “reference scenarios." This essentially refers to the worst scenario, to
which the IDF builds its forces accordingly. However, this doesn’t
necessarily mean that the IDF is preparing for the worst-case scenario.

When Halamish was launched, back when Amir Eshel was still the Head of the
Planning Branch (Eshel will soon be appointed the Air Force Commander), the
Middle East truly seemed different. The peace agreements with Egypt were
stable, even if the risk of war with Iran, Syria, Hezbollah, and Hamas was
already discernible over the horizon.

The strengthening of the threat posed by the “Iranian Axis,” in parallel to
the strategic change in the southern arena, demanded that the assumptions of
the Halamish plan be examined from the ground up. However, the suitable
conditions for that don’t exist now. Due to a gap of at least six billion
NIS between the defense establishment’s budgetary demands and the budget as
it exists on paper (at least for the time being), the defense establishment
is largely managing from hand to mouth at the moment, like a family going
through hardships, or a business with financial problems maneuvering
payments to its suppliers.

Merkava, with No End

Take the affair of the Merkava project as an example. The project was worthy
of an in-depth examination concerning the question of whether the IDF should
invest most of its allocated ground resources in a heavy armored vehicle, or
in lighter vehicles with active protection. An examination is actually being
done by a special committee, which includes the economist Liora Meridor and
the former commander of the Combat Corps Headquarters, Major General (Res.)
Emanuel Sakal.

According to the decisions made in the framework of the previous plan,
Tefen, the IDF invests approximately two billion NIS annually over a
ten-year period for construction of tanks and APCs. Nearly half of the sum
is funded by the US taxpayer, in the framework of the Namer production
efforts being done in the US. The other half is in NIS, providing a
livelihood to approximately 200 factories involved with the Merkava tank,
and a much smaller number of factories providing Namer components.

Several weeks ago, the Ministry of Defense completely halted new orders in
the framework of the Merkava tank and APC project. In the past few days, it
seems that the most predictable thing happened: small factories, most of
them in the periphery, reached the brink of collapse. An uproar came from
the heads of the periphery municipalities, including Kiryat Shmona,
Nahariya, Sderot, and Netivot.

On Wednesday, the Director General of the Ministry of Defense, Udi Shani,
approved the freeing of 50 million NIS for orders from 15 factories facing
the most distress. The rest of the factories are still crying out for orders
(primarily those that don’t have orders many years in advance). An essential
debate concerning the fate of the project is sluggishly taking place (due to
previous commitments, its closure could end up costing even more money in
the coming years than its continuation).

There are no differences of opinion in the defense establishment concerning
the necessity of the new tanks and APCs. The chief question is whether or
not the ordered amount is excessive, and if the budgets can't be utilized in
a more efficient manner.

The political echelon is urging that the number of APCs intended for
production in the coming years be cut by half. The Chief of Staff, Lt. Gen.
Benny Gantz (who didn’t hesitate when it came to slashing the armored ORBAT
while he was Ground Force Commander, prior to the Second Lebanon War) would
apparently be happy to make the significant cut to the project. The problem
is that the Ministry of Defense committed to GDLS - which constructed a
Namer assembly line in the US city of Lima. In the contract, it stipulated
that a minimal number of APCs be produced in two stages. The IDF is
considering canceling the second stage, but it’s doubtful that they could do
it, from a legal perspective.

The Southern Danger

Despite the cuts, the IDF is very much operating these days in an eve of war
atmosphere. Even if there won't eventually be a war with Iran in the summer,
there’s a possibility that a significant front will erupt in 2012 against
the Gaza Strip or in the north against Hezbollah. A conflict with Syria is
neither fictitious.

The solemn atmosphere was also sensed at the forum of hundreds of
operational commanders that gathered this week at the IDF’s Glilot base. In
contrast to the mood in the IDF, the public finds it preferable to repress
things. Even during tension-filled times, it is the nature of the media to
deal with short, specific events more than with fateful processes that occur
over time.

One example of this is the rocket fired at Eilat this week – an episode that
will soon be forgotten. The rocket was a result of the Egyptian military’s
difficulty in controlling events in Sinai, and the presence of numerous
terrorist groups throughout the vast peninsula.

The Muslim Brotherhood’s decision last weekend to run for elections for the
presidency of Egypt is an example of a far more significant event. However,
it’s doubtful that even a small percentage of the Israeli public noticed it.
This is a surprising decision, from many aspects, as the previous assessment
was that the Brotherhood would avoid a direct conflict over the regime in
the coming years. The movement’s very decision to run for office has a
considerable significance. Have you considered a scenario in which the
Muslim Brotherhood wins the elections, selects a religious president in
Egypt, and de-facto cancels the peace agreement with Israel? This is not
farfetched. The IDF, which decreased its forces in the south during the
stable period during the Egyptian peace process, must prepare for that
scenario as well.

The SIBAT Convention: No Party

The eve of Passover is a period for meetings and proposing toasts. Such was
the atmosphere at the conference held on Thursday morning by SIBAT, the
Ministry of Defense’s defense export and cooperation division, which saw the
participation of senior officials from the Israeli defense industries.

SIBAT is the branch tasked with promoting Israel’s defense exports. The more
that the Israeli defense industries sell overseas, the more they can afford
to develop additional developments for the IDF at a lower cost.

However, there is no festive mood in the defense export arena. The cuts to
the defense budgets in Western countries, primarily in the US, are leaving
their mark. Data for 2011 has yet to be completely compiled, but it is
likely that defense exports saw a specific decline compared to 2010
(although it is still high - nearly $7 billion).

The combination of global budgetary cuts (the US companies, now hungrier
than ever, have increased the competition against Israeli companies in
East-Asian markets) and the frugality of the Ministry of Defense is no
simple matter. Elbit has already started cutting hundreds of employees from
its manpower quotas (a process expected to continue after the holiday).
Rafael and IAI have stopped recruiting new employees. Plasan Sasa is
suffering from the decline in vehicle protection orders for the US Army.
Moreover, the situation is even more complicated in small and medium-sized
companies, which have fewer layers of fat to trim.

Eyes Towards the Comptroller

After the holdiday, Lt. General (Res.) Gabi Ashkenazi, Minister of Defense
Ehud Barak, and the other heroes of the Galant document affair will submit
their references to the State Comptroller’s draft report on the affair.

In addition, a full report will be published after the holiday on another
issue: the conduct of the political echelons and the defense establishment
concerning the flotilla of the Turkish ship Marmara in May 2010. An
interesting topic will be addressed in the report - should the Head of the
National Security Council take an active part in the sensitive deliberations
of the security cabinet, as stated in the NSC law? Or should he be
compartmentalized out of some of these debates, as is actually taking place?


6a)The eternal liberation movement
By Caroline B. Glick


Unfortunately for Israel, while the Arab world is increasingly uninterested in the Palestinian war against Israel, Europe and the American Left are more than happy to pick up the slack

Hamas terror boss Fathi Hamad is a notable figure. Hamad is both the director of Hamas's al Aksa television station and the terror group's "minister" of the interior and national security. His double portfolio is a clear expression of the much ignored fact that for terrorists, propaganda is inseparable from violence.

Hamad's key posts make him a man worth listening to. His statements necessarily indicate Hamas's general direction.

On March 23, Hamad was interviewed by Egypt's Al Hekma television station. The interview was translated by MEMRI.

Hamad made two central points. First he claimed that the Palestinian war against Israel is the keystone of the global jihad. Second he said the Palestinians are not a distinct people, but transplanted Egyptians and Saudis.

In his words, "At Al-Aqsa and on the land of Palestine, all the conspiracies, throughout history, have been shattered -- the conspiracies of the Crusaders, and the conspiracies of the Tatars. At Al-Aqsa and on the land of Palestine, the Battle of Hattin was waged. The [West] does not want this noble history to repeat itself, because the Jews and their allies would be annihilated --- the Zionists, the Americans, and the imperialists.

"Thus, the conspiracy is very clear. Al-Aqsa and the land of Palestine represent the spearhead for Islam and for the Muslims. Therefore, when we seek the help of our Arab brothers, we are not seeking their help in order to eat, to live, to drink, to dress, or to live a life of luxury. No. When we seek their help, it is in order to continue to wage Jihad."

Hamad next explained, "Brothers, half of the Palestinians are Egyptians and the other half are Saudis. Who are the Palestinians? We have many families called Al-Masri, [Egyptians] whose roots are Egyptian. Egyptian! They may be from Alexandria, from Cairo, from Dumietta, from the North, from Aswan, from Upper Egypt. We are Egyptians."

What Hamad's interview tells us is that today Hamas -- the Palestinian branch of the Muslim Brotherhood -- is more interested in unity with Muslim Brotherhood dominated Egypt than with Fatah. Whereas in the past it joined Fatah in obscuring the direct link between the jihad against the Jews and the jihad against the non-Muslim world, today it seeks to emphasize the connection. To this end, Hamas is willing to abandon the myth of Palestinian nativism and acknowledge that the Palestinians are an artificial people, invented for the purpose of advancing the global jihad in the key battlefield of Israel.

Hamad's statements underscore a widespread sentiment among Israelis about the revolutions now tearing apart the Arab world. That sentiment is that while the results of these revolutions will be catastrophic in the medium and long term, in the short term they bring respite to Israel. With Arab regimes -- new and old -- struggling to consolidate power, they have little time or energy to devote to their war against Israel.

In this situation, the thinking goes, Israel should be able to devote its attention to attacking Iran's nuclear facilities.

Unfortunately for Israel, while the Arab world is increasingly uninterested in the Palestinian war against Israel, Europe and the American Left are more than happy to pick up the slack.


Consider two recent events. First, two weeks ago the UN Human Rights Council voted to launch a commission whose goal is to criminalize Israel for the existence of Israeli communities beyond the 1949 armistice lines.

The council's decision to form a new kangaroo court to criminalize Israel was not the result of the Arab diplomatic war against Israel. It is the consequence of the European diplomatic war against Israel. It is Europe, not the Arabs that has barred Israel from caucusing with its UN regional group — the Western European and Others Group. By barring Israel from the caucus, the Europeans have denied Israel the ability to make its case to other UN member nations.

For its part, the Obama administration pays lip service to the need to end the Human Rights Council's obsessive war against Israel. But at the same time, it has effectively joined that war by legitimizing the anti-Israel council both by joining it, and by refusing to use its membership as leverage to coerce the council into abandoning its campaign against Israel.

Following the council's vote to form a new Goldstone-style commission to attack Israel, the State Department issued a statement in which it claimed that due in part to US membership in the council, the council had been spurred to "action on a series of important human rights situations around the world."

Then there was last Friday's Global March to Jerusalem in which a consortium of protesters organized by Hamas, the Muslim Brotherhood, Iran and the international Left intended to storm Israel's borders and fill the state with hostile foreigners.

As Ribhi Holoum, the coordinator of the march said last year, the goal of the GMJ was "to move the right of return possessed by Palestinian refugees from theory to practice." In a press conference in Amman days ahead of the operation, Haloum said that organizers expected for two million people to mass at Israel's borders and attempt to breach them.

In the end, the GMJ failed to mount its planned invasion. The sum total of the day's events amounted to several violent local demonstrations by Palestinians in Judea and Samaria joined by foreign and Israeli leftists. Israel's borders were not breached.

The GMJ's failure to achieve its aims owed to the same pan-Arab distraction that Hamad tried to address in his interview with Egyptian television. But while the Syrians, Egyptians, Jordanians and Lebanese have more urgent business to attend to, the international Left has intensified its own campaign against Israel.

Leading anti-Israel, (and anti-Jewish) leftists including George Galloway, Desmond Tutu, Mairead Maguire, Noam Chomsky, Jeremiah Wright, Cindy Sheehan and Medea Benjamin served as members of the GMJ's various organizing committees. These self-proclaimed human rights activists had no problem with the fact that the Iranian regime took a central role in organizing the operation or that the clear goal of the campaign's Muslim organizers is the destruction of Israel.

To the contrary, this goal is now openly shared by growing numbers of Western leftists. In an oped at the Guardian's online opinion forum, Sarah Colborne, a member of the GMJ's organizing committees and its national coordinator for the UK as well as the director of the Palestine Solidarity Campaign in the UK wrote, "The struggle for Palestinian rights is at the core of the global movement for social and economic justice."

Judith Butler, one of Colborne's American counterparts has opined that "understanding Hamas, Hezbollah as social movements that are progressive, that are on the Left, that are part of a global Left, is extremely important."


So just as Hamas's Hamad claims that the jihad on Israel is the key campaign of the global jihad, Hamad's Western partners claim that destroying Israel is the key to the Left's campaign for socialism.

Disturbingly, the international Left is receiving indirect support for its goal of destroying Israel's sovereignty over Jerusalem, (and through it, destroying Israel), from the US government. Just days before the GMJ failed to unravel Israel's physical control over Jerusalem, in a jaw dropping exchange between State Department Spokesperson Victora Nuland and AP reporter Matthew Lee, Nuland refused to say that Jerusalem is the capital of Israel.

The US has always been deeply hostile to Israel's sovereignty over Jerusalem. Beginning in 1950 the State Department directed US diplomats to discourage other governments from establishing their embassies in Jerusalem. But while the US has always undermined its own alliance with Israel by aligning its policy on Jerusalem with Israel's worst enemies, under President Barack Obama, the US's willingness to express this hostility has been unprecedented. This hostility has been demonstrated most famously by Obama's demand that the government stop respecting Jewish property rights in the city.

It has also been given graphic expression by the administration's decision to move the Consular Section of the US Consulate in Jerusalem from an Arab neighborhood in eastern Jerusalem to the site that Israel allocated for a new US embassy. The site is located in the Jewish Arnona neighborhood in western Jerusalem.

Israel allocated the land to a future US Embassy after Congress passed the US Embassy Act in 1995 which obligated the US government to move the US embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. The site was chosen, among other reasons, because its location in western Jerusalem put it outside the dispute regarding whether or not Israel will retain sovereignty over eastern, southern and northern Jerusalem in a hypothetical peace treaty with the Palestinians. The US government uses the non-resolution of the Palestinian conflict with Israel as its justification for refusing to accept Jewish property rights in those areas of the city.

The US Consulate in Jerusalem is not subordinate to the US Embassy in Tel Aviv. It presents itself as the unofficial US embassy to the non-existent state of Palestine. By utilizing the site in western Jerusalem allocated for a future embassy as an extension office of the consulate, the Obama administration made clear its rejection of Israel's right to sovereignty over all of Jerusalem. And in light of the US law that recognizes Jerusalem as Israel's capital and orders the government to relocate the embassy to Jerusalem, the Obama administration not only indirectly legitimized the cause of those who seek the destruction of Israel. It did so in contempt of US law.

In truth, there is nothing new about the West's rejection of Israel's right to sovereignty or even to its support and sponsorship for the Arab war for the destruction of Israel. Such animosity predates not only the 1967 Six Day War. It predates the establishment of Israel.

British Col. Richard Meinertzhagen, who served as an intelligence officer in wartime and post-World War I Mandatory Palestine made this point clearly in his memoir Middle East Diary.
Meinertzhagen wrote that the first Arab terror assaults on Jews under the British military government were instigated by the British military. Just before Easter in 1920, British military authorities contacted future Nazi agent Haj Amin el Husseini and encouraged him to attack the Jews of Jerusalem. They told him, "He had a great opportunity at Easter to show the world that the Arabs of Palestine would not tolerate Jewish domination in Palestine�and if disturbances of sufficient violence occurred in Jerusalem at Easter, [the British High Commanders] would advocate the abandonment of the Jewish Home."

Tonight the Jewish people begin our eight-day celebration of Passover, the Jewish festival of freedom. This evening we will read in the Hagada that in fight for freedom is an eternal struggle.
When we assess the global nature of the current assault on Jewish freedom and sovereignty in our country, we see the truth of that message. While our present circumstances give us much to celebrate, the work of Jewish liberation is far from over

6b)'US to accept civilian nuke program in Iran'

President Obama signals Iran that US would endorse nuclear program if Ayatollah Ali Khamenei backs up claim that Islamic Republic won't purse atom bomb, US paper reports
By Yitzhak Benhorin


US President Barack Obama has signaled Tehran that the Washington would accept an civilian nuclear program in Iran if Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei can back up his recent claim that his nation “will never pursue nuclear weapons,” the Washington Post reported Friday.

According to the report, the verbal message was sent through Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who met with Khamenei last week. A few days prior to leaving for the trip, Erdogan held a two-hour meeting with Obama on the sidelines of the nuclear security summit in Seoul, in which they discussed what the Turkish leader would tell Khamenei about the nuclear issue.

Washington Post columnist David Ignatius wrote that Obama advised Tehran, via Edrogan, that time is running out for a peaceful agreement. Obama didn’t specify whether Iran would be allowed to enrich uranium domestically. The issue evidently is to be discussed during the talks between the Islamic Republic and the West, which are slated start on April 13 at a venue yet to be decided.

Words into actions

Edrogan is said to have agreed with Obama that the primary challenge faced by the negotiators is turning Khamenei’s public rhetoric into a serious and verifiable commitment not to build a bomb.

Erdogan reportedly conveyed Obama’s message to Khamenei when he met the Iranian leader on Thursday. Erdogan also met President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and other senior Iranian officials during his visit.

Western diplomats remain skeptic about the success of the diplomatic path, especially in light of the recent disagreement over the venue for the upcoming negotiations. According to the report, Istanbul was expected to host the talks, but the Iranians last weekend balked and suggested instead to meet in Iraq or China.


US officials consider this foot-dragging a sign that the Iranian leadership is still formulating its positions ahead of the talks.

Meanwhile, the US pressed on with sanctions that aim to deprive Tehran of revenue needed to develop its nuclear program.
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