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On Thu, 7 Nov 2024 16:16:48 +0000, Owen Hartnett wrote:You don’t have to understand everything, Dan…
>According to City Journal:>
https://www.city-journal.org/article/the-disruptor?skip=1
>
"Similarly, the Jewish vote, three-quarters of
which typically goes to Democratic presidential
candidates, also shifted. Democrats still won a
majority of Jews, but Republicans got 32 percent
of the Jewish vote, which similarly eats into
Democrats’ expected margins in ways that could be
hard for them to overcome. A more worrisome sign
for Democrats may be in the New York Jewish vote,
where 46 percent of Jews in America’s largest Jewish
population voted for Trump, potentially signaling
where this community will be going electorally in
the future."
>
I have always wondered why Jewish people would
traditionally vote Democrat, although it seemed
to be against their best interest, as far as
support for Israel goes.
>
I don't understand why you are asking me or Marc.
>This is all untrue — besides the fact you stated this a few times
As I stated more than once in this forum, I do
not participate in political action of any kind,
and I do not subscribe to any shared belief system.
I cannot speak on behalf of anyone else and I do
not ever try to get inside anyone else's mind.
>Lol
I am not American. I do not vote in US elections,
and I do not investigate other people's political
beliefs and agendas, or interrogate them about
their beliefs in such a crass manner as you
exhibit in the article you just posted.
>How about not moderating people like a dickhead and let them ask who and
The questions you ask have been debated to death so
many times by so many people that it is pointless to
inject them into this ng. If you are interested in
exploring such topics, Google can find more material
for you than you can read in a lifetime. What makes
anyone think I (or Marc) would be able to provide
answers more than people who devote significant
time to such topics?
>What a load of wannabe-politically-correct-nonsense…
A couple of points are in order however.
>
The way your questions above are posed suggests a
belief that "the Jewish people" think and/or act
as a (more or less) unified block. Nothing can be
farther from the truth, and the very notion this
might be the case is deeply troubling, if not
downright insulting. The "Jewish people" are as
diverse as the French or the Americans or any
other people. No one person speaks for us all,
just as no one person speaks for the French or
the Americans or any other nation. To believe
or pretend otherwise amounts to calling Jews
a "tribe". This is insulting, and loaded with
subliminal anti-Semitism.
>Blablablabla — thanks for stating the obvious…
The breakdown by social or ethnic origin or
religion or any other kind of social group
of the vote in the US presidential election
does not conote any more meaning for US Jews
than for Catholics, or Protestants, or women,
or however else one defines the boundaries of
a study group. Like all other social groups,
Jews hold different individual political and
social views and priorities. To suggest Jews
have a single, common "best interest" that
determines how they vote is nothing more
than prejudice. No more, no less, and
nothing else.
>
Thx
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