There is only one question in this debate about Hillary and the Jew’s vote for Democrats versus Republicans. Our country is in a mess which was caused by Hillary Clinton and Obama and his Democrats/Muslims/Socialists. If the Jews vote for the Democratic Party this time, it will only tell me they are not for the people of America and are in the debate and vote to destroy America.
Once the vote is cast this year, it will tell me all I want to know and then I will go forward with my thinking about the Jews. The Republicans have bent over backwards to help the Jewish people and if they renege and vote for the Democrats – I am done with these people because it tells me they are not helping the American people and will deserve what they get from the Muslims.
The Democratic Socialist/Muslim Party have done everything they can do to destroy Israel and – now – when the rubber hits the road, it will tell us – are the Jews in with the Democrats to destroy America? Are they going to vote for Clinton and the Democrats – time will tell.
Again, the manner in which the Democrats and Obama have treated Israel is a disgrace; but, if the Jews vote with Obama and the Democrats for Hillary in November, it will tell me that it is all a ploy to destroy America.
Hillary in speaking to the Jewish people talks about how qualified she is to be the leader of America. That is a blatant lie – she nor her party should be elected because between the Muslim Brotherhood and the Democrats – they are marching toward Socialism which would only degrade our country further.
Hillary Clinton is no leader. She is a weak person who is mentally incapable due to her health – as the saying goes – she is off her rocker – her mind is crazed for power and nothing else. We cannot let another person, just like Obama, continue taking us down this road to destruction and that is where we are headed if she is at the helm.
She is liar and a thief – it is a given – enough said.
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Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton speaks at the 2016 American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) Policy Conference, March 21, 2016, at the Verizon Center in Washington.
WASHINGTON — Hillary Clinton previewed an early line of Democratic attack against Donald Trump on Monday, casting the GOP front-runner as unqualified to handle heated international conflicts as commander in chief in a speech before a prominent pro-Israel advocacy organization.
Nearly all the presidential candidates are scheduled to address the annual policy conference of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, which draws top Jewish leaders from across the world. The event is a traditional stop for U.S. politicians eager to demonstrate their foreign policy credentials by wading into Middle East conflicts.
Clinton, a former secretary of state, used her address not only to highlight her decades of work in the region but also to raise questions about Trump’s credentials and trustworthiness.
“We need steady hands,” she told thousands of activists gathered in Washington on Monday. “Not a president who says he’s neutral on Monday, pro-Israel on Tuesday and who-knows-what on Wednesday because everything’s negotiable.”
Israel’s security, she proclaimed to loud applause, “is non-negotiable.”
The comments were aimed at Trump, who sparked criticism from Republican allies of the Jewish state when he vowed to be a “sort of a neutral guy” on Israel in February. While the U.S. is officially neutral in the Middle East conflict, his statement sparked a marked rhetorical departure for typically strongly pro-Israel U.S. presidential candidates.
Trump plans to details his plans for a peace deal in remarks before the group on Monday night.
The billionaire businessman is using a rare day in Washington to try and woo a Republican establishment that’s been reluctant — and in some cases hell bent — on stopping his rise to the party’s nomination. He’s meeting with nearly two dozen top party officials, consultants and members of Congress in the afternoon before a news conference at Washington’s Old Post Office Pavilion, the site of a future Trump hotel.
The trip was unlikely to pass without controversy. There were protests planned at many of his stops, with a group of rabbis planning to boycott his speech before AIPAC.
Trump has a mixed record with pro-Israel Republicans. He’s refused to make the perennial Republican campaign promise of promising to move the U.S. Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, drawing boos last year from the Republican Jewish Coalition.
Socially liberal Jews object to his controversial remarks about Mexican immigrants, women and Muslims, with some drawing analogies to the European persecution of Jews that eventually led to the Holocaust.
Clinton drew a similar parallel in her remarks, referencing a famous incident of a ship with Jewish refugees being turned away from the U.S. in 1939.
“We’ve had dark chapters in our history before,” she said. “America should be better than this, and I believe it’s our responsibility as citizens to say so. If you see bigotry, oppose it.”
Clinton, who received a standing ovation from the group, has a long history in the Middle East, including overseeing as secretary of state the Obama administration’s first attempt to broker Israeli-Palestinian peace. Her stance against Jewish settlements on land claimed by the Palestinians has been criticized by some in the pro-Israel community, but she has been received warmly by pro-Israel groups in the past.
She renewed promises to provide sophisticated defense technology to Israel and to quickly invite the country’s prime minister to the White House, if elected president. And she offered subtle criticism of the Obama administration, which has had public rifts with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
“We will never allow Israel’s adversaries to think a wedge can be driven between us,” she said. “We must take our alliance to the next level.”
AIPAC bills itself as nonpartisan and has never endorsed a candidate. But the organization has played a big role in partisan political debates over issues of interest to Israel. Most recently, it worked hard to try and scuttle the Iran nuclear agreement, putting the group at odds with ardent deal supporters Clinton and Democrat Bernie Sanders, and to a certain degree, with Kasich, the lone Republican who has not said he would automatically rescind the pact.
Sanders— who is trying to become the first Jewish candidate to win a major party’s presidential nomination —is skipping the AIPAC meeting to campaign ahead of primaries in Utah and Arizona on Tuesday. He plans to lay out his own foreign policy vision with a speech in Salt Lake City later Monday. Clinton is to hold a get-out-the-vote event in Phoenix.
Republicans will also face off in two highly contentious contests in Arizona and Utah on Tuesday. Texas Sen. Ted Cruz hopes to close in on as many as 40 delegates in Utah, while Trump looks to build on his lead in Arizona’s winner-take-all primary.
kommonsentsjane