It's just the boy who cried wolf story. The media has cried wolf a million times and people stopped listening. Americans are tired of going to war to intervene in foreign affairs. It's really that simple.
I think there are three issues that need to be considered.
The first is that the U.S. legislature hasn't reflected public sentiment in decades. Roughly half of Republicans, and roughly half of Democrats want less for Israel. In Congress, you see 100 percent support for sending them billions more, give or take one or two libertarians whose sheer, genuine autism shields them from the lobbying power of AIPAC. While the ordinary Dem voters can say this or that, but they don't really have a say on how their leadership behaves - Republicans are high-agency enough that they can occasionally force the issue, but Democrats are not. The post-2016 neoconservative pivot to the Democrats was an unqualified success, and I don't consider it likely that the true believers are going to dislodge them, given their unbroken track record of failure and humiliation at the hands of party leadership.
The second is that the sentiment among pro-Israel figures is hostile to Amerikaners. This isn't incidental, it's core to their identity. Saad Gaad, or whatever the person's name is, is a good example. Consciously or subconsciously, they are looking at this in terms of which groups are competition for dominance, and which groups aren't. They have no intention of ever letting the WASPs back in, out of (justified or not) fear that the WASPs might want revenge for how their people have been treated, or how they themselves were stabbed in the back after offering egalitarianism and fair competition.
The third is that the Rightie base itself is in no mood to re-align with Israel. There are certainly Twitter intellectuals who are willing, but they were never the cultural force in the arena - just the loudest one that remains uncensored on 'respectable' platforms. The 20-something guys on imageboards who won Trump the election don't have any inclination to die for people who hate them, nor do they want to see their countrymen do the same. A case study is the Republican primary: While Trump was arguably pro-Israel, he was also the first politician in a long time to tell them "no" and be able to back that up. He promised no war in Syria, and stuck to that. "I'd treat them equally" is an impossible promise for any American politician to keep, but he kept it as well as anyone would have. Compare him to DeSantis, who was marketed to the public as the "acceptable" right wing populist, who would say some previously disallowed things about the culture war while restoring the flow of young Americans to whichever foreign country AIPAC preferred. The reaction was clear - DeSantis wasn't just *not preferred*, he was *hated*.
They’d rather die than not cheat us, as they’re about to prove.
Help? Here’s a list of gun stores and a google link to ranges in your zip code. LMAO.
Don’t help people in America who did this to all of us, who want the Gaza Rave to happen to us, just not them. Hell no. It’s like HAMAS, we really need to start taking them at their word.
All the machines are stopping, literally and in narrative terms.
The audience also tuned out.
However note in truth and fairness... the Israelis... are not Jews in any sense we’d understand.
All we should do is not betray them, as we betray so many others, as our own elites and neighbors betray and denounce us. The cycle of betrayal ends at some point, any point is fine- this one acutely opportune as the left guts itself.
SILENCE is fine, indeed in the midst of arms and violence silence is assent.
It's just the boy who cried wolf story. The media has cried wolf a million times and people stopped listening. Americans are tired of going to war to intervene in foreign affairs. It's really that simple.
Absolutely true.
Now that the wolfs here..
Sorry, but I don't trust people who have cried out in pain as they struck me for the last 2,000 years.
No need to trust - and on our soil 🇺🇸- we never should have or shared power.
Here? 🇺🇸You’re on your own.
Have fun with your Golems of the Copybook Margins.
Because they’re moving to the Headings...
I think there are three issues that need to be considered.
The first is that the U.S. legislature hasn't reflected public sentiment in decades. Roughly half of Republicans, and roughly half of Democrats want less for Israel. In Congress, you see 100 percent support for sending them billions more, give or take one or two libertarians whose sheer, genuine autism shields them from the lobbying power of AIPAC. While the ordinary Dem voters can say this or that, but they don't really have a say on how their leadership behaves - Republicans are high-agency enough that they can occasionally force the issue, but Democrats are not. The post-2016 neoconservative pivot to the Democrats was an unqualified success, and I don't consider it likely that the true believers are going to dislodge them, given their unbroken track record of failure and humiliation at the hands of party leadership.
The second is that the sentiment among pro-Israel figures is hostile to Amerikaners. This isn't incidental, it's core to their identity. Saad Gaad, or whatever the person's name is, is a good example. Consciously or subconsciously, they are looking at this in terms of which groups are competition for dominance, and which groups aren't. They have no intention of ever letting the WASPs back in, out of (justified or not) fear that the WASPs might want revenge for how their people have been treated, or how they themselves were stabbed in the back after offering egalitarianism and fair competition.
The third is that the Rightie base itself is in no mood to re-align with Israel. There are certainly Twitter intellectuals who are willing, but they were never the cultural force in the arena - just the loudest one that remains uncensored on 'respectable' platforms. The 20-something guys on imageboards who won Trump the election don't have any inclination to die for people who hate them, nor do they want to see their countrymen do the same. A case study is the Republican primary: While Trump was arguably pro-Israel, he was also the first politician in a long time to tell them "no" and be able to back that up. He promised no war in Syria, and stuck to that. "I'd treat them equally" is an impossible promise for any American politician to keep, but he kept it as well as anyone would have. Compare him to DeSantis, who was marketed to the public as the "acceptable" right wing populist, who would say some previously disallowed things about the culture war while restoring the flow of young Americans to whichever foreign country AIPAC preferred. The reaction was clear - DeSantis wasn't just *not preferred*, he was *hated*.
In America only help Americans.
“ “help me, help you”.
They’d rather die than not cheat us, as they’re about to prove.
Help? Here’s a list of gun stores and a google link to ranges in your zip code. LMAO.
Don’t help people in America who did this to all of us, who want the Gaza Rave to happen to us, just not them. Hell no. It’s like HAMAS, we really need to start taking them at their word.
Both.
All the machines are stopping, literally and in narrative terms.
The audience also tuned out.
However note in truth and fairness... the Israelis... are not Jews in any sense we’d understand.
All we should do is not betray them, as we betray so many others, as our own elites and neighbors betray and denounce us. The cycle of betrayal ends at some point, any point is fine- this one acutely opportune as the left guts itself.
SILENCE is fine, indeed in the midst of arms and violence silence is assent.
I think we need to just sit back and let Israel do what they need to do. They don't need our money or our help. Just let it ride.