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- Jul 15, 2014
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Created by the Emergency Committee for Israel (ECI), a pro-Israel group known to ruffle feathers in liberal circles, the ad rehashes several broken promises Obama has made in the past weeks. (no broken promises, part of the agreement)
ECI maintains that Obama’s broken promises on the issues of healthcare, Syria, and Israel leave little doubt that his assurances on Iran are not to be trusted.
(snip)
The advertisement will air “multiple times this week and next” week on news channels CNN, MSNBC, and Fox News, according to ECI, which said in a statement that “the spot shows why Americans and our allies have reason to doubt President Obama’s promises on Iran.”
The ad opens with Obama promising Americans that they can keep their own health insurance plans under the president’s signature Affordable Care Act.
http://freebeacon.com/national-security/obamas-march-to-war/
wrote by Adam Kredo, a Conservative Zionist anti Muslim jew
Emergency Committee for IsraelFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search The Emergency Committee for Israel is a right-wing[1] 501(c)(4) political advocacy organization in the United States.[2] The group's board members include Weekly Standard editor William Kristol, former Republican presidential candidate Gary Bauer, and conservative writer Rachel Abrams,[2] wife of Elliott Abrams.[3] Noah Pollak is its executive director.[2]
Kristol said his group, created in mid-2010, was inspired by the new "liberal" J Street group, "whose ability to amplify criticism of the Israeli government showed the power of a small new group—if on the other side of the debate." Pollak said, shortly after the group's creation, that it planned to be involved in a number of congressional races. "We want to be hard-hitting; we want to get into the debate and shake things up and make some points in a firm way", he said.[2]
As it started up, the organization ran ads opposing the elections of U.S. Senate candidate Joe Sestak[2][4][5] and U.S. House of Representatives candidates Rush D. Holt, Jr., Mary Jo Kilroy, and John F. Tierney, portraying them as "openly hostile" to Israel.[6]
In October 2011, the committee produced a video portraying Occupy Wall Street as anti-Semitic.[7] Washington Post columnist Richard Cohen referred to the video and said he found no evidence of antisemitism during his two visits to the demonstration site.[8]
In February 2012, the committee produced a 30-minute documentary covering President Barack Obama's record on Israel.[9] The documentary received 200,000 views in its first week.
The Free Beacon was founded by Michael Goldfarb, Aaron Harrison, and Matthew Continetti. It launched on February 7, 2012, as a project of the 501(c)4 organization Center for American Freedom.[2] In August 2014, it announced it was becoming a for-profit news site.[3]
The Free Bacon is a hate site for Muslims, Democrats, Obama and Clinton, and Pro Israel.
ECI maintains that Obama’s broken promises on the issues of healthcare, Syria, and Israel leave little doubt that his assurances on Iran are not to be trusted.
(snip)
The advertisement will air “multiple times this week and next” week on news channels CNN, MSNBC, and Fox News, according to ECI, which said in a statement that “the spot shows why Americans and our allies have reason to doubt President Obama’s promises on Iran.”
The ad opens with Obama promising Americans that they can keep their own health insurance plans under the president’s signature Affordable Care Act.
http://freebeacon.com/national-security/obamas-march-to-war/
wrote by Adam Kredo, a Conservative Zionist anti Muslim jew
Emergency Committee for IsraelFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search The Emergency Committee for Israel is a right-wing[1] 501(c)(4) political advocacy organization in the United States.[2] The group's board members include Weekly Standard editor William Kristol, former Republican presidential candidate Gary Bauer, and conservative writer Rachel Abrams,[2] wife of Elliott Abrams.[3] Noah Pollak is its executive director.[2]
Kristol said his group, created in mid-2010, was inspired by the new "liberal" J Street group, "whose ability to amplify criticism of the Israeli government showed the power of a small new group—if on the other side of the debate." Pollak said, shortly after the group's creation, that it planned to be involved in a number of congressional races. "We want to be hard-hitting; we want to get into the debate and shake things up and make some points in a firm way", he said.[2]
As it started up, the organization ran ads opposing the elections of U.S. Senate candidate Joe Sestak[2][4][5] and U.S. House of Representatives candidates Rush D. Holt, Jr., Mary Jo Kilroy, and John F. Tierney, portraying them as "openly hostile" to Israel.[6]
In October 2011, the committee produced a video portraying Occupy Wall Street as anti-Semitic.[7] Washington Post columnist Richard Cohen referred to the video and said he found no evidence of antisemitism during his two visits to the demonstration site.[8]
In February 2012, the committee produced a 30-minute documentary covering President Barack Obama's record on Israel.[9] The documentary received 200,000 views in its first week.
The Free Beacon was founded by Michael Goldfarb, Aaron Harrison, and Matthew Continetti. It launched on February 7, 2012, as a project of the 501(c)4 organization Center for American Freedom.[2] In August 2014, it announced it was becoming a for-profit news site.[3]
The Free Bacon is a hate site for Muslims, Democrats, Obama and Clinton, and Pro Israel.