Hardly. I care that the Dems want to spend millions in every country in South America on financing abortions while some cry about spending money on Isreal, our stanched supporter in the Middle East. Or they want to spend money on healthcare for illegals. Maybe we should spend the money we spend more wisely instead of spending like drunken sailors on what feels good at the moment.
Israel state pays for abortions and has universal healthcare (and I venture you don't know anyone who lives in Israel), and its best to keep the money for our neighbors instead of the ME (if Israel would not be in the ME it possibly would not be so unstable) kind of like your neighborhood. Also there are many rich Jews that make money here and send it to Israel like Sheldon Adelson, etc.
I will just say that I feel incredibly sorry for you.
If that's all you can come back with then she won.
Nazis never win
She's not a nazi is she?
Trump's 'Disloyalty' Claim About Jewish Democrats Shows He Doesn't Get How They Vote
President Donald Trump’s branding of American Jews who vote for Democrats as “disloyal” to their religion and Israel prompted alarms of anti-Semitism. But his ultimate aim appears to be dividing Democrats, peeling off Jewish support and shoring up his white evangelical Christian base.
The comment — which touches on long-trod anti-Semitic tropes about Jews’ supposed loyalty to Israel and their religion over their home nations — added a sharper edge to Trump’s appeals to another largely Democratic constituency: black voters, whom he challenged to support him in 2016 by asking: “What do you have to lose?” This time, Trump and his allies are trying to lure Jewish voters who they think could be turned off by liberal Democrats’ growing willingness to criticize the Israeli government. In a razor-close election, picking up a few thousand votes in key counties in states such as Florida and Pennsylvania could make a difference, they argue.
But Trump's admonitions are unlikely to sway Jewish voters, who have overwhelmingly voted Democratic for decades. In 2018, AP VoteCast, a survey of the electorate, found that 72% of Jewish voters supported Democratic House candidates. And 74% said they disapproved of how Trump was handling his job.
Indeed, even some Trump allies concede that the president's attempt to paint himself as more pro-Israel than Democrats is more likely to resonate with evangelical voters, who polls show are more supportive of Trump's brand of pro-Israel, Benjamin Netanyahu-aligned policies than American Jews are.
42% of Jewish Americans said Trump's policies favored the Israelis too much, versus just 26% of Christians who expressed that view.
That could explain Trump’s Wednesday tweet quoting
conservative radio host and conspiracy theory-pusher Wayne Allyn Root saying that Israeli Jews “love” Trump “like he’s the King of Israel” and “the second coming of God” when American Jews “don’t know him or like him. They don’t even know what they’re doing or saying anymore. It makes no sense!”
Only one problem. Jews don't believe in a second coming of God. Evangelicals, however, do.