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   PoliticsView from the Center and Left Middle East Annex


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To: S. maltophilia who wrote (1224)6/11/2024 10:00:11 PM
From: Sultan
   of 2471
 
Right..

I was however surprised that it was a SNL sketch that never aired.. I don't watch the show so have no idea what their range is.. It was certainly crude..

On the other hand, we have had similar type of on-the-fringe joke about some popular politician and what he can get away with a willing group of fans ready to accept any type of behaviour..

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To: Sultan who wrote (1225)6/11/2024 10:29:50 PM
From: S. maltophilia
   of 2471
 
Apparently, SNL rehearsals generate plenty of outtakes.

mondoweiss.net

salon.com

The expanded clip, when the senators were younger:


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To: S. maltophilia who wrote (1224)6/11/2024 10:58:20 PM
From: S. maltophilia
   of 2471
 
Bipartisanship or Republican meddling? AIPAC is biggest source of GOP donations in Dem primaries AIPAC sees support for Israel as bipartisan, and its donors come from both parties. But its practice of sending money from GOP donors into Democratic races has enraged progressives.

The American Israel Public Affairs Committee has become a fundraising juggernaut in recent years, raising more money for candidates than any similar organization this cycle as part of its mission to back candidates who support Israel.

It’s the rare political organization that still garners support from Republican and Democratic donors while supporting candidates from both parties. But its primary focus has been leveraging its weight in competitive Democratic primaries, spending millions to boost moderates over progressives who have been critical of Israel.

That has made AIPAC the biggest source of Republican money flowing into competitive Democratic primaries this year, according to a POLITICO analysis of campaign finance data — and drawn outrage from the left over what it sees as GOP meddling in Democratic contests.........

politico.com









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To: S. maltophilia who wrote (1227)6/12/2024 6:50:24 AM
From: Madharry
   of 2471
 
then UN resolution as passed calling for the cease fire is just an embarrassment . It will encourage any terrorist organization to kidnap random citizens across the globe and hold them hostage in order to ransom them for imprisoned fellow terrorists. if such resolution involved u.s. or british hostages it would be immediately denounced for the idiotic resolution it is. I have now lost any shred of confidence I had in the competency of the Biden administration . I will be surprised if we dont see a sharp increase in global kidnappings by terrorist groups now that a sanctioned blueprint has been established by US and the UN.

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From: stsimon6/12/2024 7:26:07 AM
   of 2471
 
Problems in the ME have been going on since pre-historic times and are not likely to be solved anytime soon, if ever..

auctionzip.com

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From: Sam6/12/2024 9:56:01 AM
   of 2471
 
Some Hamas cease-fire demands are unworkable, Blinken says; Hezbollah fires rocket barrage after top commander killed
The United Nations on Wednesday accused both Israel and Hamas of committing war crimes in Gaza, as the top U.S. diplomat signaled no deal was imminent to end the fighting.


June 12, 2024, 7:01 AM EDT / Updated June 12, 2024, 9:34 AM EDT
By Alexander Smith

The United States said Wednesday that Hamas’ demands were thwarting its push for a cease-fire with Israel, signaling the fighting would go on as the United Nations accused both sides of war crimes and Hezbollah unleashed a rocket barrage to avenge a top commander's killing that threatened wider escalation.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken said the Palestinian militant group had requested "numerous" changes to the Washington-backed plan to end fighting in the Gaza Strip and release hostages taken from Israel on Oct. 7.

"Some of those are workable changes, some are not," Blinken said in Qatar, speaking on his latest round of shuttle diplomacy to try and advance a deal that neither warring party has fully embraced.

Giving the briefing hours after Hamas delivered its formal response,he said that Washington would keep working with meditators to try and secure an agreement.

Hezbollah's retaliatory attacks

Blinken's comments came during a day of intense activity, both military and diplomatic, across the Middle East.

Earlier Wednesday, the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah, a Hamas ally that is also backed by Iran, launched a "massive" volley of some 160 missiles into Israel, the Israeli military said.

This marked a significant flare-up on Israel’s northern front with Lebanon, which many observers fear could escalate into full-blown regional war.

The Israel Defense Forces told NBC News that one of the missiles struck a factory in Kibbutz Sasa, some 3 miles from the border. Most of the rockets were intercepted or fell in open country, and one Israeli jet struck back at a launcher inside Lebanon, the IDF said.

Hezbollah’s Al-Manar TV station said the barrage was in retaliation for Israel’s killing of one of its commanders, Taleb Sami Abdullah.

Also known as Hajj Abu Taleb, 55, he was the most senior figure from the militant group killed since the fighting began, and had been in charge of a unit that oversees parts of the southern border region.

He was killed in an Israeli airstrike on what the IDF called a "command and control center" in the town of Joya late Tuesday. The attack also killed another three operatives, the IDF said in a statement accompanied by video of the strike.

Cease-fire talks in the balance

The Israeli government has signaled in recent weeks that it may step up its actions in the north, under growing pressure to respond more forcefully to Hezbollah after months of simmering tensions and deadly exchanges.

Hezbollah has the largest missile arsenal of any non-state actor in the world, according to weapons watchdogs. Many observers consider its conflict with Israel to have the biggest potential for all-out escalation among these region-wide tensions.

Conscious of this risk, Blinken has been in the Middle East all week, his eighth visit since the war began.

He is there to push a U.S.-drafted plan that aims to secure a truce and the release of the remaining hostages held in the Palestinian enclave. The U.N. Security Council endorsed it Monday, and Hamas gave its awaited response Tuesday.

Even before Blinken spoke there were hints that a gulf remained between the two sides' positions.

A source familiar with the situation told NBC News that Hamas’ reply had “contained amendments to the Israeli proposal," including setting a firm timeline for the cease-fire and withdrawal of Israeli troops.

There are also doubts over Israel's commitment to the deal, which were only fueled by the weekend's deadly rescue operation.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is under pressure from right-wing members of his government to reject the U.S.-backed plan, and from hostage families to embrace it.

Blinken rejected this suggestion Wednesday, saying that "Israel accepted the proposal, as it was and as it is."

He criticized Hamas as the sole holdout.

“A deal is on the table” that “the entire world is behind,” Blinken told a news conference. “Israel has accepted it, and Hamas could have answered with a single word: yes.”

In the event, Hamas took 12 days to issue its official reply. “You get to a point where, if one side continues to change its demands, you have to question whether they’re proceeding in good faith or not,” Blinken said.

A senior State Department official told NBC News that this week Blinken has ramped up pressure on Hamas’ military leader Yahya Sinwar to accept the deal, adding that Netanyahu confirmed his acceptance when they met Monday night.

The two parties disagree on whether the initial six-week cease-fire should be permanent, as Hamas demands, and whether Israel should completely withdraw from Gaza, the official said, adding that U.S. officials are trying to bridge that wide divide.

Until something gives, the violence on the ground will continue.

U.N. probe says both sides committed war crimes

The report from the U.N. independent commission said that on Oct. 7 Hamas had “deliberately killed” civilians, “mistreated” hostages, and carried out “sexual and gender-based violence” against Israeli and foreign nationals.

“These actions constitute war crimes and violations and abuses” of international humanitarian law and human rights law, it said.

It accused Israel of the same, as well as crimes against humanity.

The report said Israel’s “chosen strategy for the use of force” had resulted in “immense numbers of civilian casualties and widespread destruction” in Gaza.

It has shown “intent to cause maximum damage, disregarding distinction, proportionality and adequate precautions” and an “intentional and direct attack on the civilian population, particularly affecting women and children,” it added.

On Wednesday, Israel's Embassy at the U.N. rejected the “abhorrent and immoral accusations” and accused the commission of “systematic anti-Israeli discrimination” and only seeing the conflict “through the lens of the Palestinian narrative.”

Some 1,200 people were killed and around 250 taken hostage during that Hamas-led assault eight months ago, according to Israeli officials, and more than 37,000 people have been killed in Israel's assault on Gaza, according to local health officials.

nbcnews.com

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To: stsimon who wrote (1229)6/12/2024 10:02:30 AM
From: Sam
   of 2471
 
You may as well say that problems in the world "going on since pre-historic times and are not likely to be solved anytime soon".

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To: Sam who wrote (1231)6/12/2024 10:15:04 AM
From: stsimon
   of 2471
 
Obviously humor isn't my forte.

In reality, many of the world's problems may well be solved, but not to most people's satisfaction.

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To: Madharry who wrote (1228)6/12/2024 11:40:34 AM
From: S. maltophilia
   of 2471
 
I haven't bothered reading the resolution since it seems there's one every week. Can you elaborate on the part that encourages random terrorist kidnappings?

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To: S. maltophilia who wrote (1233)6/12/2024 11:57:51 AM
From: Madharry
   of 2471
 
it wasnt easy to find. so i read the resolution on the un site . part 1 of the resolution calls for 6 week cease fire accompanied by an exchange of women and and elderly hostages for palestinian prisoners. So here we are having terrorist kidnappings being condoned by all the powers that be including the U.S>

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