General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsHundreds of rabbis accuse Mamdani of fueling antisemitism over 'monsters' comment
More than 700 rabbis representing every major Jewish denomination across the United States are calling on New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani to publicly apologize for remarks he made about the pro-Israel lobbying group AIPAC.
In an open letter released Friday afternoon, the Jewish clergy condemn the mayor's statement in which he described members of the pro-Israel lobby as "monsters" and claimed they were spending "millions in dark money" to preserve their power and sow division. The rabbis note that Mamdani has refused to retract his remarks despite mounting criticism and are demanding that he clarify his position.
The letter's release coincides with a new poll by the Jewish Majority organization highlighting deep concern within the community. According to the survey, 82% of Jewish voters in New York are concerned about rising antisemitism, with most respondents linking it to the normalization of anti-Zionism. The poll also found that a majority believe Mamdani's refusal to condemn calls to "globalize the intifada" has emboldened pro-Hamas demonstrators.
(snip)
The letter was prompted by a speech Mamdani delivered last week, when he used celebrations marking the New York Knicks' championship to launch what the rabbis described as an unprecedented attack on AIPAC and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. In a speech at a rally backing progressive candidates in Brooklyn ahead of the Democratic primaries, Mamdani accused AIPAC of pouring millions of dark-money dollars into efforts to turn the public against itself. He claimed the lobby feared democracy and the end of the genocide and Netanyahus wars.
The letter's authors emphasize that the unusually broad coalition of rabbis, who often disagree on political issues, united over what they see as the dangerous implications of Mamdani's remarks. They note that his comments came just days after five people were charged with plotting to kill government officials supported by AIPAC, and on the same day that a man in Florida was indicted for allegedly planning a mass shooting at the organization's offices.
https://www.ynetnews.com/article/s100efe2fzx
Fiendish Thingy
(24,474 posts)Either way, they are certainly flexing their influence, arent they?
mountain grammy
(29,411 posts)And yes. Theyre not gonna go quietly. Last week I was sticking with DeGette.
I just voted for her opponent . . Enough already!
mr715
(4,867 posts)mike_c
(37,182 posts)Nothing divides like religion.
Eko
(10,192 posts)Actions of Israel is antisemitism since they are not inherently responsible for what Israel does. So criticizing Israel or pacs that support Israel is antisemitism? Cant have it both ways. To be clear, I 100% agree with the first part.
hookaleft
(1,400 posts)They are aligned with the Zionist state of Israel. Nothing against Jewish people. Everyone is OK with them.
Can't blame Jews for the actions of Israel because Jews are not responsible for what Israel does. To do so is anti-semitism (TRUE!)
Can't criticize Israel because then you are blaming Jews (HUH?? Now Jews ARE responsible? FALSE!)
Netanyahu claimed that he represents all Jewish people in the world. This conflation, combined with his genocidal actions, make him the biggest driver of anti-semitism in the world. Maybe he's the biggest anti-semite just for how he is harming Jews!
Eko
(10,192 posts)AloeVera
(4,650 posts)Logically, it would make sense for the sake of Jewish safety and well-being, for all people, including Jewish people, to work towards getting rid of Netanyahu and his ilk in Likud and the extremist parties. Starting with saying no to AIPAC.
Sympthsical
(11,287 posts)If this sentiment were said about any other ethnic group, it would be called out.
Can you imagine any white person bouncing out there with, "If X people only took care of their bad elements, they'd be much safer!" while implying they're partially responsible for their own mistreatment?
Like, that would be crazily racist sentiment to toss out there in a liberal space.
But when it's said about Jews, it's just common sense!
This is abhorrent. I'm sorry. It's one thing to be against what's happening in Gaza - I think nearly all of us here are. But when people start sounding like they just read the Protocols of the Elders of Zion for the first time, it's gone too far. This stuff is hedging into collective responsibility - which is racist.
I don't think people recognize in themselves the road they're allowing their ideology to take them down.
I cannot believe this is getting posted to DU. Fucking crazy. The post October 7th influx of this - yes, racism - needs to be called out already.
"But Gaza . . ." is not an excuse for the fucked up shit that's getting posted here about Jews on the regular lately.
Shame.
muriel_volestrangler
(106,860 posts)It's like saying "say no to the NRA".
If the American people only took care of their bad elements like the NRA, they'd be much safer!
I said it, and I think it holds up extremely well. And you could, if you want, substitute "white Americans" for "the American people", and it'd still work.
Sympthsical
(11,287 posts)Dont excuse it. Just stop.
Collective responsibility is dangerous.
You can criticize Israel without excusing this stuff.
Its enough already. Monitor the bad elements in your cause before they monitor you.
hookaleft
(1,400 posts)They need to suck it up.
Mossfern
(4,872 posts)lame54
(40,436 posts)aocommunalpunch
(4,599 posts)Behind the Aegis
(56,322 posts)----
On the left and, more quietly, the right versions of the monster narrative are spreading, suggesting that AIPAC is an electoral force with bottomless pockets that decides who serves in Congress.
The truth is quite different. To find it, I pulled both primary and general election outcomes for every Congressional candidate that AIPACs traditional PAC backed in 2022 and 2024 788 candidates across the two cycles from the Federal Electoral Commission. I ran the same exercise for 17 peer single-issue PACs, including the NRA and Planned Parenthood.
The data shows that while AIPAC has an impressive operation, its electoral results do not outperform those of any other major single-issue lobby. AIPAC itself cites a 95% win rate on endorsed candidates as evidence of its political muscle, but that high level of success is partially attributable to the fact that, according to my sample, some 86% percent of AIPACs endorsements go to sitting members of Congress. And incumbents win about 95% of general elections regardless of who funds them.
Whats more remarkable than the number of elections AIPAC wins is how often it gets credit or blame depending on your politics for deciding races.
more...
Intractable
(2,574 posts)I hope AIPAC continues to drive its opposition to the polls.
If it's a choice for me between a Dem that takes money from Israeli lobbies and one that doesn't, I would count this against the former, probably motivating me to vote against them in a primary.
In the general election, I would always vote for the Democrat.
I believe Israel has a right to exist. But, only within its current borders. I am against any expansion of territory in the West Bank, Gaza, or Lebanon.
More AIPAC means more war.
Behind the Aegis
(56,322 posts)"More AIPAC means more war."
Intractable
(2,574 posts)I say that it is your post that is mere hay pretending to be substance.
A few years ago, I was a full supporter of Israel.
But now, that basically amounts to sending Israel weapons and money so Netanyahu can continue Israel's aggressions against its neighbors.
The only way I can agree is if Israel is given only defensive weapons.
Behind the Aegis
(56,322 posts)ETA: " So, for you, the problem is not the ideology of AIPAC. It's just that it's not 100% successful." THAT was the strawman.
hookaleft
(1,400 posts)Intractable
(2,574 posts)AIPAC is not 100% successful. You said that already. You seem stuck on this point.
AIPAC lobbies for weapons and money for Israel. I am against it.
>> It rhymes with the oldest antisemitic trope there is: that Jews quietly run the world.
I do not accept your inference. I am against Israeli aggression, not Jewish people. Like Bibbi, you can try to blur the difference, but that's another strawman from you.
Like all other lobbies, AIPAC does its best to influence how the world is run.
Cha
(321,559 posts)Resorting to insults doesn't make your case.
Eko
(10,192 posts)Instead of what they are advocating for which is what we keep pointing out.
sarisataka
(22,994 posts)lapucelle
(21,237 posts)the code evolves, but the underlying meaning remains crystal clear.
yardwork
(69,964 posts)Intractable
(2,574 posts)Had some pleasant chats with him. It was before Oct 7.
hookaleft
(1,400 posts)Lobbying group the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) was by far the largest PAC contributor to members of Congress and federal candidates in the 2023-2024 election cycle, funneling hard dollars to the campaigns of lawmakers who approved military aid packages for Israels war in Gaza.
Below are the complete totals of how much money congressional campaigns, leadership PACs, and party committees received from AIPAC PAC last cycle, according to Federal Election Commission data.
The money that AIPAC PAC contributed during the election cycle was overwhelmingly provided by individual donors who used the group as a conduit that passed their money along to candidates and other political groups.
The data table below also includes the totals of how much AIPACs super PAC, the United Democracy Project (UDP), spent in the elections, largely opposed to candidates that the group deems insufficiently supportive of Israel, as well as spending that supported its endorsed candidates.
AIPACs PAC and UDP spent nearly $126.9 million combined during the 2023-2024 election cycle, according to the FEC. This includes more than $55.2 million in donations given to federal candidatesat least $45.2 million of which went to the campaigns of members of the new 119th U.S. Congress, Sludge identified.
UDP made almost $61 million in disbursements last election cycle, of which around $37.9 million was independent expenditures supporting or opposing candidates for U.S. House. In 2023 and 2024, UDP received seven-figure sums from more than a handful of billionaire donors. Its spending went in large part to media and ad blitzes that did not mention the issue of Israel. In addition, UDP made nearly $8.6 million in contributions to six other PACs last cycle.
https://readsludge.com/2025/01/24/here-is-all-the-money-aipac-spent-on-the-2024-elections/
And the money it gives to seated congress people:
The pro-Israel lobbying group AIPAC, which has opposed efforts at diplomacy with Iran and is applauding the U.S.-led strikes, has delivered $28 million to the campaigns of members of Congress in the 20252026 election cycle, according to a Sludge analysis of FEC data, including earmarked PAC contributions.
The money AIPAC PAC contributes is overwhelmingly provided by U.S.-based individual donors who use the groups website to select which candidates to support. The money is disbursed by AIPAC PAC, and the group highlights on its website that credit goes to both the individual donor and AIPAC, strengthening the pro-Israel groups ties to the candidates.
Here is how much every member of Congress has received from AIPAC PAC from Jan. 1, 2025 through the end of January 2026.
https://readsludge.com/2026/03/01/here-is-how-much-aipac-has-funneled-to-every-member-of-congress/
DFW
(60,822 posts)The Koch Brothers' "Americans For Prosperity" PAC spent $138.5 million in the same election cycle, where Karl Rove's American Crossroads spent $60 million, although that was mostly for Republican campaign infrastructure rather than contributions directly to the candidates themselves.
Either way, AIPAC is not in a league by themselves.
Cha
(321,559 posts)Rabbis across the Country are worried about spreading more Anti-Semitism.
Anti-Zionist stickers given to kids 'an innocent mistake,' Michigan mom says
snip***
https://www.democraticunderground.com/100221330562
☮️💙
betsuni
(29,443 posts)AIPAC hysteria --
31j20b3
(105 posts)Scream antiseminism to comments about Israeli genocide doesn't penetrate the wall of opposition from a majority of the countries of United Nations
I know DU isn't terrribly agronomistic but, everyone REAPS what the SOW.
Live through it, do better. The critisims won't hold forever. It's just criticism, not like AIPAC and Israeli politicians don't do that to the US.
Boo1
(609 posts)Say they are worries about increasing antisemitism stemming from normalization of anti-zionism and the response is "get used it"?
31j20b3
(105 posts)I think that's true across the US. So things are more likely to go unread on the radar.
New York has larger Jewish population and traditionally, more attention given to their issues.
Eko
(10,192 posts)I don't think anyone has an inherent right to a country especially one that thinks that right comes from a religion.
Boo1
(609 posts)Do they have a right to a country?
I don't think anyone has an inherent right to a country. There is is an adjective you missed that modifies it.
Boo1
(609 posts)and having an inherent right?
If you don't have an inherent right to a country when what is it that gives you that right? Conquest?
- existing in someone or something as a permanent and inseparable element, quality, or attribute; inhering.
permanent and inseparable element
You don't even have to be Jewish to have a right to that country according to the Israeli laws. You just have to convert to Judaism and then you have an inherent right to be a citizen there. But if you are Jewish and convert to another religion before you go there you do not have that right.
If me and my family have not lived somewhere for hundreds of years, or never, why should we have a right to live in that place especially over the people that have been there for hundreds of years?
Mossfern
(4,872 posts)Or Catholic, or Protestant? etc.
I don't want to go down the rabbit hole with this, but I know that you are aware of the expulsion of Jews from Muslim countries in the Mideast. No? The founders of Israel were no especially religious - you know that too.
Let's put it this way: Many antisemitic people use "Zionism" as an excuse.
I dont think anyone has an inherent right to a country, religious or otherwise. Where does it start? Where does it end? Does it start with this group, or the group before them, or the group before them, which of those groups do you choose? Do the Canaanites and all of their descendants have that inherent right? What about the Natufians? The Amorites? The Philistines? Which one?
Mossfern
(4,872 posts)How's that supposed to work?
I don't think that human nature will allow it.
Eko
(10,192 posts)To be anti-zionist and not be antiSemitic?
But why would one be anti-Zionist if Zionism is merely the belief that Jewish people have a homeland? Are they also anti-Palestinian?
One can be a Zionist and passionately against the actions of Israel just as one can be an American and be passionately against the actions of the present administration.
Violet_Crumble
(36,468 posts)I don't consider this a rabbit hole, expulsions weren't one-sided. Tens of thousands of Palestinians were expelled from what is now Israel, but some don't seem to care because it doesn't suit their narrative. It would have been far less messy if people had been allowed to stay where their homes were and on the land they were connected to.
The founders of Israel? I'm assuming yr talking about Ben-Gurion? He was a realist and worked purely from a political stance because Zionism was and still is a political ideology. While he wasn't particularly religious, he did need to get the religious types onside when Israel was created. He had to make some concessions to Orthodox Jews, which is why things like marriage, divorce etc are controlled by religious law and not civil law. Don't quote me on that last bit, as it's been a long time since I read about it. Which means while the founders weren't particularly religious, they catered to the Orthodox and were very into expanding territory, which is why Israel's borders weren't defined when the state was created.
Oh, no. I just realised I used the term Zionism! I got chided just recently from someone in another thread who informed me that studying Israel and Zionism when I was at uni was proof that there's a disproportionate fixation with Zionism, AND YOU KNOW WHAT THAT MEANS!!!! Unfortunately they never returned to answer my question about how much discussion of Israel is acceptable, so I'm still not clear on what the red line in the sand is, not that I really give a shit...
Yes, I agree with you, Many antisemitic people use "Zionism" as an excuse, though I find the attempts to label all discussion of Zionism as antisemitic is merely an attempt to silence criticism of Israel. And let's be real. I've seen the antisemitic ones on FB and it's not hard to miss. I encountered someone who didn't seem capable of saying 'Israel'. He'd call it the 'Zionist entity' or 'Zionist regime'. The way he said it made it very clear there was something boiling away underneath that was really ugly. Along the same lines, blaming Zionists for all the ills in the world is another giveaway, as well as comparing Israel to Nazi Germany.
What's not accurate is what some in this thread have a habit of doing, which is labelling any and all mentions of Zionism and AIPAC and dog knows how many other keywords as being antisemitic. My rule of thumb is that people who aren't Jewish are Zionists, and AIPAC isn't a Jewish organisation. Insisting on conflating them with Jews is just playing into antisemites hands. Have you noticed some who do this have no qualms about attacking J-Street or Jewish Voice for Peace? Because the issue isn't whether an organisation is Jewish, it's about whether the organisation 110% falls in line and defends everything Israel does.
And because I don't think there's much going on in this thread, I'll just finish up by pointing out that AIPAC is a horrible, hardline group, and anyone who claims to support Israel should get behind J-Street instead. And also, Zohran Mandami is a superhero and I suspect some of the attacks on him come from him not only being a socialist, but a Muslim one
https://jstreet.org/
Mossfern
(4,872 posts)I am not, anti-Palestinian and strongly support a two state solution.
There's a whole bunch of healing and self soul searching on both sides for this to happen.
That's why I support organizations like Seeds of Peace. https://www.seedsofpeace.org/
Children should be taught love, not hate.
Just think of what can be accomplished!
hookaleft
(1,400 posts)What we are against are the violent actions of Zionists who refuse to live in peace with their neighbors. The destruction and the land grabbing and genocide of the Palestinians. And those horrible Israeli settlers that foment violence and atrocities. Furthermore we do not want another penny of our tax dollars to go to the Zionist government of Israel who is supported by AIPAC in this country. They are going to have to get used to that.
Boo1
(609 posts)Interested in peaceful coexistence? Never has seemed like it.
Response to Boo1 (Reply #34)
Post removed
Boo1
(609 posts)Then why have they made it this long?
sarisataka
(22,994 posts)Is that why there is so much antisemitism?
Nanjeanne
(6,841 posts)He claimed the lobby feared democracy and the end of the genocide and Netanyahus wars.
AND? for this he should apologize? I applaud him.
leftstreet
(41,371 posts)LAS14
(15,583 posts)From ChatGPT
The key passage, as reported by multiple outlets, was:
"The monsters that we are up against, they take many different forms."
He then went on to single out AIPAC, saying it was an organization:
"for whom the only thing more frightening than democracy being allowed to run its course is an end to genocide and Netanyahu's wars."
He also accused AIPAC of moving:
"millions in dark money to accomplish a single goal, to preserve their power so that they can turn us against one another instead of our leaders turning towards the moral change we all know to be necessary."
The remarks were widely interpreted by critics as calling AIPAC and its supporters "monsters," while Mamdani later disputed that interpretation.
When asked about the controversy, he said he was invoking a line commonly attributed to Antonio Gramsci:
"The old world is dying, and the new world struggles to be born; now is the time of monsters."
Mamdani said:
"I used the term to describe all those who are preventing the birth of a new world. My use of the term is a broad use..."
So, to answer your question precisely:
There is no verified quote in which Mamdani called "Israeli supporters" generally "monsters."
There are verified reports that he used the word "monsters" in a speech that immediately turned to
RockRaven
(20,062 posts)for pro-Israel and pro-AIPAC political purposes.
AloeVera
(4,650 posts)Boo1
(609 posts)There's a word for that.
AloeVera
(4,650 posts)A genocidal freak.
I refuse to whitewash and excuse him because of his religion/ethnicity. If that makes me an anti-semite in the eyes of the monster's defenders, I'll wear that false smear with honour.
Bye.
Eko
(10,192 posts)Have created a more unfavorable opinion of Israel in the past couple of years. Nearly 60% of the U.S. public disapproves of Israel's military actions in Gaza. That is a historic high. When you make criticism of Israel, its policies and a PAC that pushes only for supporting Israel anti-Semitic then yes that would increase antisemitism. The top post proves that. Criticizing AIPAC is supposed to be anti-Semitic according to them. The ADL defining anti-Zionism as anti-Semitic when plenty of Jewish people are not Zionist and plenty of non Jewish are Zionist. In a world where more people dont support Israel than they used to and they keep making things that are not anti-Semitic but valid criticisms of the policies of Israel and a PAC that supports them anti-Semitic,,,, I dont know what you want me to believe. You have 700 Rabbis telling us that thinking a PAC that pushes support for a country that is clearly on the route to if not actually being a far right authoritarian state a bad thing is antisemitic. That's antisemitic?.
Negative views of Israel, Netanyahu continue to rise among Americans especially young people


Joinfortmill
(21,928 posts)I don't know much about this situation. But, my opinion is Israel should rid themselves of Netanyahu. As for Mamdani, I don't know enough to comment.
question everything
(52,631 posts)Emile
(44,130 posts)Celerity
(55,364 posts)They supported 109 treasonous sitting RW Rethug election denialists.
RW-billionaire-funded AIPAC is not a Dem ally on balance. As stated above, in 2022 they endorsed 109 Republicans who refused to certify Biden's election (Including the christofash Speaker of the House Mike Johnson, Gym 'the paedo enabler' Jordan, ultra MAGAette cheerleader Elise Stefanik, the worm of worms Kevin McCarthy, the crazed gunhumper Greg Steube, Ronny 'Trump's drunk Dr Feelgood' Jackson, Joe 'you lie!' Wilson, John 'I am a racist, climate change denying MAGAt, but look!, Henry Cuellar campaigns and fundraises for me so it's all good' Carter, Troy 'make shit up about being threatened, get caught, and then distract by trying to get Biden 25th Amendment'ed' Nehls, etc etc). AIPAC values fealty to a foreign power more than the health of American democracy as shown by their support for those RW treasonous MAGAts simply because the MAGAts are also pro-Israel hawks.
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/oct/18/pro-israel-lobby-group-aipac-midterms-election-deniers-and-extremist-republicans

The USs largest pro-Israel lobby group is backing dozens of racists, homophobes and election deniers running for Congress next month because they have pledged to defend Israel against stiffening criticism of its oppression of the Palestinians. The powerful American Israel Public Affairs Committee (Aipac) has justified endorsing Republicans with extremist views, including members of Congress with ties to white supremacist groups and representatives who attempted to block Joe Bidens election victory, on the grounds that the singular issue of support for Israel trumps other considerations.
But Aipacs support for rightwing politicians has privately embarrassed some Democrats also endorsed by the powerful group and drawn accusations from more moderate pro-Israel organisations that it is attempting to stifle legitimate criticism of hardline Israeli policies. Logan Bayroff, a spokesman for J Street, a group campaigning for Washington to take a stronger stand to end the occupation of Palestinian territories, accused Aipac of attempting to impose a narrow definition of what it is to be pro-Israel amid shifting views in Democratic ranks.
Their actions have made clear that they view pro-Israel, pro-peace progressive Democrats as threats and Trumpist Republicans as allies. That worldview could not be more out of touch with the vast majority of American Jews, he said. Aipac may hope to silence and intimidate political leaders who believe that settlement expansion, endless conflict and permanent occupation are harmful to Israel, the Palestinian people and US interests. Ultimately, however, these common-sense views are too popular, widespread and important to be suppressed, and will continue to gain strength within American politics and among the American Jewish community.
Aipacs backing of extreme rightwing Republicans follows its $27m advertising campaign during the Democratic primaries to defeat candidates who spoke up for Palestinian rights, mostly with attacks over issues that had nothing to do with Israel. The campaign is part of push by more hawkish pro-Israel groups to shore up support in Congress in the face of rising advocacy for the Palestinian cause within the Democratic party and erosion of approval for Israeli actions among American Jews, particularly younger people.
snip
https://jstreet.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/AIPAC-Endorsee-List-042022.pdf
AIPAC endorsees that voted against certifying the 2020 presidential election results
Robert Aderholt (AL-04)
Jerry Carl (AL-01)
Barry Moore (AL-02)
Gary Palmer (AL-06)
Mike Rogers (AL-03)
Andy Biggs (AZ-05)
Debbie Lesko (AZ-08)
David Schweikert (AZ-01)
Rick Crawford (AK-01)
Ken Calvert (CA-41)
Mike Garcia (CA-27)
Darrell Issa (CA-48)
Doug LaMalfa (CA-01)
Kevin McCarthy (CA-20)
Jay Obernolte (CA-23)
Doug Lamborn (CO-05)
Kat Cammack (FL-03)
Mario Diaz-Balart (FL-25)
Byron Donalds (FL-19)
Neal Dunn (FL-02)
Scott Franklin (FL-15)
Carlos Gimenez (FL-26)
Brian Mast (FL-18)
Bill Posey (FL-08)
John Rutherford (FL-04)
Greg Steube (FL-17)
Daniel Webster (FL-11)
Rick Allen (GA-12)
Buddy Carter (GA-01)
Ross Fulcher (ID-01)
Mike Bost (IL-12)
Jim Baird (IN-04)
Jim Banks (IN-03)
Greg Pence (IN-06)
Ron Estes (KS-04)
Jake LaTurner (KS-02)
Tracey Mann (KS-01)
Hal Rogers (KY-05)
John Kennedy (LA-Sen)
Garret Graves (LA-06)
Clay Higgins (LA-03)
Mike Johnson (LA-04)
Steve Scalise (LA-01)
Andy Harris (MD-01)
Jack Bergman (MI-01)
Lisa McClain (MI-09)
Tim Walberg (MI-05)
Michelle Fischbach (MN-07)
Michael Guest (MS-03)
Trent Kelly (MS-01)
Steven Palazzo (MS-04)
Sam Graves (MO-06)
Blaine Luetkemeyer (MO-03)
Jason Smith (MO-08)
Matt Rosendale (MT-02)
Adrian Smith (NE-03)
Jeff Van Drew (NJ-02)
Yvette Herrell (NM-02)
Chris Jacobs (NY-24)
Nicole Malliotakis (NY-11)
Elise Stefanik (NY-21)
Dan Bishop (NC-08)
Virginia Foxx (NC-05)
Richard Hudson (NC-09)
Greg Murphy (NC-03)
David Rouzer (NC-07)
Steve Chabot (OH-01)
Bill Johnson (OH-06)
Jim Jordan (OH-04)
Stephanie Bice (OK-05)
Tom Cole (OK-04)
Kevin Hern (OK-01)
Mike Kelly (PA-16)
Dan Meuser (PA-09)
Scott Perry (PA-10)
Guy Reschenthaler (PA-14)
Lloyd Smucker (PA-11)
G.T. Thompson (PA-15)
Jeff Duncan (SC-03)
Ralph Norman (SC-05)
Tom Rice (SC-07)
William Timmons (SC-04)
Joe Wilson (SC-02)
Tim Burchett (TN-02)
Scott DesJarlais (TN-04)
Chuck Fleischmann (TN-03)
Mark Green (TN-07)
Diana Harshbarger (TN-01)
David Kustoff (TN-08)
John Rose (TN-06)
Jodey Arrington (TX-19)
Brian Babin (TX-36)
Michael Burgess (TX-26)
John Carter (TX-31)
Michael Cloud (TX-27)
Lance Gooden (TX-05)
Ronny Jackson (TX-13)
Troy Nehls (TX-22)
August Pfluger (TX-11)
Pete Sessions (TX-17)
Beth Van Duyne (TX-24)
Randy Weber (TX-14)
Roger Williams (TX-25)
Chris Stewart (UT-02)
Ben Cline (VA-06)
Morgan Griffith (VA-09)
Rob Wittman (VA-01)
Scott Fitzgerald (WI-05)
Carol Miller (WV-01)
Iggo
(50,128 posts)Wait, I dont care about them, either.
Ponietz
(4,609 posts)Supporting Bloatass to the detriment of liberty, truth and honor is monstrous. My Jewish friends agree.
CivicGrief
(407 posts)Sorry but there are some really fucked up people in the Israeli government who want to see Palestinians wiped out as much as Hamas wants to see Israel wiped out. The double-standard is not helpful.
Mossfern
(4,872 posts)I also would have no issue for 100's of Imams protesting anti-Muslim inferences.
Why is there a problem with 100's of Rabbis protesting what they see as harmful rhetoric.
wyn borkins
(1,609 posts)(IMHO) This specific discussional seems to have ceased being a part of "General Discussion" and has devolved into something else (?).
Perhaps it should be 'moved' (certainly NOT deleted) to another forum OR to a newly created forum wherein a bit of additional leeway would serve the participants more appropriately...
multigraincracker
(38,310 posts)State Solution happens.
sheshe2
(99,045 posts)The Mayor of NY City used the celebration of the NY Knicks win to make an inflammatory political statement. There are approximately 1.4 million Jews that live in the New York City metropolitan area, making it the largest Jewish community outside of Israel.
Mamdani is the mayor of all the people of the city and IMHO he should choose his words wisely. This was the Wrong place. Wrong time. Wrong message.
He is new. He is young. I hope he learns and I wish him the best.
betsuni
(29,443 posts)Yesterday lots of people piled on a talk show host for not liking the mayor's comments, but the comments were unwise.