Bold Pro-Working Class Policies

116.2K posts

Bold Pro-Working Class Policies

Bold Pro-Working Class Policies

@jayferus

Pro-Working Class community organizer. 2nd generation anti-fascist.

Wisconsin, USA انضم Şubat 2010
5.4K يتبع1.7K المتابعون
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Sabby Sabs
Sabby Sabs@SabbySabs2·
Just as I warned you, Israel will still receive WEAPONS from the United States. Here’s the president of J Street confirming that.
Sabby Sabs tweet media
Jeremy Ben-Ami@JeremyBenAmi

A bipartisan consensus is emerging to end unconditional taxpayer subsidies for Israel’s military and to enforce U.S. law on the use of American weapons. In January of this year, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told The Economist: “I want to taper off the military aid within the next ten years.” Asked if he meant reducing it to zero, he replied: “Yes. We’ve come of age and we’ve developed incredible capacities.” Within hours of Netanyahu’s interview, Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina – one of Israel’s staunchest Republican allies in the Senate – tweeted that he would propose accelerating that timeline: “I will always appreciate allies who are trying to be more self-sufficient,” he wrote. “Given what the Prime Minister said, we need not wait ten years.” Both Netanyahu and Graham pointed to the same underlying reality: Israel today has one of the most dynamic and advanced economies in the world. With a per capita GDP higher than countries like the United Kingdom, France and Japan, Israel is more than capable of paying for its own defense – just as America’s other wealthy allies already do. Yet the United States provides Israel with $3.3 billion annually in Foreign Military Financing - more than half of all such funding the U.S. distributes globally – on top of an additional $500 million/year for joint missile defense systems and other occasional significant supplemental appropriations. That reality raises a straightforward question: why should American taxpayers continue to subsidize the defense budget of a prosperous ally, particularly at a time when the U.S. faces its own significant fiscal pressures? Netanyahu and Graham are not alone in this view. For years, analysts and policymakers across the political spectrum have been arguing that Israel no longer needs generous economic subsidies. Across the political spectrum, a growing view is emerging: the US-Israel relationship should be “normalized.” Supporters of Israel - many raised on the vision that the Jewish people just want Israel to be treated like all other countries - should welcome the development. The benefits of disproportionately large financial assistance today are outweighed by the damage to Israel when that financial support becomes a divisive wedge in American politics. To be clear: a call to end American financial subsidies for Israel’s defense is not a call to end the U.S.-Israel security relationship. Israel faces significant threats and security challenges - from Iran, terror groups and more. The United States should continue to support Israel in confronting those threats in a host of important ways including intelligence sharing, operational coordination, joint exercises, and cooperative development of defense technologies. Security assistance does not have to - and should no longer - take the form of unconditional financial subsidy. Arms sales – paid for by Israel and governed by U.S. law - should continue in accordance with all relevant statutes including the Leahy Law, the Arms Export Control Act and the Foreign Assistance Act. The U.S. should continue to sell Israel important - and jointly developed - air defense systems like Iron Dome, David’s Sling and Arrow. I cannot emphasize enough how important missile defense systems such as Iron Dome are to the Israeli people. Over these past weeks and years, these systems have saved the lives of countless civilians. The technology underlying them was developed jointly by Israel and the U.S. and the manufacture of the interceptors and launchers is governed by bilateral agreements. The United States should continue to supply what Israel needs for the defense of its people from Iranian, Hezbollah, Hamas and Houthi missiles - but the time is coming for Israel to pay for what it needs, as other prosperous countries do. This approach aligns with the center of gravity in American Jewish opinion - reflecting the emotional attachment that 70 percent of Jewish Americans feel for Israel and simultaneously the opposition of 70 percent to unconditional American military and financial assistance. Congress should retain, exercise and expand its authority to review and, when necessary, block specific weapons sales that do not align with American law or interests. That’s why J Street supports the Ceasefire Compliance Act, new legislation which would ensure that if Israel continues to pursue policies in Gaza and the West Bank that run counter to American interests, it should not be able to use U.S. weapons in those areas. It’s also why J Street urges Senators this week to vote to disapprove two sales to Israel - one of large bombs and one of bulldozers - both to demonstrate consequences for misuse of these items in Gaza and elsewhere and to express consistent opposition to the war in Iran. A transition toward a more normalized security partnership would place the relationship on a more sustainable and less politically polarizing foundation. It would align U.S. policy with Israel’s own stated aspirations for self-reliance. The technological, economic and defensive achievement that Israel has accomplished and that make it self-sufficient should be a matter of pride for Israel’s supporters around the world. These are developments the founders of the country would have deeply valued. The exact timetable for phasing out taxpayer subsidies should be worked out carefully. The United States should honor existing commitments, including those in the 2016 memorandum of understanding, through their conclusion in the next two years. But after that, a responsible yet rapid phase-out is needed – a step that would move the U.S. and Israel toward a more mature, balanced, and ultimately more resilient partnership – one grounded not only in shared interests, but in shared standards and accountability.

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Novara Media
Novara Media@novaramedia·
Donald Trump and Joe Biden ‘would be hanged at Nuremberg-like trials’ for abetting genocide in Palestine, says a top political scientist. Professor John Mersheimer told Arab Center conference attendees that the US is helping Israel to commit “the greatest of all crimes”. “We know what happened to all those people who executed the genocide between 1941 and 1945 in Europe,” he added.
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AOCPulse
AOCPulse@AOCPulseX·
🚨 AOC JUST WENT THERE: “I thought that fascist takeover attempts were going to be architected by evil geniuses. I was not expecting how unearned, nepotistic, mediocre and just dumb so many of the people architecting this were going to be.”
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Ryan Rozbiani
Ryan Rozbiani@RyanRozbiani·
Two Weeks Ago Marco Rubio: “The people that run this country [Iran] are radical Shia clerics, these are religious fanatics.” Today Trump posts an image of himself as Jesus Christ Every accusation is a confession...
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Taylor Lorenz
Taylor Lorenz@TaylorLorenz·
.@AbdulElSayed never misses
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💕 Brittany Belle 💕
💕 Brittany Belle 💕@BrittanyinTexas·
The biggest test of Vance’s career and he failed. Kushner & Witkoff were never trained for this level of global stakes. 3 unqualified losers who lost the deal. Meanwhile, Trump & Rubio party at a UFC fight. And you wonder why our country has become an international joke.
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(((Tendar)))
(((Tendar)))@Tendar·
The collective meltdown among most at the far right regarding Péter Magyar's resounding victory in Hungary is probably the most telling moment you will see regarding the so-called "conservative" or "patriotic" movements across the globe. I will elaborate: Péter Magyar is not a lefty or woke. His ideology is center-right. Tisza will partially follow an even harsher immigration policy and continue some decisions made under Orban, e.g. opposing the EU migration and asylum pact, a core demand of many of the far-right figures. Magyar himself describes his movement a "renewal", not a "revolution". So why the meltdown? The answer is so unmasking. Péter Magyar and Tisza are no Russian puppets. They haven't forgotten what Soviet-Russia did in 1956. They made a clear stand against the Russian aggressions, both of those in the past and today. Furthermore, the system of rampant corruption Orban and his allies have built is not limited to Hungary. It has deep ties to foreign actors. It is obvious that it will reveal some very interesting money streams coming from East and West. So, we are not talking about Hungary alone, but an international network of right-wing movements actively collaborating. Most of those right-wing movements bemoan this development, and this development alone. It unmasks that their political leaning of being "conservative" was but a sharade. It was only about money and a deeply corrupt network benefiting them, with money streams coming from Russia and elsewhere.
(((Tendar))) tweet media
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Drop Site
Drop Site@DropSiteNews·
Jeremy Scahill says the U.S. is overextending, driven by “imperial hubris,” as power, alliances, and the global narrative are all being contested. “The world is up for grabs again right now — and the idea space is quite diverse.” And amid the uncertainty, “history has shown time and again that when the poor of the world band together… when workers actually get politicized, you shouldn’t underestimate their ability to change history,” @JeremyScahill told @VarshaGandikota.
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Jesus Chrysler
Jesus Chrysler@JesusChryslerII·
This TV ad, which was broadcast back in 1971 during the Vietnam War, is weirdly relevant today. Fight for your slice
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Trita Parsi search. ..
I explained on @cnn that Lebanon may be the real sticking point, since Iran demands Israel end the bombardment of that country. “For the Iranians, this is a test to see whether the United States is capable of controlling and reining in Israel,” I explained, otherwise the value of a deal with the US becomes questionable to Tehran.
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Danny (Dennis) Citrinowicz ,داني سيترينوفيتش
Treating Ghalibaf as if he were Delcy Rodríguez is no different than pretending Iran has experienced regime change. As long as policy is shaped by wishful thinking rather than facts on the ground, any meaningful agreement will remain out of reach. #ira
Laura Rozen@lrozen

The US admin thinking reported in this piece seems based on fantasy. Trump reverting to economic pressure to see if Ghalibaf decides to become Davos guy?

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audrey White
audrey White@RedRosa91940184·
This is British values - Robert Fisk is a real reporter and he’s spot on here …..
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Malcolm Nance
Malcolm Nance@MalcolmNance·
Next Up: The Houthis will announce they are going to blockade the Bab al-Mendab and force all shipping to go round South Africa. Once again price of oil will skyrocket as it can end Saudi Arabia’s bypass to Asia from Yanbu. No one at the WH is thinking this through bc no one in the WH is capable of thinking.
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Mike Young
Mike Young@micyoung75·
The quote that matters most in the Atlantic piece does not come from a critic. It comes from Andrew Napolitano - libertarian, retired judge, Alito's Princeton classmate. His words: "Sam is not an originalist. Sam is a conservative person who wants a conservative outcome." And the record backs him. At the tariff hearing, Alito was volunteering legal justifications for Trump's orders that Trump's own legal team had not raised. National Review put it in print: "it is not the Court's job to opine on powers the president has not invoked." When the publication that shaped your legal worldview since college has to tell you to stay in your lane, something has shifted. Roberts, Barrett, Kavanaugh, and Gorsuch have each, at least occasionally, pushed back on unchecked executive power. They understand their own movement's stated first principles require it. Alito, on the rare occasions they cross over, holds firm for Trump. "Held firm" is doing a lot of work in that sentence.
Mike Young tweet media
Jonathan Lemire@JonLemire

“On the rare occasions when conservative colleagues have joined with liberals to rein in Trump, Alito has held firm” theatlantic.com/ideas/2026/04/…

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PC Butter Bread
PC Butter Bread@PC_Butter_Bread·
#ExposeICE inhumanity
Yassamin Ansari@yassaminansari

What's happening inside ICE detention centers, including the holding facility at Mesa Gateway Airport, is evil. @adelitaforcongress, @gregstantonaz and I conducted an unannounced visit this week and what we saw was shocking. Concrete cells where people were laying body to body because it was so overcrowded, sick people being denied medical care, women begging us for sanitary napkins. This is what our taxpayer dollars are funding. abc15.com/news/local-new…

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Glenn Greenwald
Glenn Greenwald@ggreenwald·
Iran has been vehemently clear for decades that it would never renounce the same right every country on earth has under the NPT: to enrich uranium for nuclear energy, but not for nuclear weapons. No country would ever give up that right. Trump never demanded this ludicrous concession until Israel ordered him that this has to be the red line. I still think Trump doesn't understand the difference bewteen "no nuclear bomb" and "no nuclear program." But either way, any "negotiations" based on a demand that Iran give up the right to enrich uranium even to 3.67% is designed in advance to fail, and instead to re-start the war so that Israel's ultimate aim can be achieved: shattering Iranian society and turning it into Libya and Syria.
Bannon’s WarRoom@Bannons_WarRoom

TRITA PARSI: If JD Vance is right that the U.S. went in demanding zero enrichment, then of course this blew up. That was Israel’s red line, not Trump’s original red line of no nuclear weapons. Push for surrender, and you guarantee escalation.

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