Green Party candidate Jill Stein is gaining ground among Muslim-American voters in three critical swing states: Michigan, Arizona, and Wisconsin, according to a recent poll by the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR).

Stein leads Vice President and Democrat candidate Kamala Harris in these states, with 40 per cent support in Michigan, 35 per cent in Arizona, and 44 per cent in Wisconsin. This surge in popularity appears tied to Steinā€™s vocal criticism of US support for Israel during the ongoing genocide in Gaza.

  • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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    2 months ago

    Liberals downvoting this would rather plug their ears and cover their eyes instead of confronting their issues and calling on Kamala to sanction Israel.

      • UltraGiGaGigantic@lemmy.ml
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        2 months ago

        Donā€™t worry everyone, just one more damage control vote and things will all be fixed. The democrats pinky swears. /$

    • aalvare2@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Kamala isnā€™t president yet. You can call on her to sanction Israel as president, without also pushing another candidate.

      Jill Steinā€™s only practical role in this election is as a presidential spoiler benefitting Trump, and if Trump wins then Palestine is really truly fā€™d anyway.

      It also doesnā€™t help that a vote for Jill Stein is a vote for the disbandment of NATO and the disruption of Ukraine aid. Those are extreme positions that have nothing to do with Israel-Palestine, and many of those interested in voting for her are likely not even aware of those stances.

      • mathemachristian[he]@lemmy.ml
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        2 months ago

        Sheā€™s the VICE president! We can already judge her actions and make pretty accurate judgements on how she will act as president based on what she is currently doing. Which is aiding genocide.

        • aalvare2@lemmy.world
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          2 months ago

          Being the VP by itself doesnā€™t give her any authority to make decisions concerning the Israel-Palestine conflict.

          You can criticize her on the basis that sheā€™ll likely continue the same kinds of actions Biden has already taken in the conflict, which has involved support for Israel, but also some sanctions against Israel, ceasfires, and calls for a two-state solution. Iā€™m under the impression that if Biden was truly unconditionally pro-Israel, that the conflict would be over by now in the most violent way.

          • ā˜† YĻƒÉ ĘšŌ‹ĻƒŹ‚ ā˜†@lemmy.mlM
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            2 months ago

            The fact that sheā€™s at the highest levels of Biden admin is itself an endorsement of the policies of the administration sheā€™s part of. She absolutely can be judged on that basis. On top of that, everything she has said publicly clearly indicates that sheā€™s all in on the genocide. She even repeated debunked October 7th rape claims at the debate. There is no question of where she stands. Itā€™s the height of intellectual dishonesty to continue pretending otherwise.

            • anarcho_blinkenist@lemmy.ml
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              2 months ago

              smh just because I was Hitlerā€™s personal attachĆ© doesnā€™t mean I agree with Hitlerā€™s policies it wasnā€™t like I had the authority to make those decisions myself while I helped engage in the diplomatic and administrative duties to facilitate them

          • anarcho_blinkenist@lemmy.ml
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            2 months ago

            Iā€™m under the impression that if Biden was truly unconditionally pro-Israel, that the conflict would be over by now in the most violent way.

            He literally sidestepped around congress twice to shovel guns and bombs to them faster than even the bloodthirsty Zionists in Congress could ā€” who were already themselves bipartisanly moving to do the same.

            He 100% wanted Gazans wiped off the face of the earth before the elections hit. Donā€™t make yourself such an easy mark for the most despicable racketeers, murderers, and liars that billionaire and arms-dealer money can buy. These democrat politicians, just like their Republican colleagues who work for the same class of people, would disappear both of us and our entire families to one of the countless bipartisan CIA blacksite torture camps around the world before showing real humanity toward the working class and the victims of their imperialism. There is never any reason to defend them.

            • aalvare2@lemmy.world
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              2 months ago

              He literally sidestepped around congress twice

              I appreciate the source, I was not aware of this.

              That said, has Biden sidestepped Congress since these sales to send additional weapons to Israel? These sales happened just 2 months after the assault on Israel, and just a few weeks apart from one another. Itā€™d be nice to know if any other sidestepping occurred in the following 9 months, the bulk of the conflict.

              Edit: added quote

      • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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        2 months ago

        Kamala isnā€™t president yet. You can call on her to sanction Israel as president, without also pushing another candidate.

        She has promised to always keep sending Israel bombs. She can promise to sanction Israel if she wants to regain votes she is shedding by promising to continue genocide.

        Jill Steinā€™s only practical role in this election is as a presidential spoiler benefitting Trump, and if Trump wins then Palestine is really truly fā€™d anyway.

        Jill Steinā€™s platform is a lot better than the Democrats, votes for her pull the DNC to the left. If Trump wins, he will indeed continue the genocide started under the Democrats, but so would Kamala.

        It also doesnā€™t help that a vote for Jill Stein is a vote for the disbandment of NATO and the disruption of Ukraine aid. Those are extreme positions that have nothing to do with Israel-Palestine, and many of those interested in voting for her are likely not even aware of those stances.

        Then tell people what she stands for. For what itā€™s worth, disbanding NATO is the single greatest thing any American President could do for the Global South, taking a firm stand against Imperialism.

        • aalvare2@lemmy.world
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          2 months ago

          She has promised to always keep sending Israel bombs. She can promise to sanction Israel if she wants to regain votes she is shedding by promising to continue genocide.

          She has not promised to ā€œkeep sending Israel bombsā€. She has said that she would continue to arm Israel, but a) she would have to support Israel so far as Congress continues to apportion aid to Israel, and b) she has also repeatedly stated that she wants a 2-state solution and to enact a ceasefire.

          Jill Steinā€™s platform is a lot better than the Democrats, votes for her pull the DNC to the left.

          I disagree with this. Youā€™d think that voting for Jill Stein would pressure the DNC to go further left, but if Trump wins then it sends the message that the progressive left canā€™t be trusted to vote for them, so theyā€™ll go back to appealing to moderates. So the gains created by giving Sanders/AOC-types more leverage in the party and nominating Tim Walz for VP (the most progressive pick out of everyone considered) would be lost.

          If Trump wins, he will indeed continue the genocide started under the Democrats, but so would Kamala.

          I believe the assault on Palestine would be accelerated under Trump. You can call it lip service if you want, but at least Kamala has repeatedly called for a 2-state solution, meaning sheā€™d continue to do the bare minimum reqā€™d by Congress as far as supporting Israel would be concerned. Trump has never supported a 2-state solution, verbally or otherwise - the guy even moved the Israel embassy into Jerusalem, against the suggestion of virtually all his foreign aid experts. He has more interest in stoking this conflict than not.

          For what itā€™s worth, disbanding NATO is the single greatest thing any American President could do for the Global South, taking a firm stand against Imperialism.

          I disagree very, very strongly. I donā€™t see how this ā€œtakes a firm stance against imperialismā€ because Russia is 100% the aggressor of that conflict. They had no legitimate reason to cross into Ukraineā€™s border and open fire, other than to further imperialistic ambition. The whole point of NATO is to discourage that ambition.

          • GarbageShootAlt2@lemmy.ml
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            2 months ago

            She has not promised to ā€œkeep sending Israel bombsā€. She has said that she would continue to arm Israel

            lol

            • aalvare2@lemmy.world
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              Copied from my other reply:

              Iā€™m sorry, but ā€œsaying that sheā€™d continue to arm Israelā€, which would literally be her job if Congress apportions funds for her to arm Israel, is not equivalent to ā€œpromising to give Israel bombsā€. The keyword ā€œpromiseā€, to me, suggests she would do anything her power to aid Israel, even if she doesnā€™t have to. Iā€™ll accept any constructive criticism of this take, but not a strawmanning that strips away the context that itā€™s literally the law to do what Congress says in this case.

              • GarbageShootAlt2@lemmy.ml
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                Hereā€™s the thing, taking your paraphrased quotes as accurate (and I believe they are) she is not appending any condition on arming Israel. She did not say ā€œIf Congress apportions funds, I will arm Israel,ā€ [let alone ā€œIf and only if,ā€] she said ā€œI will continue to arm Israel,ā€ without any conditional, which Biden has demonstrated the President can do at least to some extent through unilateral executive authority in addition to Congress being able to do it. Therefore, the statements are equivalent. I therefore maintain that ā€œlol/lmaoā€ is a valid response to claiming they are different.

          • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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            2 months ago

            She has not promised to ā€œkeep sending Israel bombsā€. She has said that she would continue to arm Israel

            Lmao

            I disagree with this. Youā€™d think that voting for Jill Stein would pressure the DNC to go further left, but if Trump wins then it sends the message that the progressive left canā€™t be trusted to vote for them, so theyā€™ll go back to appealing to moderates. So the gains created by giving Sanders/AOC-types more leverage in the party and nominating Tim Walz for VP (the most progressive pick out of everyone considered) would be lost.

            Historically this isnā€™t the case. The DNC only throws the left a bone if they need to.

            I disagree very, very strongly. I donā€™t see how this ā€œtakes a firm stance against imperialismā€ because Russia is 100% the aggressor of that conflict. They had no legitimate reason to cross into Ukraineā€™s border and open fire, other than to further imperialistic ambition. The whole point of NATO is to discourage that ambition.

            We arenā€™t talking about Russia and Ukraine, though NATO did provoke that. NATO itself is an offensive alliance that has plundered the Global South, period, without needing to reference Russia nor Ukraine. Ask anyone in the Global South what their opinion of NATO is.

            • aalvare2@lemmy.world
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              2 months ago

              > Lmao

              Iā€™m sorry, but ā€œsaying that sheā€™d continue to arm Israelā€, which would literally be her job if Congress apportions funds for her to arm Israel, is not equivalent to ā€œpromising to give Israel bombsā€. The keyword ā€œpromiseā€, to me, suggests she would do anything her power to aid Israel, even if she doesnā€™t have to. Iā€™ll accept any constructive criticism of this take, but not a strawmanning that strips away the context that itā€™s literally the law to do what Congress says in this case.

              > Historically this isnā€™t the case. The DNC only throws the left a bone if they need to.

              Do you have any sources for this?

              > We arenā€™t talking about Russia and Ukraine, though NATO did provoke that. NATO itself is an offensive alliance that has plundered the Global South, period, without needing to reference Russia nor Ukraine. Ask anyone in the Global South what their opinion of NATO is.

              This segment of the discussion IS about Russia and Ukraine, because itā€™s what I raised at the end of my first post.

              In any case, do you have any sources for this? Because from my perspective, I donā€™t see how NATO provoked that conflict. It was Russia, not a NATO-membered country nor Ukraine, that crossed the Ukrainian border and opened fire on Ukrainian territory that started the war.

              • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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                2 months ago

                Iā€™m sorry, but ā€œsaying that sheā€™d continue to arm Israelā€, which would literally be her job if Congress apportions funds for her to arm Israel, is not equivalent to ā€œpromising to give Israel bombsā€. The keyword ā€œpromiseā€, to me, suggests she would do anything her power to aid Israel, even if she doesnā€™t have to. Iā€™ll accept any constructive criticism of this take, but not a strawmanning that strips away the context that itā€™s literally the law to do what Congress says in this case.

                She has promised to always support Israel and aid it in its defense. Itā€™s cut and dry, she will posture for a ceasefire while supporting genocide.

                Do you have any sources for this?

                Sure. During FDRā€™s campaign, coming off of the Great Depression, the Ruling Class feared a US October Revolution like what happened in the USSR, so the US became a Social Democracy for a time. Leftward movement comes from fear from the Ruling Class.

                This segment of the discussion IS about Russia and Ukraine, because itā€™s what I raised at the end of my first post.

                My point was not. My point was that pulling out of NATO is the single greatest act for the majority of Mankind that any US President could do. Youā€™re shifting it back to Russia.

                In any case, do you have any sources for this? Because from my perspective, I donā€™t see how NATO provoked that conflict. It was Russia, not a NATO-membered country nor Ukraine, that crossed the Ukrainian border and opened fire on Ukrainian territory that started the war.

                Stoltenberg admitted it. ā€œThe opposite happened. He wanted us to sign that promise, never to enlarge NATO. He wanted us to remove our military infrastructure in all Allies that have joined NATO since 1997, meaning half of NATO, all the Central and Eastern Europe, we should remove NATO from that part of our Alliance, introducing some kind of B, or second class membership. We rejected that. So he went to war to prevent NATO, more NATO, close to his borders.ā€

                In other words, NATO expansionism and encirclement of Russia despite Russia warning against it caused it. NATO was formed by Anticommunists against the USSR, and retained its anti-Russia purpose even after the dissolution of the USSR. Had NATO not expanded against Russiaā€™s wishes, Russia would not have invaded Ukraine.

                • aalvare2@lemmy.world
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                  2 months ago

                  She has promised to always support Israel and aid it in its defense. Itā€™s cut and dry, she will posture for a ceasefire while supporting genocide.

                  Paying lip-service to the support of Israelā€™s defense is not equivalent to personally supporting genocide. You could argue that itā€™s practically the same thing if she ultimately continues to arm Israel and Israel continues to attack Gaza, but I donā€™t think the blame should be placed on her, it should be placed principally on Israel, next on a Congress that apportions funds for Israel.

                  During FDRā€™s campaign, coming off of the Great Depression, the Ruling Class feared a US October Revolution like what happened in the USSR, so the US became a Social Democracy for a time. Leftward movement comes from fear from the Ruling Class.

                  My original claim was that if progressives split the vote, and the GOP wins as a result, thatā€™ll shift the party right.

                  This isnā€™t a counter-example to that, IMO itā€™s an example that the worse the economy is for the working class, the harder the working class swings politics left, which I would agree with. That said, the Great Depression was also a much worse economic period.

                  I think an example in favor of what Iā€™m talking about is the 2000 election. Bush won Florida by less than 1000 votes, but 100k votes were cast for the socialist candidate, most of which wouldā€™ve otherwise gone to Gore. The result was Bush not only winning in 2000, but again in 04. And in 08 we get someone who appealed moderates as much as he did to progressives.

                  My point was not. My point was that pulling out of NATO is the single greatest act for the majority of Mankind that any US President could do. Youā€™re shifting it back to Russia.

                  Iā€™m not shifting the entire conversation back to Russia, just this portion of it, because thatā€™s where this portion started, and your point about dissolving NATO being an anti-imperalist move contradicts my take that removing the check against Russia is a pro-imperialist move. Also I donā€™t see how disbanding NATO would be ā€œthe single great act for the majority of Mankind that any US President could doā€œ, feel free to elaborate.

                  In other words, NATO expansionism and encirclement of Russia despite Russia warning against it caused it. NATO was formed by Anticommunists against the USSR, and retained its anti-Russia purpose even after the dissolution of the USSR. Had NATO not expanded against Russiaā€™s wishes, Russia would not have invaded Ukraine.

                  Russia could have simplyā€¦not invaded Ukraine? NATO is just a defensive alliance, it getting bigger doesnā€™t put Russia in danger unless Russia has imperialistic tendencies.

                  You could argue that Russia feared that NATO getting bigger meant that the individual countries get bigger, meaning they may choose to attack Russia themselves with larger power. But Russia could use that as an excuse to shore up its own alliances and continue building its own military (both actions taken in case of Russian invasion), not to invade a non-NATO country for no other reason?

                  • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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                    2 months ago

                    Paying lip-service to the support of Israelā€™s defense is not equivalent to personally supporting genocide.

                    No, she agreed to send bombs for children.

                    I think an example in favor of what Iā€™m talking about is the 2000 election. Bush won Florida by less than 1000 votes, but 100k votes were cast for the socialist candidate, most of which wouldā€™ve otherwise gone to Gore. The result was Bush not only winning in 2000, but again in 04. And in 08 we get someone who appealed moderates as much as he did to progressives.

                    Youā€™re missing 9/11, which fundamentally changed America.

                    Iā€™m not shifting the entire conversation back to Russia, just this portion of it, because thatā€™s where this portion started, and your point about dissolving NATO being an anti-imperalist move contradicts my take that removing the check against Russia is a pro-imperialist move. Also I donā€™t see how disbanding NATO would be ā€œthe single great act for the majority of Mankind that any US President could doā€œ, feel free to elaborate.

                    Itā€™s simple, NATO is the most Imperialist offensive coalition on the planet. These countries hyper-exploit the Global South and defend themselves via NATO. Here is an article on it.

                    Russia could have simplyā€¦not invaded Ukraine? NATO is just a defensive alliance, it getting bigger doesnā€™t put Russia in danger unless Russia has imperialistic tendencies.

                    No, NATO is not ā€œjust a defensive alliance,ā€ go on, have a read. Itā€™s a millitary alliance of Imperialist countries. Yes, Russia could have just not invaded, thougj given the shelling of ethnic-Russians within Ukraine by Kiev itā€™s impossible to say NATO wasnā€™t deliberately provoking it as well.

                    You could argue that Russia feared that NATO getting bigger meant that the individual countries get bigger, meaning they may choose to attack Russia themselves with larger power. But Russia could use that as an excuse to shore up its own alliances and continue building its own military (both actions taken in case of Russian invasion), not to invade a non-NATO country for no other reason?

                    Given the shelling of Donetsk and Luhansk, areas with majority ethnic Russians within Ukraine, Russia decided to take advantage of that and cripple Ukraineā€™s military. It isnā€™t ā€œjustified,ā€ but thatā€™s what happened, and the invasion never would have happend if NATO wasnā€™t deliberately encircling Russia. Russia even tried to join NATO, but was denied.

      • Fidel_Cashflow@lemmy.ml
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        2 months ago

        It also doesnā€™t help that a vote for Jill Stein is a vote for the disbandment of NATO and the disruption of Ukraine aid.

      • UltraGiGaGigantic@lemmy.ml
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        2 months ago

        Jill Steinā€™s only practical role in this election is as a presidential spoiler benefitting Trump

        Can you explain why?

        • Dr. Bluefall@toast.ooo
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          2 months ago

          Stein has been primarily campaigning on ā€œDrop Kamalaā€, bleeding democratic support away from Harris.

        • aalvare2@lemmy.world
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          Sure.

          When I say ā€œpractical roleā€, Iā€™m referring to how Stein affects the results of this election.

          There is a nearly 0% chance that Jill Stein is going to win the election, and a nearly 100% chance the winner will be either the Dem or GOP nominee. Given that sheā€™s left of Kamala, whoā€™s left of Trump, there are far more Stein voters who wouldā€™ve otherwise voted for Kamala than Stein voters who otherwise wouldā€™ve voted for Trump. So long as one or both of these voter groups are significantly large (which can mean as few as ~81,000 votes in the right states, since thatā€™s the margin of victory Biden had in 2020), Stein would serve as a significant spoiler for Harris.

          Consider the effect that Ralph Naderā€™s 2000 presidential campaign had on the 2000 election.

          • verdigris@lemmy.ml
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            Itā€™s literally 0. The entire country could vote unanimously for Stein and the electors could (and would) still just pick a winner from the two major parties.

        • verdigris@lemmy.ml
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          2 months ago

          Please research the electoral college before you discuss US presidential elections online.