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Prometheus 6

All respect and no restraint

John McCain, meet Unintended Consequences

"There's no question that Obama came into this election with probably less going for him than most Democratic nominees," says Wald. But the Palin pick "probably blunted any gains the Republicans had made."

The Fight for the Jewish Vote
Obama was trailing, but Palin may hurt McCain.
Catharine Skipp and Arian Campo-Flores
Newsweek Web Exclusive

Like many Jews in south Florida, Todd and Jamie Ehrenreich are registered Democrats who have faithfully cast ballots for their party's presidential nominees as long as they can remember. But this year, they'd decided to back Sen. John McCain, the Republican candidate. "We are over the $250,000 tax bracket, and we didn't want to lose our money," Jamie says. "We wanted to benefit from our own American dream."

Then McCain selected Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin as his running mate—and "lost us in one fell swoop," says Jamie, who lives with her husband and two kids in Miami. She finds so much about Palin objectionable that she almost doesn't know where to begin. There's the abortion issue, for one. Palin "wouldn't want anyone to have an abortion even for rape or incest," says Jamie. "Who is she to judge by telling me how to live my life and overturning the things women have worked so hard for?" Equally disconcerting is Palin's seeming shallowness on some of the most pressing matters facing the country. "She doesn't know what she is talking about and makes it up as she goes along," says Jamie. "The fact that she had to be coached for two weeks [to prepare for the vice presidential debate] tells me she doesn't know anything. She just talks in circles."

The Ehrenreichs' reaction is hardly isolated. Many Florida Jews who had previously been open to McCain appear to share the couple's aversion to Palin, according to political scientists, polling data and anecdotal reporting. "She stands for all the wrong things in the eyes of the Jewish community," says Kenneth Wald, a professor at the University of Florida. Among the examples he cites: Palin seems to disdain intellectualism, she's a vociferous opponent of gun control and she attended a fundamentalist church that hosted Jews for Jesus, which seeks to convert Jews to Christianity. (Palin apparently sat through a speech by a leader of the group in which he said terrorist attacks on Israel were punishment for Israelis' failure to accept Jesus as the Messiah.) An American Jewish Committee poll taken in the weeks after Palin was picked found that 54 percent of respondents disapproved of her selection, compared to 37 percent who approved. And that was before the onslaught of withering criticism of her interviews with CBS's Katie Couric.

Such rejection of Palin could prove decisive on November 4. The Sunshine State has emerged once again as a key battleground, and "in a close election, Florida Jews could tip the scales," says State Rep. Adam Hasner, co-chair of McCain's Jewish steering committee there. Though Jews account for only 5 percent of Florida voters, they turn out reliably on election day. In 2004, Sen. John Kerry, the Democratic nominee, captured about 78 percent of the Jewish vote nationally—roughly in line with recent historical trends (Ronald Reagan's 39 percent in 1980 marked the high point for Republicans). But this year's Democratic nominee, Sen. Barack Obama, has appeared to lag among Jews. The AJC poll showed only 57 percent of Jews nationwide supporting Obama, with 30 percent backing McCain and 13 percent undecided. "There's no question that Obama came into this election with probably less going for him than most Democratic nominees," says Wald. But the Palin pick "probably blunted any gains the Republicans had made."

Obama's got a video of some of the most respected

Jewish folks from around the country.

What does Palin have?

A church with a history of anti-Semitism.

Plus, their peeps in the fifty-first state have come around and sent the word:

They want Obama.

But they would have voted

But they would have voted Clinton if she had been the nominee??? This isn't about taxes. We all know what this is about.
Yet you cannot tell it like it is without being called an anti-Semite. Well they're not even Semites!!

Man this is tiring. Every

Man this is tiring. Every single "ethnic group" has trouble with blacks. A third of Asians are "undecided", which is the politically correct way of saying that they are completely ruling voting for the nigger out. Indians as model-minorities derive their identity like other ethnic groups from being non-black. Latinos/Hispanics do appear to be coming around though, half of them consider themselves white, so they've got the "right kind of nigger" and therefore they can feel good about casting a vote for him. Sometimes I wish every black person on earth and the continent of Africa fell into the ocean. Somehow blacks would still be blamed for the worlds ills.

But they would have voted

But they would have voted Clinton if she had been the nominee???

It's not strictly a Jewish thing, sall.

There are a lot of people who are Republicans for exactly this reason...they have a bag of money they don't want to share. Many of them are now switching over to Obama for the same reason...they see now the only hope of keeping that bag of money is to get Republicans out of office, break their control over law and the economy. Whatever their perception of race was hasn't changed. Their perception of Republicans has.

Frankly, the fascinating thing to me is how Palin was chosen to appeal to dissatisfied Clinton supporters (whose numbers appear to have been exaggerated by a media that likes to keep shit started so they have stories to report), and she's had precisely the opposite effect.

A third of Asians are

A third of Asians are "undecided"

And two thirds are not.

Indians as model-minorities derive their identity like other ethnic groups from being non-black.

Oh, no...especially the new immigrants. They have a 5000 year old culture. White Americans may well identify them as not-Black in America but do not confuse white American conceptualization of Indians with their own, any more than you should confuse white American's conceptualization of Black people with your own.

Latinos/Hispanics do appear to be coming around though, half of them consider themselves white, so they've got the "right kind of nigger" and therefore they can feel good about casting a vote for him.

I believe it was from the introduction to a book titled Portnoy's Complaint: "If you ever forget you're Jewish, some goy will remind you." I also believe that was lifted from Black folks. 

We do obstruct ourselves sometimes, you know? Just not in the way Conservatives would have people believe...and no more than others do. 

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