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voice



Welcome to Jewish Americans for Obama


Watch Video "This time - in this election - it's time for fundamental change in Washington. To make that change, we need to draw on a spirit that is deeply embedded in the Jewish tradition - a view that says we all have a responsibility to do our part to repair this world; that we can take care of one another and build strong communities grounded in faith and family; that repairing the world is a task that each of us takes up every day. That is how we are going to meet the challenges we face." — Barack Obama
Rodeph Shalom Synagogue, Philadelphia
April 16, 2008



Barack Obama on Key Issues of Concern to Jewish Americans
As a community organizer, a law professor, a parent, a state senator, and a United States Senator, Barack Obama has embodied the Jewish community's strongest values. Barack Obama knows our history as Jewish Americans – one of persecution and immigration, of resilience in the face of tragedy and difficult odds, of hard work and our devotion to education, to strengthening community, and to our country. Barack, whose name comes from the same root as the Hebrew word Baruch, or "blessed," has traveled to Israel and witnessed Israelis' determination in the fight against terrorism and their yearning for peace with their neighbors. His commitment to Israel's security, to the U.S.-Israel relationship, and to Israel's right to self-defense has always been unshakable. Demonstrating his personal connection to Zionism and understanding of Israel as the homeland Jews longed for, Senator Barack Obama has stated that it must be preserved as a Jewish state. He will work tirelessly to help Israel in its quest for a lasting peace with its neighbors, while standing with Israel against those who seek its destruction.

Barack Obama stands shoulder-to-shoulder with Jewish Americans on the issues that our community has consistently fought to defend, including choice, civil rights, health care and church-state separation. Endorsed by NARAL Pro-Choice America, Barack Obama is a steadfast supporter of a woman's right to choose. As President, he will make available a new national health plan to all Americans. Barack Obama, whose grandparents helped raise him, is opposed to privatizing Social Security, and he will help make prescription drugs more affordable for seniors. His belief in a separation of church and state, as well as his championing of pluralism and equality, places him squarely aligned with our community and our values. As a father of two young daughters, Barack has promised to work to achieve energy independence and to fight global climate change, so that all our children's birthright will be a cleaner and safer world.

We hope you will explore the site and read about Barack Obama, his story, his values, and his plan for America. We hope you will join us in helping to elect a President who will stand up for what Jewish Americans believe in both at home and abroad.

http://my.barackobama.com/page/content/jahome





voice

Rabbis' Testimonials

Rabbi Gordon | Rabbi Bob | Rabbi Teutsch | Rabbi Mikva | Rabbi Visotzky | Rabbi Tucker | Rabbi Simon | Rabbi Dreyfus | Rabbi Levy | Rabbi Foster | Rabbi Kroloff | Rabbi Dorff


I have been a rabbi in Chicago for twenty-eight years. In all that time I have never publicly endorsed a candidate for office. As a congregational rabbi, I have always avoided taking such a public position. This year is very different. First, I have been deeply offended and outraged by the lies and smears about Senator Obama that have been specifically targeted to the Jewish community. I find it shameful that there are those who feel they can manipulate the American Jewish community through these attacks. As a Chicago area rabbi I have been fortunate to know Senator Barack Obama. I have met him on many occasions, and I witnessed his swearing in for his Senate seat in January of 2005. More importantly, people I know and deeply trust have known Barack Obama since his days at Harvard Law School.
Barack Obama is a man of incredible wisdom, insight, and integrity. His connections within the Chicago Jewish community could not be deeper. He has won the admiration and trust of many of the leading figures of Chicago Jewish life. Those who know him best recognize him to be a person who truly understands the American Jewish experience as well as the centrality to Jews and all Americans of Israel as the only democracy in the Middle East and America's strongest ally. He demonstrated a remarkable depth of understanding of Israel in his most recent visit there and impressed all those whom he met. I support him as well because of his commitment to an America called to its highest ideals. On all the major domestic issues Barack Obama shares the values of the American Jewish community. I am endorsing Barack Obama for president because I know him to be a man of incredible judgment and vision. This is the most important presidential election of our lives. These times demand that we elect Barack Obama President of the United States.
- Rabbi Sam Gordon, Wilmette, IL



I was moved to take a public stand in support Barack Obama in response to the smear campaign targeting elderly Jewish voters using rumors, racial slurs, and lies. I feel an obligation to stand up to those trying to drive a wedge between Barack Obama and the Jewish community. Since the beginning of his political career Barack Obama has been personally and politically close to the Jewish community here in Chicago. He shares our commitment to aid the weakest in our society. He understands that "love your neighbor as yourself" applies to us as individuals and to us as a nation. He strongly supports America's special relationship with Israel. He rejects the shoot from the hip, cowboy approach to foreign policy. Before the war in Iraq began, he understood that it was a mistake. He bases his positions on wisdom and knowledge. He speaks eloquently but he also listens. Rather than be satisfied with the "is" Barack Obama calls us to aspire to the "ought."

- Rabbi Steven M. Bob, Glen Ellyn, IL


I vigorously support Senator Obama's campaign for President of the United States because I am confident that he will unite the country with inspiring leadership. He has a thoughtful and measured approach to foreign policy, and has both a deep commitment to the safety of Israel and a commitment to finding peaceful resolutions to the conflicts in the Middle East. He will ensure that judicial appointees, especially those to the Supreme Court, will be excellent jurists who can restore a commitment to individual liberties. He will work constructively with a broad array of political leaders to address such long-term challenges as the energy shortage, global warming, improvement of education and the need for guaranteed availability of moderately priced health insurance. He has surrounded himself with experts of diverse backgrounds and views, which suggests that he will assemble a leadership team capable of bringing changes that will improve the lives of all Americans and restore the luster of American leadership across the world.
- Rabbi David A. Teutsch, Philadelphia, PA



Anyone who looks at Sen. Obama's record will see that he has been and remains a staunch supporter of Israel. He has also spoken out against anti-Semitism time and again, including words directed to the black community when he spoke at Ebenezer Baptist Church in celebration of Dr. King's birthday this year. My support, however, is not based only on his "Jewish credentials." His plans to address global warming and alternative energy are the most compelling, his judgment in foreign policy is the most sound, his capacity for restoring America's stature in the world is the most promising, and his proposals for dealing with our nation's economic woes have the best chance of success. I believe his ideas for confronting poverty, for reforming health care, and for improving our public education system can work. He also has the real potential to create a new politics -- a politics that re-engages the full energies of our citizens to work toward common goals, a politics that is less distorted by lobbyists and PACs, a politics that is strong enough to address issues of race and class without oversimplification. Sen. Obama's long experience as a public servant, both as community organizer and legislator, demonstrate his ability to inspire cooperation and commitment, and to accomplish real and challenging goals. God has graced us with an exceptional candidate for the presidency, ready to serve.

- Rabbi Rachel S. Mikva, New York, NY


I am supporting Senator Obama for President because our country desperately needs a leader of intelligence and vision. Senator Obama can help repair our broken economy, polish our tarnished image abroad, and end the senseless war in Iraq that erodes our country's military and economic capabilities. I believe Senator Obama is good for Israel, because a strong America is the best way to assure Israel's security. I support Obama because I value hope.
- Rabbi Burton L. Visotzky, New York NY



For years, our political discourse has focused on personal attacks and has avoided honest and thoughtful debate about the pressing issues of the day. I support Barack Obama because of his pledge to change our political discourse. In a world of fluid religious identity and an endless array of cultural choices, we need a leader who can not only preach, but persuade.

- Rabbi Ethan Tucker, New York, NY


I have been a follower of Barack Obama since I first learned about him in the fall of 2006. His ability to grasp the big issues and at the same time maintain an interest and a focus in the local community impressed me. The fact that he has continued to do this throughout his campaign reinforces my commitment to support him.
- Rabbi Charles Simon, New York, NY



I have supported Barack Obama since I met him during the primary campaign when he ran for U.S. Senator from Illinois. As the only Jewish participant at a clergy breakfast held in the south suburbs of Chicago, I particularly wanted to ask him about Israel. He responded to my questions with answers I was pleased to hear. Clearly he had thought about the issues, and was prepared and knowledgeable on that and many other subjects. Senator Obama brings energy and passion and a strong moral compass that have been sorely lacking in our national government. I want a president who is very intelligent, who "gets it," who cares about ordinary people, and who wants to make this country better. I want to feel that my president represents me and the values I hold dear. Barack Obama will be that president.

- Rabbi Ellen Weinberg Dreyfus, Homewood, IL


I believe the United States needs to re-establish its Biblically-inspired covenant to improve the lives of those who struggle against poverty, ill health, racial and ethnic discrimination, to start to redress the growing gap between the most privileged Americans and the rest of us. I believe this country needs to return to a policy of respect for other nations, to pursue energetically all opportunities for peace in the Middle East and around the world. As Jews we know that covenants depend on words as well as deeds, and Senator Obama has proven himself a leader whose words can inspire individuals and communities to work for a more just and compassionate America. His voice carries echoes of some of America's most uplifting leaders, and I enthusiastically support him for President of the United States.
- Rabbi Richard Levy, Los Angeles, CA



I support Senator Obama for the following three reasons. First, Senator Obama offers the best chance for the continued right of women to have reproductive choice. The future judicial selections will make all the difference in this area. Secondly, I support Senator Obama because I believe that he has a moral sense that will enable all Americans to feel like they are included in the process. We have lost the ideal of inclusion. The last reason I support Senator Obama and it is the most important to me is the fact that he has reenergized young people in our country and has given them a sense that they do count and that there is really hope for the future.

- Rabbi Steve Foster, Denver, CO


I support Barack Obama because he will be a pro-active force for peace and a two-state solution in the Middle East. I have great confidence in his judgment and high regard for his advisers. I believe that his judicial appointments will be wise and that he will be a strong advocate for the environment, alternative energy sources, education, and bipartisan cooperation. He is the right man for these challenging times.
- Rabbi Charles A. Kroloff, Westfield, NJ


Absolutely nothing is better now for our country than it was eight years ago, when George Bush took office. He inherited a budgetary surplus; he leaves us -- and our children and grandchildren -- with the largest deficit we have ever had. In the process, the dollar has sunk in value in comparison to other currencies, to the point that it is a laughing stock and source of pity for Americans who travel there. That is fiscal irresponsibility of the largest magnitude. He has thwarted embryonic stem cell research, leaving many people without the cures that we might have had by now. He has done nothing to develop alternative sources of energy, choosing instead to befoul our environment and our dependence on foreign nations by focusing on oil alone. He has intentionally ignored any scientific findings that he does not like, leaving us with government support only for abstinence-only programs of teenage sexual education -- programs for which we have solid evidence that they do not work -- and with total denial of, and certainly no programs to diminish, global warming. He has neglected the infrastructure of our roads and bridges. He has pursued the wrong war that is responsible for thousands of American deaths and hundreds of thousands of Americans maimed physically or psychologically -- and now the Taliban inhabit Iraq, where they never used to be. He simply pulled out of long-term agreements with other nations and has undermined our ties with virtually all of our former allies. He abandoned New Orleans after Katrina. He created No Child Left Behind and then did not fund it. And he has curtailed our civil rights in multiple ways, both directly through his own policies and indirectly through his Supreme Court appointments. Bush is undoubtedly the worst President during my lifetime and possibly ever, and McCain voted with Bush 95% of the time. This country simply cannot afford any more of the Bush-Cheney-McCain policies. Obama, by contrast, offers us intelligence, caring, individual rights, well-thought-out programs for improvement in education and health care -- and, yes, wise and firm support for Israel and for peace in the Middle East.
- Rabbi Elliot Dorff, Los Angeles, CA

http://www.rabbisforobama.com/




Dear Friends,

We join together as rabbis who believe that Barack Obama is the best candidate to be President of the United States, and we do so in the belief that he will best support the issues important to us in the Jewish community.

Senator Barack Obama inspires in us the hope for an America once more called to its best values. We know him to be a man of incredible integrity, born of a deep and abiding spiritual faith based on the teachings of the Hebrew Prophets, and committed to achieving a world of peace with justice for all people.

We hope you join us,



happy2Bfree
I think it is important to keep in mind the kind of people that Obama has called his spiritual advisors....and what their beliefs are and who they associate with. I happen to know Orthodox Jews and Christian Jews who DO NOT support Obama.
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Given the anti-Semitism that is sadly so often associated with other leaders and groups that have emphasized black separatism and empowerment (think Louis Farrakhan, Jesse Jackson, and Al Sharpton) perhaps some qualms might be warranted, particularly given some of the actions and statements of the Church's minister.


Reverend Jeremiah Wright, Jr. is the long-time Pastor of Obama's church, and Obama has credited him as being an inspiration and guiding light for him. He is a spiritual mentor to Obama and coined the term the "audacity of hope" that Obama has essentially made a theme of his campaign as well as the title of a book. He also has, in the words of the [i]Chicago Tribune[/i], a militant past.

Moreover, Pastor Wright has beliefs that might disturb some of Obama's supporters. He is a believer in "liberation theology," which makes the liberation of the oppressed a paramount virtue. The language of liberation all too often veers off into anti-Jewish rants. For example, one of the founders of the movement, Gustavo Gutierrez, has stated that the infidelities of the Jewish people made the Old Covenant [between the Jews and God] invalid." Pastor Wright is also a supporter of Louis Farrakhan, and in 1984 traveled with him to visit Col. Muammar al-Gadaffi, an archenemy of Israel's and America and a firm supporter of terror groups.

Wright has also been a severe critic of Israel. In his own words,
The Israelis have illegally occupied Palestinian territories for almost 40 years now. It took a divestment campaign to wake the business community up concerning the South Africa issue. Divestment has now hit the table again as a strategy to wake the business community up and to wake Americans up concerning the injustice and the racism under which the Palestinians have lived because of Zionism.

The Divestment issue will hit the floor during this month's General Synod. Divesting dollars from businesses and banks that do business with Israel is the new strategy being proposed to wake the world up concerning the racism of Zionism. That Divestment issue won't make the press either, however.


Once this history came to light, Obama started publicly distancing himself from his spiritual mentor, disinviting Wright from various Obama campaign events. Wright rationalized his current [i]persona non grata[/i] status by stating that otherwise
"a lot of his Jewish support will dry up quicker than a snowball in hell"
Wonder why?
Pastor Wright is not the only person from whom Obama tactically distances himself during political campaigns.

[b]Obama's anti-Israel friends[/b]

Ali Abunimah is a well-known Chicago-based activist for Palestinian causes. He has a harshly anti-Israel attitude. He has also written that he had met Obama about half a dozen times at various Palestinian and Arab-American events, including a May 1998 community fundraiser at which the late Edward Said was the keynote speaker (there is a photo of Said with Senator Obama and his wife).

Edward Said was a severe critic of Israel; he developed a school of study about the Middle East based on denunciation of so-called "Orientalism" that has influenced many Middle Eastern professors to take an anti-Israel view. The entire field of Middle Eastern studies has been so corrupted that Congress has raised an alarm about federal funding going to professors with an anti-American, anti-Israel agenda. These are the ideological heirs of Edward Said.

Abunimah recently wrote an article critical of Obama's very recent and somewhat lukewarm outreach to the Israel's supporters. He wrote that years ago Obama had been forthright in his criticism of American foreign policy and had called for an even-handed approach to the Palestinian-Israel conflict. But Abunimah detected a change as Obama began his Senate run. He met Obama at an event that occurred in the midst of the Senator's primary campaign for Senate. Abunimah writes,
Obama said, "Hey, I'm sorry I haven't said more about Palestine right now, but we are in a tough primary race. I'm hoping when things calm down I can be more up front." He referred to my activism, including columns I was contributing to the Chicago Tribune critical of Israeli and US policy, "Keep up the good work!"

Could Obama's outreach to the pro-Israel community during his Presidential run just be a reprise of his actions during his Senate campaign? True, Abunimah may not be the most reliable source, but the picture of Obama together with one of Israel's harshest critics in America, Edward Said, gives scant reason for comfort regarding Obama's true beliefs.

http://www.americanthinker.com/2007/03/bar...d_israel_1.html
freedom
http://www.christian-forum.net/index.php?s...st&p=246069

Do we need more proof? ph34r.gif
voice



Lies About Barack Obama:




לא תשא שמע שוא אל־תשת ידך עם־רשע להית עד חמס
Thou shalt not raise a false report: put not thine hand with the wicked to be an unrighteous witness.
Exodus 23:1



לא־תענה ברעך עד שקר׃
Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbor.
Exodus 20:16









Yitzhak Benhorin

Israel News

WASHINGTON – More than 300 rabbis from all streams of Judaism signed a document expressing their support for Democratic candidate Barack Obama for president of the United States. The letter signed by the rabbis displays their stance on Obama's pro-Israel inclinations.


The rabbis wrote that these "continuing efforts to defame him and distort his record help perpetuate a deeply disturbing political process in our country."


Moreover, "we fear that the attempts by some to use Israel as a wedge issue against him, unjustifiably is dangerous in that it politicizes the pro-Israel position."

"With his tough but pragmatic approach to Iran, Senator Obama is in the best position to restore faith in America as a leader in the fight against serious threats to Israel, our allies, and the United States," they write.

"We feel it is our duty as Jewish leaders to fight for the truth and against Lashon Hara (slander)...

Senator Obama has been viciously attacked using innuendoes, rumors, and guilt by association, and we urge our fellow American Jews to judge Senator Obama based on his own record and the clear statements he has made about his personal beliefs and principles," they wrote.

(slander reminiscient of racist German Nazis against Jews during WWII and by
German Neo-Nazis today)

TPJ: And yet McCain picks a V.P. (Sarah Palin) who supported infamous critic of Jews, Pat Buchanan for president. She supports creationism which many Jews are a little uneasy about (source 1) (source 2) and her pastor a supporter of "Jews for Jesus" said this while Palin sat in the pews:

Palin's pastor, Larry Kroon, introduced Brickner on Aug. 17, according to a transcript of the sermon on the church's website. "He's a leader of Jews for Jesus, a ministry that is out on the leading edge in a pressing, demanding area of witnessing and evangelism," Kroon said.

Brickner then explained that Jesus and his disciples were themselves Jewish.

"The Jewish community, in particular, has a difficult time understanding this reality," he said.
Brickner's mission has drawn wide criticism from the organized Jewish community, and the Anti-Defamation League accused them in a report of "targeting Jews for conversion with subterfuge and deception."

Brickner also described terrorist attacks on Israelis as God's "judgment of unbelief" of Jews who haven't embraced Christianity. The executive director of the National Jewish Democratic Council, Ira Forman, cited the "cultural distance" between Palin and almost all American Jews.


"She's totally out of step with the American Jewish community," he said.

TPJ: Yet she hasn't been pressured to renounce this pastor as Obama did Jeremiah Wright. It was right for Obama to leave his church and denounce Wright and so should it be for Palin and her pastor.

If she actually disagrees with his radical views on Jews.



Obama's Rabbi:

Turns out that a member of the Obama clan is a rabbi. Rabbi Capers C. Funnye Jr., who heads a predominantly black congregation in Chicago, is a cousin of Michelle Obama, Mr. Obama's wife. Rabbi Funnye is the son of Verdelle Robinson Funnye, the sister of Mrs. Obama's grandfather, Frasier Robinson Jr. As the first black member of the Chicago Board of Rabbis and many mainstream Jewish organizations, Rabbi Funnye is well known in Chicago, primarily for his efforts to build bridges across racial and religious divides.

TPJ: I think it is so wonderful that the Obama extended family is so diverse, they are like a microcosm of America itself! (yay!)

And yes I realize as do most people that having a Rabbi in the family doesn't automatically mean in and of itself that he's a champion of Jews. However, it does show that he has a personal connection to the Jewish community and likely an understanding of the religion and its views from relating to Michelle's cousin that most politicians and people don't have.

http://geniusofinsanityworld.blogspot.com/...port-obama.html
voice
RE Barack Obama:

Bruce Orenstein a producer of documentary films
who worked with Barack Obama for a year and a half
when both were community organizers in Chicago
in the 1980s. He has just produced the video
at the link below.

This video addresses questions about Obama
that have been raised in the Jewish community
and beyond.


http://my.barackobama.com/JFOvideo1
diverteach
QUOTE (Voice @ Oct 9 2008, 11:50 AM) *
[


Are you trying to say Jews are all for Obama? Most Jews have always voted straight democrat anyway no differently than blacks have always voted democrat, despite the fact that the man that freed them, Abraham Lincoln, and the man who helped end segregation and lead the civil rights movement, Martin Luther King were both republicans.

BTW the Kings are still supporting republicans and McCain.

Another BTW, THERE IS NO WAY ANYONE WHO SUPPORTS OBAMA IS A CHRISTIAN IN GOOD STANDING WITH THE LORD!!!

Argue as you may and will YOU ARE WRONG!!!

freedom
The TRUTH is many JEWS are split on who to vote for. I have never been more sure of who NOT to vote for. This year, the LORD has really opened my eyes to a lot of things regarding our POLITICAL LEADERS. wink.gif

36 Jews who have shaped the 2008 U.S. election


The John McCain-Barack Obama contest has been one in which the issues of Wall Street and fitness for the presidency have far overshadowed the subject of Israel. But the Jewish vote remains a key element in battleground states, and, playing a wide variety of roles, Jews have helped to shape the campaigns. Thirty-six of them are mentioned below. This list is by no means all-inclusive, and, for considerations of space, many Jews who have played active parts in the campaigns do not appear - among them Obama surrogate U.S. Senator Ben Cardin of Maryland, and Obama advisor and ex-California congressman Mel Levine.

Also missing are a number of Jews who have played minor roles, but merit mention for the interest they have attracted - in particular, Sandra Froman, the first Jewish president of the National Rifle Association (2005-7), and a steering committee member of Sportsmen for McCain; and Linda Lingle, the first Jewish governor of Hawaii and an early defender of Sarah Palin.

It should be noted that perhaps the most significant name that appears on the list belongs to a man, Henry Lehman, who has been dead for 153 years, and has thus remained uncounted among the living.
Advertisement

Following is the list, in alphabetical order:

Sheldon Adelson: He is Republican, neoconservative and a mega-donor, however, a combination of financial reverses and internal disputes has muted his contribution to the McCain effort.

David Axelrod: Chief strategist and media advisor for the Obama campaign, he has harnessed grassroots support through "viral" media, new technology and emphasis on the theme of change.

Steven Bob and Sam Gordon: The two Reform rabbis from the Chicago area founded Rabbis for Obama, which has persuaded hundreds of rabbinical colleagues to go on record by name supporting the candidate. The group's influence on the Jewish electorate has been difficult to gauge.

Matt Brooks: The executive director of the Republican Jewish Coalition is a frequent media "first responder" on Jewish issues.

Mark Broxmeyer: A businessman and chair of the Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs conservative think tank, Broxmeyer serves as national chairman of the McCain campaign's Jewish Advisory Coalition and as a member of the candidate's national finance committee.

Eric Cantor: This Virginia congressman, the sole Jewish Republican in the House, has emerged as a primary McCain surrogate in a bid to sway Florida and his home state.

Laurie David: The global-warming activist and producer of "An Inconvenient Truth," starring Al Gore, she is ex-wife of "Seinfeld" and "Curb Your Enthusiasm" creator Larry David and one of Jewish Hollywood's most prodigious fundraisers.

Ira Forman: The executive director of the National Jewish Democratic Council, he is Matt Brooks' counterpart.

Barney Frank: The Massachusetts Democratic congressman is one of the most visible, outspoken liberals in the House. He is openly gay and a frequent target of pro-McCain commentators, particularly on Fox News, where, because of his role as chair of the House Financial Services Committee, he has been said to bear crucial responsibility for the sub-prime lending crisis. He played a key role in negotiating the Wall Street bailout package.

Malcolm Hoenlein: Formally nonpartisan as professional chief of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, he invited Sarah Palin to speak at an anti-Ahmadinejad rally at the UN, then bowed to pressure to rescind the invitation. He is seen to have aided the McCain campaign in terms of some Jewish undecideds.

Cheryl Jacobs: A McCain campaign co-chair in Broward County, Florida, the Conservative rabbi, a longtime Democrat, supported Hillary Clinton's primary race for president, but then switched to McCain.

Henry Kissinger: The New York Times calls the former secretary of state a "close outside adviser" to McCain's campaign. He is regularly called upon by the candidate for advice on foreign affairs, and held a high-profile briefing session with Palin prior to the vice-presidential debate.

Ed Koch: The former New York City mayor is still a gold standard for Jews of a certain age. He backed Bush in 2004 and Hillary Clinton during the primaries. Now he's for Obama.

William Kristol: As editor of Rupert Murdoch's Weekly Standard magazine, a New York Times columnist and a Fox News commentator, he is an extremely influential neoconservative voice.

Sherry Lansing: The first woman to head a major Hollywood studio (Paramount), she is a major Democratic donor and fundraiser.

Ed Lasky: Through the American Thinker Web site, his articles helped spawn the widespread Internet campaign alleging that Obama is anti-Israel.

Henry Lehman: A Bavarian immigrant who settled in Alabama in 1844 at age 23, and founded H. Lehman, a general store that, by accepting raw cotton in lieu of cash, would later lead to commodity trading in cotton. In 1850, he and his brothers Emanuel and Mayer formed Lehman Brothers, which became one of the first and most powerful investment houses on Wall Street. Lehman Brothers' spectacular collapse in mid-September, the largest bankruptcy in American history, triggered a worldwide financial panic that, more than any single factor, may determine the outcome of the 2008 presidential election.

Joe Lieberman: The Connecticut senator was Al Gore's 2000 Democratic running mate. He is now McCain's point man for undecided Jewish voters.

Mik Moore and Ari Wallach: Launched Jewsvote.org, utilizing high-tech methods to counteract Web-borne attacks on Obama. The group also sponsors The Great Schlep - a campaign to get grandchildren to visit grandparents in Florida, to persuade them to vote for Obama.

Eli Pariser: He heads MoveOn.org, a liberal on-line advocacy group that has raised large sums for Democratic candidates.

Martin Peretz: The editor of The New Republic, he wrote an influential article entitled "Can friends of Israel - and Jews - trust Obama? In a word, Yes."

Dennis Prager: He is an influential, outspoken and often strident nationally syndicated radio talk-show host. Despite reservations over McCain's campaign reform bill, he has thrown his weight behind the GOP ticket.

Penny Pritzker: She is the national finance chair of the Obama campaign. A billionaire executive, pioneer Obama supporter and scion of a well-known Jewish mega-donor family, she has taken flak over the degree of her involvement in a the failure of a bank driven by sub-prime mortgages.

Ed Rendell: The governor of the key swing state of Pennsylvania, he is former head of the Democratic National Committee and a top Democratic campaign spokesman.

Denise Rich: The socialite and ex-wife of disgraced billionaire Marc Rich is a Democratic megafundraiser.

Dennis Ross and Dan Kurtzer: They are the center-right and center-left anchors of Obama's Middle East advisory staff.

Robert Rubin: The top Obama economics advisor has unsurpassed knowledge of the workings of Wall Street and was treasury secretary in the Clinton administration.

Dan Shapiro: A former Clinton administration National Security Council official, he is a senior Mideast policy advisor and Jewish outreach coordinator for the Obama campaign. He is said to have co-written Obama's speech before AIPAC (the pro-Israel lobby), in which the candidate declared "Jerusalem will remain the capital of Israel and it must remain undivided" - a statement Obama later partially recanted.

Sarah Silverman: A "shock comedian," she served as video spokeswoman for The Great Schlep (see Mik Moore, above). Her monologue spawned a counter-clip from veteran comic Jackie Mason.

Alan Solow: The Chicago lawyer is active in the Jewish community and in the Conference of Presidents. He has been an Obama supporter for a dozen years.

Jon Stewart: As host of the satirical TV news program "The Daily Show," he has become perhaps the most listened-to liberal voice in the nation. The New York Times called Stewart's program "a genuine cultural and political force."

Barbra Streisand: The superstar singer is a Jewish-liberal icon and mega-fundraiser. She endorsed Hillary Clinton in the primary race and has backed Obama since the Democratic convention. She also headlined a Hollywood fundraiser in September, which included a $25,800-a-plate dinner.

Robert Wexler: A key Obama surrogate, the Florida congressman has campaigned extensively in the effort to shift the electoral vote-rich Sunshine State from the McCain column to the Democrats.

Fred Zeidman: McCain's lead Jewish strategist, he is chairman of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Council, and a heavyweight among Jewish Republicans.

http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1029302.html

voice



The Jewish Star endorses John McCain

With 19 days until Election Day, it is not too soon to say that the 2008 presidential campaign has been fascinating. One man's candidacy was written off as the impossible dream on account of his race, yet Barack Obama knocked out the shoo-in candidate and went on to secure his party's nomination. The other candidate's race for the White House nearly fizzled for lack of cash, yet John McCain regained his footing and his fundraising and went on to win his party's nomination.

For much of the last six weeks the campaign was dominated by endless discussion, not of the candidates, but of their running mates. Surely no candidate for the vice presidency has inspired as much passion for and against as Governor Sarah Palin — even Dan Quayle, who was running for re-election with George H.W. Bush in 1992 when we learned that he couldn't spell potato.

As the post-Cheney era approaches, it seems clear that future veeps are likely to loom large in the administrations they serve. Even so, all the talk about whether Palin or Biden is better prepared to assume office in an emergency is a smokescreen. For all of Governor Palin's political ability, Senator Biden is clearly the better prepared today to be president but, as it happens, he's not running for president. And there's no reason to assume that Senator McCain, now 72, wouldn't live to serve out a four-year term. That political calculus is better left in G-d's hands since He'll be the one making the decision.

Of more immediate concern is that four of the last five presidents — George W. Bush, Bill Clinton, Ronald Reagan and Jimmy Carter — entered the Oval Office via a governor's mansion and with significant executive experience. Even Carter — a nuclear engineer who turned out to be a moron, and inarguably one of the worst chief executives ever — was Georgia's governor for four years. This time we're choosing between two United States Senators. In other words: not executives, but legislators.

Neither candidate has significant executive experience, true, but one does have a lifetime of experience in making tough decisions in the service of his country, while the other was barely in the U.S. Senate for half a year before he presumptuously announced that he would seek the presidency.

In 1992 Bill Clinton ousted George H.W. Bush from the White House after a single term partially on the strength of a famous internal campaign mantra which read, in part: "It's the economy, stupid." It was how his advisors maintained the discipline to stay on message and talk about what they correctly surmised voters most wanted to hear about (the rest of the message reminded them also to discuss change and health care).

In this campaign, in which the 'October Surprise' was the one the markets sprung on all of us, that slogan seems highly apt again. The economic crisis has only served to further highlight the starkly different views each candidate has of the world, and of our nation's future. Still, we urgently argue that voters must not lose sight of our national security concerns, which have all but fallen off the election radar. Logic dictates that terrorists will seek to attack while we're distracted by other weighty concerns. (Wouldn't that would be SO Bin Laden?)

Senator McCain, in our view, is considerably better equipped to react to threats to national security, if for no other reason than because he is more likely to actually see them.

Senator Obama is likable on the campaign trail and in debate — perhaps more so than Senator McCain — but his charm and appeal don't forgive other failings, chief among them the naοve, simplistic manner in which he interprets and plays down the dangers posed by radical Islam.

Obama proposes to only very modestly reduce taxes on the middle class, and would raise taxes on capital gains. McCain's tax plan would lower taxes more steeply overall. Neither man offers a solution to the problem of the federal deficit. Both offer proposals to expand health insurance coverage. Both plans are expensive and neither seems likely to be enacted anytime soon.

There is much to dislike in the Obama platform, but we can't claim to love every McCain proposal, either.
McCain has been fairly accused of not being his maverick self lately on the campaign trail, instead morphing into a candidate more of the politics-as-usual variety. It's a fact of life that campaigns often make candidates do strange, out-of-character, things in their need to appeal to key segments of the electorate and there's every reason to believe that after Nov. 4 Senator McCain will come back to himself and his long record of acting on his true convictions.

Senator Obama's record in the Illinois legislature suggests that he, too, is toning down his inner Barack so as to appear a centrist, which his voting record shows he is not. His true colors worry us.

The latest polls show a growing majority of voters who seem to feel that Senator Obama is better equipped to handle the still brewing economic crisis that the next president will undoubtedly inherit, and that he therefore deserves to win. We reject that view. No president will decide our economic course all by himself; there will always be a coterie of specialized advisors. The overall mindset of the man, and the sum total of his life experiences, is a much more urgent barometer of suitability.

Some people fall for sweet talkers. We can see why Americans of a liberal bent might dearly wish to see a man of Senator Obama's formidable rhetorical talent as president, some day. Were he of a more moderate sensibility, which he is decidedly not, perhaps so would we. But not now. Especially not now.

Presidents have a way of rising to occasions, but that doesn't mean we should elect someone who right off the bat clearly lacks the needed seasoning.

Of the two candidates before us, now, more than ever, John McCain is the man we need in the White House.

http://thejewishstar.wordpress.com/2008/10...es-john-mccain/

QUOTE (diverteach @ Oct 23 2008, 07:33 AM) *
Are you trying to say Jews are all for Obama? Most Jews have always voted straight democrat anyway no differently than blacks have always voted democrat, despite the fact that the man that freed them, Abraham Lincoln, and the man who helped end segregation and lead the civil rights movement, Martin Luther King were both republicans.

BTW the Kings are still supporting republicans and McCain.

Another BTW, THERE IS NO WAY ANYONE WHO SUPPORTS OBAMA IS A CHRISTIAN IN GOOD STANDING WITH THE LORD!!!

Argue as you may and will YOU ARE WRONG!!!
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