PDA

View Full Version : Let's hope Bibi gets a boot in the ass!



EE_
15th March 2015, 08:18 AM
Not because it will change anything, but because it will be a major blow to a US Congress that jumps up and down applauding him like a bunch of trained seals and to the Fox News Republicans that regard him above the United States. Wouldn't it be a shame to see all Bibi's minions get crushed after putting so much praise and energy into this criminal madman.
The election is on Tuesday.

Netanyahu fights to stave off election defeat
Michele Chabin, Special for USA TODAY 7:07 a.m. EDT March 15, 2015

JERUSALEM — Hard-line Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is fighting for his political life this weekend, as a rival aided by a former consultant to President Obama threatens to oust the long-serving Israeli leader in Tuesday's parliamentary election.

Polls show a coalition led by Isaac Herzog clinging to a small lead over Netanyahu's right-wing Likud Party.

So far, bread-and-butter issues, which favor Herzog's center-left Zionist Union coalition, appear to be trumping security concerns that play to Netanyahu's strengths as the nation's protector.

"People want change. They're talking about social and economic issues," said pollster Rafi Smith. "These issues are having more weight than in any other election."

Netanyahu's controversial March 3 speech to the U.S. Congress, where he assailed President Obama's efforts to cut a deal curbing Iran's nuclear program, failed to give him much of a boost at home. A Channel 10 poll showed Likud got a 2-percentage-point bump after his dramatic speech, but it quickly evaporated.

Herzog's coalition could win 26 of the 120 seats in the Israeli parliament, the Knesset, just ahead of Likud, which is seen winning 22, according to poll results in the Yediot Ahronot newspaper on Friday. Other polls had similar results.

Who winds up as prime minister is not only of high interest to Israelis but to Washington, which has a big stake in the outcome. That is evidenced by the significant role U.S. campaign consultants have been playing in the election: Democrats, including former campaign aide Jeremy Bird, are working with a non-profit group trying to oust Netanyahu and elect a more liberal government, while Republican political consultants who have worked for Senate leaders are advising Netanyahu.

Wealthy American donors played a role in the primaries, where Democrats helped Herzog's coalition, and Republicans backed Netanyahu.

Netanyahu and Obama have had strained relations not only over Iran's nuclear program, but also over the prime minister's tough stance in advancing peace talks with the Palestinians. By contrast, Republicans in Congress share Netanyahu's concerns that Obama will strike a weak deal with Iran that allows the avowed enemy of Israel to develop nuclear weapons that could destroy the Jewish state.

The close race between Herzog, 54, and Netanyahu, 65, isn't what the prime minister expected last year when he prematurely dissolved his government and called for new elections. He thought Likud would easily win.

Even if Herzog's Zionist Union coalition comes out on top, he isn't assured the prime minister's seat under Israel's electoral system. He still will need to cobble together a majority of 61 seats to form a coalition government.

Gadi Wolfsfeld, a political science professor at the Interdisciplinary Center in Herzliya, attributed Herzog's strong showing to national dissatisfaction with the status quo.

"Netanyahu has been in power for quite a few years, and I don't think anyone's happy with the way the country is going," he said. He pointed to frequent wars, intermittent terrorism and inequality, both economic and social.

Isaac Herzog, the soft-spoken opposition leader, is looking to unseat three-term Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Video provided by Newsy Newslook

Although Herzog has never led the country, "he has convinced people he is a man of integrity and experience in government," Wolfsfeld said.

On Thursday, former Israeli president and prime minister Shimon Peres endorsed Herzog, calling him a "level-headed leader."

Netanyahu's campaign has highlighted his role in protecting Israel from Islamist militants bent on its destruction.

In one of the most talked-about campaign ads, Netanyahu, whose nickname is "Bibi," shocks a young couple as he shows up at their door and announces that he's their "Bibi-sitter" for the evening. Netanyahu sits down in front of the TV with a container of popcorn and asks the couple if they'd prefer having Herzog watch their kids. The father answers, "No, no, no. The kids would have to babysit him!"

Herzog's ads portray Netanyahu as fiscally irresponsible. One focuses on a recent government report that criticized Netanyahu and his wife for exorbitant living expenses for their official and private residences. The ad shows youths asking strangers to donate money to the first family.

Another ad asks passersby to list Netanyahu's accomplishments during the past six years. Not one comes up with an answer.
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/world/2015/03/15/israel-election-netanyahu-herzog-preview/70208142/

Cebu_4_2
15th March 2015, 02:55 PM
I'm sure their elections are rigged, look who helped the USi out.

Neuro
16th March 2015, 10:10 AM
I'm sure their elections are rigged, look who helped the USi out.
I don't think it is likely, actually, they have one system for people (Jews) another for cattle (goy). Media in Israel are much more outspoken against Israeli government policy, compared to American media. Dissent is allowed in the zionist state, but none is allowed from the outside...

EE_
16th March 2015, 06:38 PM
Sounds like Bibi has been re-elected

Headlines:

Bibi vows to kill every last God damn Palestinian and seize their land if re-elected.

https://i2.wp.com/www.haaretz.com/polopoly_fs/1.629686.1417652539!/image/1380926458.jpg_gen/derivatives/landscape_640/1380926458.jpg

JERUSALEM — Under pressure on the eve of a surprisingly close election, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel on Monday doubled down on his appeal to right-wing voters, declaring definitively that if he was returned to office he would never establish a Palestinian state .

The statement reversed Mr. Netanyahu’s endorsement of a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict in a 2009 speech at Bar Ilan University, and fulfilled many world leaders’ suspicions that he was never really serious about peace negotiations.
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/03/17/world/middleeast/benjamin-netanyahu-campaign-settlement.html?_r=1

EE_
17th March 2015, 05:07 AM
Chuck Norris-isms:
When Chuck Norris kicks you out of a country, the only people left are Jews.
Chuck Norris can lift a Jew so high, that goyim think he's God.
Chuck Norris loves Jews so much, goyim think being hated is normal.
When Chuck Norris puts Israel first, the rest of the world feels like Israel's slaves.
When Chuck Norris declares war, the Jews always win.
When Chuck Norris says America First, he really means Israel.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SkZr21WFEP8

mick silver
17th March 2015, 11:38 AM
http://sd.keepcalm-o-matic.co.uk/i/bow-down-to-your-master.png

Cebu_4_2
17th March 2015, 01:47 PM
When is this election? Thought it was today.

ximmy
17th March 2015, 01:54 PM
anybody have any updates? Did yahoo get the boot to the head.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vFldBVWFgWo

EE_
17th March 2015, 01:56 PM
anybody have any updates? Did yahoo get the boot to the head.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vFldBVWFgWo

Still waiting with crossed fingers that turd gets booted.
Netanyajew has to lose by a wide margin, otherwise the slaughter of Palestinians and theft of their land will continue. Also the constant threat of an Israeli attack on Iran, dragging the US into another war for Israel, remains on the table.

http://www.hope4peyton.org/wp-content/uploads/2008/10/crossed-fingers.jpg

EE_
17th March 2015, 03:17 PM
Death to the Palestinians! Let's take thier land! Death to Iran!

Israel's Netanyahu declares victory in tight race

Mar 17, 4:57 PM (ET)

By JOSEF FEDERMAN

(AP) Bedouin women wait to cast their votes at a polling station in the town of Rahat,...
Full Image
JERUSALEM (AP) — Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has declared victory after a tight national election appeared to give him the upper hand in forming the country's next coalition government.
In a statement released on Twitter, Netanyahu says that "against all odds" his Likud party and the nationalist camp secured a "great victory."
Initial exit polls showed Netanyahu's Likud Party deadlocked with the center-left Zionist Union.
But the results indicated that Netanyahu will have an easier time cobbling together a majority coalition with hard-line and religious allies.
Netanyahu said he had already begun to call potential partners. (and is salivating at the thought of more death, distruction and theft)

Cebu_4_2
17th March 2015, 03:29 PM
Trailing...


Netanyahu, trailing in polls, promises no Palestinian state if electedFaced with a tight race for his political life, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu stepped up the nationalist rhetoric on the eve of parliamentary elections, vowing a Palestinian state will not be established on his watch if he’s re-elected.


In an interview published Monday in the nrg news website, Netahyahu said withdrawing from occupied areas to make way for a Palestinian state would only ensure that territory will be taken over by Islamic extremists. When asked if that means a Palestinian state will not be established if he is elected, Netanyahu said "indeed."
It was the latest -- and clearest -- attempt by Netanyahu to disavow his earlier support for Palestinian independence, which he first laid out in a landmark 2009 speech.


"If we get this guarantee for demilitarization and necessary security arrangements for Israel, and if the Palestinians recognize Israel as the state of the Jewish people, we will be willing in a real peace agreement to reach a solution of a demilitarized Palestinian state alongside the Jewish state," he said in 2009.
Despite that pledge, two rounds of peace talks have failed and Netanyahu has continued to expand Jewish settlements.

Cebu_4_2
17th March 2015, 03:30 PM
Israeli election close; Netanyahu calls strong showing 'victory
JERUSALEM -- Benjamin Netanyahu's conservative Likud Party was locked in a too-close-to-call race with its major opposition party in Israel's elections Tuesday night, according to exit polls that kept alive the prime minister's hope for a fourth term.

Exit polls of voters by two Israeli TV outlets showed his party tied with the center-left opposition Zionist Union at 27 seats each in the next Knesset, or parliament. A third station showed Netanyahu narrowly ahead, 28-27.

Netanyahu, seeking a fourth term, declared the tight outcome to be victory for his party.

"Against all odds: a great victory for the Likud, a major victory for the national camp led by the Likud, a major victory for the people of Israel,'' he tweeted in Hebrew.

The close results, if upheld when votes are counted, will likely touch off a scramble to build a coalition government and increase chances a national unity government could be formed. Running in a strong third place in the exit polls with 13 seats was the United List, a coalition of four small Arab parties.

The exit poll results suggested Netanyahu's party was doing better than pre-election polls indicated. and that a substantial share of voters were willing to give their prime minister a fourth term despite a public feud with President Obama over Iran's nuclear program.

"The atmosphere at the Likud HQ is electrifying," said Avi Hyman, a Likud field coordinator, speaking from Likud headquarters in Tel Aviv. "Once again the people have chosen Netanyahu for the fourth time. Netanyahu is the only true statesman that can unite all Israelis to face the challenges ahead.This is a great night for Israel and the Jewish people."

But analysts warned that the exit polls are preliminary and the final results remained too close to call. Election officials will work through the night to count paper ballots collected from more than 10,000 voting stations around the country, as well as the votes of thousands of Israeli soldiers.

Opinion polls before the election had shown a close race heading into the vote, with Netanyahu's opponents, led by Isaac Herzog of the Zionist Union, with a small lead. The last available poll was published Friday, when a significant number of voters were still undecided, meaning the race was still too close to call.

Under Israel's complicated electoral math, however, the party with the most seats short of a majority does not necessarily get the prime minister's post, and instead the elections begin a period of negotiations with smaller parties toward building a governing coalition.

Without a decisive outcome, it will be up to the Israeli president, Reuven Rivlin, to decide who to call on to attempt to form the next government. Traditionally that task has gone to the leader of the party that receives the most votes. It could require weeks of political negotiations.

With his grip on power in peril, Netanyahu moved farther to the right in the closing days of the campaign in a bid to solidify support among splintered hard-right voters and galvanize his Likud base.

He pledged to block establishment of a Palestinian state, a reversal from past statements and at odds with much of the international community's support for a two-state solution to the issue. He also tried to rally supporters by warning his leadership was in jeopardy because Israeli Arab voters were turning out "in droves'' to oppose him. Arabs make up 20% of the Israeli population.

But after nine years in the prime minister's job, the election was a referendum on Netanyahu, who angered Obama and jeopardized the bipartisan support Israel has long enjoyed in the United States by speaking to Congress at the invitation of majority Republicans, in a snub to the president and minority Democrats.

Netanyahu announced his opposition to a Palestinian state Monday and reiterated that pledge early Tuesday after casting his ballot.

His reversal marks a second flash point with the Obama administration, which has been prodding Israel and Palestinians to make progress in peace talks on creation of an independent Palestinian state.

More recently, Netanyahu and Obama have clashed over U.S. talks with Iran on curbing that country's nuclear program. The Israeli prime minister says Iran can't be trusted to halt a program that he contends is intended to build nuclear weapons and threaten Israel's existence.

Cebu_4_2
17th March 2015, 03:31 PM
Lots of support...

http://www.gannett-cdn.com/-mm-/641ecd9a321a8af610707ecd50305e755282f130/c=315-0-3949-2732&r=x404&c=534x401/local/-/media/2015/03/17/USATODAY/USATODAY/635621783298271588-EPA-MIDEAST-ISRAEL-ELECTIONS.jpg

osoab
17th March 2015, 04:03 PM
Does Diebold do the counting?

Cebu_4_2
17th March 2015, 04:06 PM
Does Diebold do the counting?

Someone mentioned in this thread their elections are more secure than in the USi. Don't feel like re-hashing tho.

EE_
17th March 2015, 05:14 PM
I heard, in celebration of Bibi's victory, Israel is going to drop white phophorus on Palestinian children and break ground for new settlements on stolen land.

http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/46061000/jpg/_46061574_007651442-1.jpg
http://i.ytimg.com/vi/s0igorvoBFs/hqdefault.jpg
http://www.vosizneias.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/RTR4BVHU.jpg

The people that work directly for Bibi are elated
http://www.veteransnewsnow.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/US_congress_benjamin-netanyahu.jpg