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'We have the right to demand better': Arab Americans wrestle with the 2024 presidential election | Mondoweiss | Since the American-backed Israeli genocide in Gaza began, Arab Americans have grown more disillusioned with U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East, and the lack of change in policy toward sending more weapons to Israel. Despite Op-Eds and social media buzz about how the new Democratic pick for president Kamala Harris will be different, many Arab Americans have already been disappointed. [Hey .... the candidate has not yet been tasked as Commander-in-Chief 😖] These are the choices Arab Americans have been given for president this year. Arab Americans have already been expressing their frustration with the election for months, but it has reached a boiling point in the last few weeks -- they feel unheard, disappointed, and most of all, angry with the current two-party system. Mervat Saudi, a Palestinian-American mother who lived in Palestine for ten years, says she will "not be voting at all" this November. "Everything that's been happening, it hits a little too close to home for me," she says. "I just feel like our voices aren't being heard, and both parties, whether Democratic or Republican, are not in the best interest for my own people." Saudi, who is registered to vote in Michigan, says she did consider voting for a third-party candidate at one point, but cannot bring herself to the ballot box at all this year. The first time she ever voted was in 2020 for Biden because she didn't want Trump's Islamophobic policies to continue. Now, she says, "I don't know if I'll ever vote again."
Since the American-backed Israeli genocide in Gaza began, Arab Americans have grown more disillusioned with U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East, and the lack of change in policy toward sending more weapons to Israel. Despite Op-Eds and social media buzz about how the new Democratic pick for president Kamala Harris will be different, many Arab Americans have already been disappointed.
These are the choices Arab Americans have been given for president this year. Arab Americans have already been expressing their frustration with the election for months, but it has reached a boiling point in the last few weeks -- they feel unheard, disappointed, and most of all, angry with the current two-party system.
Mervat Saudi, a Palestinian-American mother who lived in Palestine for ten years, says she will "not be voting at all" this November.
"Everything that's been happening, it hits a little too close to home for me," she says. "I just feel like our voices aren't being heard, and both parties, whether Democratic or Republican, are not in the best interest for my own people."
Saudi, who is registered to vote in Michigan, says she did consider voting for a third-party candidate at one point, but cannot bring herself to the ballot box at all this year. The first time she ever voted was in 2020 for Biden because she didn't want Trump's Islamophobic policies to continue. Now, she says, "I don't know if I'll ever vote again."
Arab, Black, Muslim voters 'swung Michigan for Biden', early polling shows | The New Arab |
'Sapere aude'
As Japan marks the 79th anniversary of the US nuclear attack on Hiroshima, peace activists draw attention to the devastation unleashed by the Israeli military in Gaza where nearly 40,000 people have been killed— TRT World (@trtworld) August 6, 2024
As Japan marks the 79th anniversary of the US nuclear attack on Hiroshima, peace activists draw attention to the devastation unleashed by the Israeli military in Gaza where nearly 40,000 people have been killed
Netanyahu compares Oct. 7 to Pearl Harbor and criticizes protesters in address to Congress
Hiroshima Survivors Decry US-Japan Agreement Equating Pearl Harbor With Atomic Bombing The Biden administration last week signed an agreement with Hiroshima Mayor Kazumi Matsui establishing a "sister-park" relationship between the Japanese city's Peace Memorial Park and the Pearl Harbor National Memorial. At a signing ceremony at the U.S. Embassy in Tokyo, U.S. Ambassador to Japan Rahm Emanuel appeared to equate the events that the two parks memorialize. "Nobody can go to Pearl Harbor, and nobody can go to the Hiroshima Peace Memorial and enter the front door, walk out the exit door and be the same person," Emanuel said. Japan's surprise attack on Naval Station Pearl Harbor in Hawaii in 1941 killed roughly 2,300 U.S. military personnel.
The Biden administration last week signed an agreement with Hiroshima Mayor Kazumi Matsui establishing a "sister-park" relationship between the Japanese city's Peace Memorial Park and the Pearl Harbor National Memorial.
At a signing ceremony at the U.S. Embassy in Tokyo, U.S. Ambassador to Japan Rahm Emanuel appeared to equate the events that the two parks memorialize.
"Nobody can go to Pearl Harbor, and nobody can go to the Hiroshima Peace Memorial and enter the front door, walk out the exit door and be the same person," Emanuel said.
Japan's surprise attack on Naval Station Pearl Harbor in Hawaii in 1941 killed roughly 2,300 U.S. military personnel.
Netanyahu: US response to attack like Oct. 7 would be 'at least as strong' as Israel's | TOI |
How did president Truman end the war in the Pacific with Imperial Japan ... all options on the table in the Command bunker under Jerusalem. 'Sapere aude'
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