Summary

U.S. Muslim leaders who supported Trump to protest Biden’s stance on Gaza and Lebanon now feel betrayed by Trump’s pro-Israel Cabinet picks.

His appointments of Marco Rubio as Secretary of State, Mike Huckabee as ambassador to Israel, and Elise Stefanik as UN ambassador have drawn sharp criticism, with some accusing the administration of pursuing “Zionist overdrive” and “neoconservative” priorities.

Rabiul Chowdhury, a Philadelphia investor who chaired the “Abandon Harris” campaign and co-founded “Muslims for Trump,” and Rexhinaldo Nazarko, executive director of AMEEN, feel betrayed by broken promises of peace.

“It’s like he’s going on Zionist overdrive,” said Nazarko, adding, “it does look like our community has been played.”

  • Billiam@lemmy.world
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    12 hours ago

    Then maybe they should have listened when they were told that this was the exact literal consequence of voting emotionally.

    • jonne@infosec.pub
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      8 hours ago

      So they should’ve listened to Bill Clinton instead, why went to Dearborn and essentially said Israel can do whatever they want to their faces? There were no good options to vote for.

          • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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            3 hours ago

            And he’s also a human being with his own opinions.

            Maybe they should have listened to the woman running for president instead. I’m not sure why that idea didn’t occur to you.

            • jonne@infosec.pub
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              3 hours ago

              If the campaign didn’t want Bill Clinton there, he wouldn’t have gone. This was their campaign strategy, along with hanging out with Cheney.

              The Democrats ran an awful campaign again, and they need to stop blaming the voters for reacting negatively to this.

              • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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                3 hours ago

                You asked who they should have listened to. I told you the person they should have listened to. The person actually running for office.

                I have no idea why you think they should have not paid attention to what the person running for office said and just took for granted what her surrogate said agreed with what she said. That’s a pretty ignorant thing to do, not take a few moments to check and see what her actual beliefs on this are and if they’re being represented accurately.

                So I guess we’ll put you down on the “pro-ignorance” list. I guess that’s why you seem to be okay with Trump winning.

      • Billiam@lemmy.world
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        7 hours ago

        My dude, nobody said there was a good option. The choice was a bad option, and a much worse option. Bill Clinton doesn’t matter since he has nothing to do with the government. Harris at least paid lip-service to stopping Israel; Trump said he wants Bibi to “finish the job.”

        And the kicker is, one of those two choices was going to win and if you don’t vote for the bad option, the much worse option wins by default.

        Unfortunately, this whole election can be summed up as: everyone not named Trump voted against their best interests.

        • Tinidril@midwest.social
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          1 hour ago

          When it comes to this issue, you can’t really say that Trump is that much worse. Either way Gaza and the West Bank were heading to oblivion. Rhetoric aside, there is no evidence that Harris would have ever stood up to Israel in any meaningful way.

    • Zaktor@sopuli.xyz
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      12 hours ago

      And people in the community were warning for months that this was the consequence of refusing to denounce genocide. But somehow you only want to blame the racial and religious out group who can’t even be credibly blamed for losing the election. You guys were claiming for months they weren’t important and should be ignored, and now that the election is over and the thing Democratic leaders were warning of happened, suddenly it’s all their fault?

      • enkers@sh.itjust.works
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        11 hours ago

        I personally agreed with undecided in principle and was sympathetic that Harris largely ignored them. The problem is that trying to leverage their position for actual good policy outcomes made for this nasty prisoner’s dilemna situation where both parties chose the bad option.

        I honestly thought that they’d eventually come around because of just how bad Trump was going to be for democracy, and moreover for the people they cared about. Sadly, they were so devoted to their game of chicken that some of their loved ones will pay for it.

        I also don’t think it’s that callous to engage in a little bit of “I fucking told you so.”

        Most people I saw here were just trying to achieve the most favourable outcome, given the reality at the time.

        • Zaktor@sopuli.xyz
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          11 hours ago

          I honestly thought that they’d eventually come around because of just how bad Trump was going to be for democracy, and moreover for the people they cared about. Sadly, they were so devoted to their game of chicken that some of their loved ones will pay for it.

          The problem in this is that you can substitute either the Harris campaign or the Muslim voters for “they”, and far too few people are applying it to the people with power. It seems inconceivable to these people that politicians actually need to address the concerns of the people they want to vote for them. They’re like some sort of unknowable force without agency or responsibility. It’s always the little guy’s fault for not coming around to the whims of the politician.

          What makes it all worse is that on one side you have a population with good reason to be acting emotionally and the other you have someone just making a calculation that they just didn’t think they were worth it. Everyone shares blame for this result, but I get acting emotionally when you’re being ignored by power while they send weapons to kill your families. I don’t have any grace for sociopathic Democrats who would rather chase Republicans than take a moral stance for a constituency that voted for them in the past.

          • enkers@sh.itjust.works
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            9 hours ago

            The problem in this is that you can substitute either the Harris campaign or the Muslim voters for “they”

            Lol! You’re absolutely right. From my point of view, though, the democratic party is so fully captured and out of touch with actual issues that they’re beyond being reasoned with, so it should almost go without saying who I’m referring to. And yes, I acknowledge how completely fucked that is.

            They’ve created this absolutely monstrous situation where we always have to choose between letting people we care about get hurt, or a tiny glimmer of hope of something better, and even though I pushed to avoid the former, I’m fully sympathetic to both sides.

      • Billiam@lemmy.world
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        11 hours ago

        And people in the community were warning for months that this was the consequence of refusing to denounce genocide

        And they were told, repeatedly, that Trump would be worse. Guess what happens now?

        But somehow you only want to blame the racial and religious out group who can’t even be credibly blamed for losing the election.

        Trump improved his margin across nearly every single demographic, so there’s plenty of blame to go around. But in a comment thread about Muslim voters feeling buyer’s remorse, I’m not going to talk about the white men who get fed shit from the manosphere podcast space, or the ghost of Phyllis Schlafly infecting women across this country to vote for the party that wants to take their rights away, or that when Trump was talking about Latino immigrants he was talking about them and not those other immigrants. It’s called “context.”

        You guys were claiming for months they weren’t important and should be ignored

        Nope, didn’t say that. I said that when your choice is token lip service about maybe stopping Palestinian genocide, and making the genocide worse, that you should vote for the former, because otherwise you’ll get the latter. Which is what happened. Congratulations, you told the Dems you weren’t going to vote for them, and now are surprised they ignored what you wanted.

        • Zaktor@sopuli.xyz
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          11 hours ago

          Congratulations, you told the Dems you weren’t going to vote for them, and now are surprised they ignored what you wanted.

          This is such a completely broken and backward way to think about politics, but even so, the entire time representatives from that community (Democrats trying to get Harris elected) were trying to get them to do anything to head this off. At no point was there a “well, we’re just never going to vote for you so look elsewhere”, but that didn’t stop the campaign for prioritizing literal Republicans over previously Democratic constituencies with unsurprisingly bad results.

          And I am a non-Muslim Harris voter, but this liberal tendency to blame minorities for the failures of existing power structures cannot be suppressed.