A majority of people will always say they don’t want a humanitarian crisis of any nature to continue. I feel as if a better metric to poll for is how many people will factor in these kinds of things when deciding on who to vote for, and how likely they will not vote for a party that supports it.
A majority of people will always say they don’t want a humanitarian crisis of any nature to continue.
“I want the war to stop” and “I want less/no arms sales to Israel” are two different statements. They’re logically equivalent, but Israel and their supporters spend millions of dollars every year to prevent people from making that and similar connections, so it’s a meaningful result coming from one of the world’s Zionist hotbeds.
I feel as if a better metric to poll for is how many people will factor in these kinds of things when deciding on who to vote for, and how likely they will not vote for a party that supports it.
A majority of people will always say they don’t want a humanitarian crisis of any nature to continue. I feel as if a better metric to poll for is how many people will factor in these kinds of things when deciding on who to vote for, and how likely they will not vote for a party that supports it.
“I want the war to stop” and “I want less/no arms sales to Israel” are two different statements. They’re logically equivalent, but Israel and their supporters spend millions of dollars every year to prevent people from making that and similar connections, so it’s a meaningful result coming from one of the world’s Zionist hotbeds.
No argument there.