Whites Voting Democrat

Most whites vote Republican but there are exceptions.

Comments:

* There are still significant white demographics voting Democratic. Almost 60% of Polish, Irish, and Swedish Americans and almost 65% of Italian Americans and 70% of Jewish Americans voted for Obama against Romney:

If there are major white demographic groups that have been here for generations and are still voting Democratic, it’s not clear that more recent arrivals won’t.

* Well, they’ll keep enough of us White guys around as their electricians, plumbers and other trades, infrastructure, the things the upper-level Asians and Jews are lacking in taste and strength for. They need folks of the median White intelligence to do those things. Truthfully, I see no Blacks or women, white or otherwise in the building/construction or service/maintenance trades I travel with. Never a Black commercial electrician, telephone guy, network technician, ever, at least in the NYC-Boston-DC corridor. White guys all, except Hispanics rule in the trade of base level construction, drywall, painting and whatnot. Our numbers dwindle by the year and pay is excellent these days, especially small shops that contract. Nice dough in the trades these days and there’s only one race and gender performing these tasks in the United States, anyway.

The Whites in academia and the white-collar professions (those that are not engineering and design professions) that cannot maintain critical infrastructure, especially electricity and communications and technology infrastructure? They’re dead. Screw em, they don’t like my type anyway, let them starve. Ha! And, White women better sweeten up or they’re going to be flushed from their precious perches one day. As White men are flushed from influence and rule, White women will find their incessant bitching and moaning will fall on the deaf ears of the Yellow and Brown and Black people, especially the Muslims and whatnot.

White women still don’t get that their power flows from the generosity/coercion of White men. As we disappear (largely by the hand of White women and all their abortions and birth control), the rules are going to change. Kinda wish I could have another 50-year go-around to see it all come to pass.

* Most of white America is comfortable with the policies that prevailed under Nixon and Ford. Nixon won an enormous landslide in 1972 because he combined law-and-order conservative views with economic moderation.

The Republican party has gotten the idea that it can appeal to voters by moving far to the right on economics and balancing it out with left-wing immigration policies. It’s a disaster that will destroy the party and the country.

* It depends whether the officer is outnumbered by, or stronger than, the suspects. If a cop tries to subdue a suspect manually and turns out not to be up to the job, he’s in trouble. He may be prevented from reaching for his gun and may even have it taken from him. It’s usually considered that you should start to draw your weapon when the suspect is twenty feet from you if think you think there’s any chance you might need it. Once you do have it drawn, you’re more committed to using it, because having a gun in your hand limits your capacity for unarmed combat.

As I understand it, the .40 S & W was a compromise choice after the reform of firearms policy resulting from the Miami shootout. The calibre they originally had in mind was the even more powerful 10mm. But they eventually decided its strong recoil would make rapid fire less accurate and the grip would be too thick for some officers because of the bigger cartridges. I suspect they’d have gone for the 10mm were it not for the increasing number of female law enforcement personnel.

* East Asians, especially a generation in, are about as assimilated as anyone could reasonably ask for—in terms of dead-center middle-class American values, mannerisms, speech, aspirations, lifestyle, respect for law, integrating into suburbs without ghettoizing—all that we required of previous generations of European Americans.

Any ethnocentrism on their part is in response to such rejection as they might genuinely encounter after those efforts, and, increasingly, is germinated, fed and nurtured by (white) left social justice and race studies “thought-leader” professors that they encounter in their higher education.

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Skirting Around The Impact Of IQ

Comments on Charles Murray’s recent Wall Street Journal op-ed:

* In writing for the WSJ, Murray must skirt around ‘IQ’, which is a major contributing factor for the decline of the ‘middle’. Murray knows this, too – he wrote a whole book about it: The Bell Curve.

In our hyper-competitive, winner-take-all post-2008 economy, wealth inequality has become tantamount to IQ inequality, as I explain: http://tinyurl.com/jn5qj9g . This is because recent factors such as automation technology and globalization have amplified the consequences of individual cognitive differences, with smart people tending to rise to the top due to being more ‘fit’ in the Darwinian sense in this ‘new economy’ we find ourselves in.

Educational attainment is a good proxy for IQ, and as you can see smarter people are faring better:

https://innovationandgrowth.files.wordpress.com/2011/01/wages12.png

http://scalar.usc.edu/works/growing-apart-a-political-history-of-american-inequality/media/Gordon%20technology%20graphs%20(rev2)%20FIG%202%20Chart%201.jpg

http://multiplier-effect.org/files/2014/06/Fig4B_Wages-by-Education_Age-Fixed.png

Some of this is also due to credentialism, too, which I also http://tinyurl.com/hyq6elw discusss. But even that alone cannot
explain why drop-outs from prestigious, selective schools do better than drop-outs from no-name schools, suggesting that IQ again plays a role. Having an IQ that is high enough to get admitted into a prestigious school is good enough , as in the case of Bill Gates, Mark Zuckerberg, Steve Jobs, and other high-IQ individuals who either dropped-out or became rich in industries entirely unrelated to their degrees.

We can’t have an honest, productive debate if not being offended is more important than the pursuit of the truth.

* Automation is inevitable and it will gradually eliminate a larger and larger proportion of the work that humans did or are doing now. At some point only those on the far right of the bell curve will succeed in getting desirable jobs. And this will be true not just with respect to IQ but also artistic ability, athletic ability, sexual attractiveness, and other traits or combinations of traits. Already about 90% of the work that lawyers, CPAs, actuaries and the like do can be done better by AI (think Turbo Tax and the various law applications on the internet). AI can also read medical images and stained slides better than radiologists and pathologists. Machinery is currently being built to replace human workers in various types of stoop labor. Anybody who watches the television show, “How It’s Made”, quickly notices humans doing assembly line tasks that a machine could and undoubtedly soon will do better than any human. Even a lot of programming is automated these days. Nobody writes the enormous code packages surrounding real applications. This is done automatically by various programming tools. In the end only a very small fraction of humans will be needed to do essential and/or rewarding work.

For most of the developed world’s history the primary means of organizing society has been through a rewards system that connected labor and participation in other social activities. Now, under the onslaught of industrialization, that system is breaking down. The positive result is that soon most of humanity will be freed of the need to work unless they desire to. The negative impact is that social control and order are breaking down. Dealing with these issues is one of the major challenges facing the developed world. A way must be found to equitably distribute the wealth flowing from an automated economy while still being able to use that wealth to encourage socially useful behaviors and discourage socially destructive ones. The current system is already broken.

It’s ironic that Marx was ultimately right about one thing: Capital – automation – has accumulated to the point that ultimately most of us will be impoverished and only a very small proportion — much, much less than 1%! — will have any real wealth. He was just a century-and-a-half late and failed utterly to appreciate the mechanisms and results. But Marx was terribly wrong to assume that this would automatically lead to a golden age of “from each according to his ability, to each according to his need”. Whatever we wind up with it won’t be this simple and getting there is going to require a lot of out-of-the-box thinking, hard work, and suffering.

* Thilo Sarrazin: Ultimately, globalization means that equal work gets equal pay in free-market countries, because they are able to allot the necessary public resources to education and infrastructure. To put that in economic terms: labor’s marginal cost and its marginal product tend to align everywhere there is a free economy.[3] Just as marginal capital compensation acts as a world-wide interest rate, labor-compensation also tends to level out. It makes complete sense that in Germany the real wages of young people today are no higher than in 1990. The same situation prevails in, for example, the US and Italy. Real wages will not start to climb again until wages in countries like China, India and Thailand have reached Western levels.

* Yes, it’s interesting how the WSJ, Financial Times & The Economist types are all suddenly realizing they may have been pushing it with the rest of us. Martin Wolf at the FT had his piece entitled “The economic losers are in revolt against the elites” late last month and laid out many of things people have been screaming at them for decades. Now, all of a sudden, they can catch a bit of what we’re saying. They’re still calling everyone else “losers” but I guess we’re making some progress. Maybe Donald Trump, the Front National and the others are teaching these globalists some manners? Maybe.

* Murray purposely chose to live in semi-rural Maryland near Frederick to give his children (and himself) a break from the attitudes of the wealthy DC suburbs.

Of course, Murray works with and, presumably, is friends with people who live in the “Super Zip Codes” as he calls them, but given him credit for wanting to show his kids that not everyone is a high-IQ overachiever.

From an interview:

“We moved out to Burkittsville in large measure because Catherine and I wanted our children to be exposed to lots of kids. And they were.

Our (two) kids went to school in Brunswick, and my daughter’s best friend in high school was the daughter of a guy who drove a bakery truck. Which is exactly right. When you’re doing overnights at each other’s houses, you’re having a real good time, but you’re also getting a sense of what life is like in different parts of society. That’s great for everybody.”

* Regardless of how much certain people want to get their knickers in a bunch, humans are a biological species, and there is always selection going on. For our hunter gatherer ancestors a guy who was lazy or weak or incompetent at the hunt (or warfare) would have a much tougher time finding a good mate and having surviving offspring. (If he didn’t end up being chased out or get spear in his back.) Since the neolithic there’s obviously been–especially in areas with temperate zone agriculture–strong selection for those who could work hard, organize, plan ahead (winter) and generally keep their ducks in a row. And selection against the stupid, shiftless, sickly, etc. This selection has in fact *made us* the people who can do modern industrial society–cue “Farewell to Alms”.

The basic nature of being a sexually reproducing species is that everyone dies and is replaced by new individuals who are a remix. In nature, those “remixed” individuals will be the children of those who were on average more “fit” (along with luck). And that selection for “fitness” is something a society must have–not even to improve, but just to *stay* healthy. I carry some–let’s say 50–mutations from my parents genes. Most of those will be negative. I seem to be reasonably “fit” (as do my kids). But down the road somewhere–grandchild, great-grandchild, great-great grandchild …–there’s going to be someone born where the combination of mutations makes them decidedly less “fit” and for the society to stay healthy they need to not be passing those mutations on.

If you want to have a society that does whatever it does well–in our case modern industrial society. Then the people who do what that society requires–work diligently, reason, plan ahead, organize, write email, interpret graphs, show up on time, figure out what needs to be done, etc. etc.–well are fit and need to reproduce. And those that can not do what the society needs doing–i.e. who are not “fit”–must not reproduce, or not reproduce as much.

This is just basic biology. It’s really “just math”. Folks can disagree politically–many do. But they are just wrong. If you wipe out selection for the traits that your society needs … your society will be less capable and decline. You can’t wish that away.

None of this means anyone has to starve in the streets. You can couple having “eugenic” selection with all sorts of Christian humanitarian rah-rah, including a generous welfare state. The obvious solution: you culturally and economically encourage the highly fit to have children. (I.e. encourage smart well-educated women to have lots of kids–the exact reverse of what we do now.) And couple that with having the “unfit”–demonstrated by those who can’t hack it in society and ask for public support–stop having children in return for welfare support.

But if you’re in Darwinian denial–a blank slater–and force the productive to subsidize the continued reproduction of those who are failures at doing precisely the tasks that your society requires … well then you’re just committing societal suicide. Selection for fitness is *required* by any society just to stay in place against mutational load, much less improve.

* Murray has done much excellent work over the years. He is miles past any other beltway think-tanker, both in terms of the quality of his work, and his willingness to challenge conventional wisdom. Fair enough if you think he doesn’t challenge it enough. I’d like him to challenge it more, too–especially on immigration. I also find his libertarianism to be shallow, but thankfully it does not undermine his approach to data.

But to say he is just like all the others is factually inaccurate. If your point is that all differences of degree are irrelevant when trying to foment revolution, I still disagree. Murray’s work can be useful in correcting current mistakes and, if things come to it, not repeating the same mistakes. Even if he’s not right about everything.

I don’t see why Murray’s disdain for Trump means he must hate the little guy. Trump is himself a newcomer to the fight for the little guy. Murray has been talking about how to help the left half of the Bell Curve for more than 20 years.

* Here’s Murray on immigrants in his essay:

“There’s irony in that. Much of the passion of Trumpism is directed against the threat to America’s national identity from an influx of immigrants. But the immigrants I actually encounter, of all ethnicities, typically come across as classically American—cheerful, hardworking, optimistic, ambitious.”

As if American workers (low wage and STEM) stuck with crammed down wages or displaced from the workforce altogether by immigration are philosophically ruminating about “America’s national identity” when they are sweating bullets to pay their bills. All they really want is a decent job that pays a living wage.

Make no mistake, that national identity shtick is Murray’s backdoor propaganda meme for the Cronies that want cheap immigrant labor.

* Now and then, I revisit the idea that 1849 was the turning point (and corruption, eventually) of the “original” America. At least psychologically, if not functionally. Gold was discovered in California, and it was sort of like a light bulb went on. Certainly, before 1849, many people saw America as a land of economic opportunity, but after 1849 there seemed to be almost a casino mentality with regards to what the US had to offer it’s people – it’s rank and file people – and that notion has never really died.

On the other hand, while paleoconservatives rightfully lament the disconnection modern America has with it’s “Anglo-Protestant” origins, there are some things to keep in mind: First, an almost entirely WASP Supreme Court started ruining this country in the early 1950′s, and continued to do so throughout the 1960′s and 70′s. I say “started in the 1950′s,” but that impulse can actually be traced back to the Puritans.

Second, many (though certainly not all) modern immigrants from white Britain are people I wish would’ve stayed home. I’ve met some nice folks from the UK who I respect greatly, but some are leftists who despise the original US venomously, and see it as little more than a casino where they seek personal financial gain.

* He does not claim that high IQ is necessary for menial jobs. Rather he claims that those menial jobs, which do not require high IQ, are in decline because of automation, outsourcing, and immigration.

The result of the pattern that Murray identifies is that high IQ people, who have prospects in careers which are less prone to competition from automation and immigrants, will have increasing prospects for prosperity while low IQ people will have decreasing prospects. Throw in the fact that high IQ people are having fewer children while low IQ people are having more and the result could be economic fragmentation and disaster in the future.

* Let’s tackle these one at a time:

1) sloth: If you read Coming Apart, Murray’s elite are not, in general, trust fund recipients as you have insinuated. They are rather people who are at the top of professions, business, the media, the entertainment industry, STEM academia, and so on. These people have vices, no doubt, but sloth is not usually one of them.

2) obesity: Highly class dependent. It is simply incorrect to say that the elite have embraced obesity.

3) out of wedlock births: The data in Coming Apart show that this phenomenon is almost entirely absent from the elite.

4) drug use: Again, misconceptions aside, the ‘idle rich’ do not comprise a large part of Murray’s elite. When there is drug use among the elite, it tends to be a different beast than among the lower classes. Elite drugs include powder cocaine and marijuana, and alcohol in some cases. Lower class drugs are meth, heroin, crack, painkillers, and alcohol. The only possible overlap is in alcohol.

* Murray, after getting clobbered for his Black Darkness in The Bell Curve, has never mentioned the thang again.

” egalitarianism, liberty and individualism.” Dunno what Huntington said but if he said that those aforementioned terms were what we are about…that is very minimal/reductionist.

This country was founded for White Men and only later for White women, if you want to talk about the suffrage. But is was for Whites. Race has always been with us in spades. The later immigration debates of early 20th century were all about keeping the US White, and even southern Europeans were not considered white enough.

Jews were kept out, etc. etc. The egalitarianism is true enough within limits…what with no aristocracy, etc. Liberty yes, per English liberty, and Individualism per our traits going all the way back to Germania, Greece and Rome….. At least some were free, if not all….until recently.

So Murray is staying away from Race. So is this thread. Trump is 100% about race, whether it is trade issues with Chinkdom, etc, mexicans, and so far, soft-peddling on blackness. Wait till he gets in…the Black Lives Matter animals will find themselves cut loose and stomped down.

Back to Huntington…I read his Civilizations Clash book a few years ago. It was all about race and ethnicity as well. That is the basis of the whole book. He said that we have several civilizations in the world that will never embrace one-another. To keep the peace, minimal interaction, no immigration, no race mixing, no land-grabbing as in Israel, etc.

Race, race, race. since I did not read the rest of the article, maybe he had something to say…..but I doubt it.

We are down to about 62% whites in the country. More darkies being born than whites. Disaster looms, and Trump sees it. Dunno whether H. and M. see it, but I would argue that they do see it clearly but just write with euphemisms.

* “…the immigrants I actually encounter, of all ethnicities, typically come across as classically American—cheerful, hardworking, optimistic, ambitious.”

See, what Murray is implying is that immigrants are cheerful, hardworking, optimistic, ambitious and Americans categorically are not. The solution to the problem is not less immigration, it is having the weak, stupid Americans wallowing in learned helplessness pull themselves up by their bootstraps and act more like immigrants. As if good jobs would suddenly be created to accommodate them.

And if they can’t? Tough beans. Murray and his Elite pals will still be living very large and they’ll have the immigrants to do their dirty work for them.

I’m not discounting the effects of chicken and egg social pathology. But from Murray’s PoV, the working class’s predicament is only a function of its collective lack of intelligence and intrinsic pathology enabled by government largess.

The root causes of their problems are not massive immigration, outsourcing and banksterism. Their problem is that they have not adapted to the massive immigration, outsourcing and banksterism by being more like what Murray and his pals want them to be. Cheap compliant labor.

Murray issues contempt for Trump because Murray is paid to be a mouthpiece for the Cronies who do not want that apple cart upset.

Make no mistake. Scratch the surface of avuncular but supposedly objective Social Scientist Charles Murray and you’ll find an apologist tool for the “I got mine” Elites.

* Screwing around doesn’t lead to negative life outcomes. Out-of-wedlock births do. So the latter matters for the fortunes of individuals and classes of individuals while the former doesn’t. One is a vice in this context and the other isn’t.

And again, with regard to the supposedly rampant drug use you are confusing a segment of the ‘elite’ for that class in general (again, taking Murray’s definition of the elite). The cocaine cowboys of Wall Street and Hollywood and Rush Limbaugh are only one small part of the elite.

Most of Murray’s elite are working away at the upper levels of the media, academia, start-ups, corporations, think tanks, government agencies, and so on. He talks a lot about the “super zips” (zip codes) where the elite are concentrated – Northern Virginia, Potomac / Bethesda / Chevy Chase Maryland, Suburban Connecticut and Northern New Jersey, the suburban parts of the Bay Area, the North Shore suburbs of Chicago, etc. Are these really hotbeds of drug abuse?

* IQ won’t matter, hard work won’t matter. What will matter will be good looks, charisma and extroversion – because those are human traits which other humans value. The outsize social power wielded by charismatic and sexy people today will be magnified 100x after machines have rendered all other sources of professional status obsolete.

Females might become more valued, since women are better looking, socially more appealing and extroverted than men. You already see this with SWPL ads which show daughters in disproportionate numbers.

The corollary, of course, is that small bands of men will organize into bands to take through force what they couldn’t gain through pure charisma and attractiveness. Black America writ large.

* What are some of those fields where schmoozing, charisma and appearance are limited in their professional value? Is working in a hedge fund one of them?

I imagine it would be any field where results matter, results are dependent on ability and not on chance, and results are easy to compare between individuals.

Surgery is a field which could go that way, as soon as a good method for comparing outcomes is established.

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Trump poised to step on the GOP accelerator

NEWS: CHARLESTON, S.C. Things sure look good for Donald Trump.

The Republican presidential race expanded across the country Sunday, and polls show the real estate mogul ahead in eight of the dozen states voting in the next nine days.

Trump has now won primaries in two very different states, center-right New Hampshire and evangelical-dominated South Carolina. And the Republican Party system of choosing a presidential nominee favors candidates who continue to win early primaries and caucuses.

“He seems to have about a third of the Republican electorate under his spell, and it’s a durable, non-ideological coalition,” said Kyle Kondik, managing editor at Larry Sabato’s Crystal Ball Sunday.

The biggest hope for stopping Trump is for a single strong challenger to emerge, and so far that hasn’t happened.

Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., finished second Saturday in South Carolina, but he was 10 percentage points behind Trump and barely edged Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, even though Rubio barnstormed the state with popular Gov. Nikki Haley and Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C.

Rubio also lacks an obvious state where he can win in the next few weeks. He should be a favorite in Tuesday’s Nevada caucus. Rubio lived in Las Vegas as a child, was a church member, and Sunday picked up the endorsement of Sen. Dean Heller, R-Nevada. But a CNN/ORC poll last week showed Trump with a huge lead, with more support than Rubio and Cruz combined.

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From AIPAC to Trump: Michael Glassner’s journey

Jewish Journal: How does one go from serving as AIPAC’s Southwest Regional Political Director a year ago to running Donald Trump’s national political operation today?
Ever since Trump announced his White House bid last June, Michael Glassner has been serving as his campaign’s national political director. In part, he is credited with landing the coveted Sarah Palin endorsement ahead of the Iowa Caucus last month.
Glassner’s political journey began as a 20-year-old college student from Kansas when he served as Bob Dole’s traveling aide in the 1988 presidential campaign. “I became the right-hand man for the Senate Majority Leader and a presidential candidate,” Glassner related in an interview with Jewish Insider. “It was a tremendous education in politics, and that was the beginning of what became a 15-year relationship as I worked for Senator Dole in a number of capacities.”
Upon moving to New Jersey in the late nineties, Glassner served as a senior advisor to Lewis Eisenberg, the then-Chairman of the Port Authority of New York & New Jersey and a prominent Republican Jewish leader. He worked out of the Port Authority’s World Trade Center office but left just before 9/11 to join IDT Corp in Newark. Glassner credits his former boss, IDT founder Howard Jonas, whom he referred to as “a strong Zionist and an AIPAC guy,” with encouraging him to become more active in pro-Israel politics. Intermittently between 2000 to 2008, Glassner would take time off to return to the campaign trail: running George W. Bush’s general election campaign in Iowa, fundraising for Bush’s ’04 re-election effort, and in ’08, where he managed Sarah Palin’s vice presidential campaign.
“My interest in pro-Israel politics had grown exponentially,” Glassner recalled. “Particularly since 9-11, which represented a real credible threat to all Americans and in particular as a Jew, I felt very strongly about the threat of radical Islam and so I became more and more involved with AIPAC.” In 2014, Glassner officially joined AIPAC as their Southwest Regional Political Director where, according to his LinkedIn profile, he managed AIPAC’s legislative mobilizations, conducted briefings with candidates, and spoke at political events throughout the region.
In July 2015, the phone rang. Donald Trump, a real-estate magnate, decided to run an unconventional campaign for president. Keeping senior hires to the minimum, the Trump campaign offered Glassner to join and serve as its national political director. “The Trump campaign came to me for a lot of reasons,” Glassner told Jewish Insider regarding the recruitment process. “I think they were looking for somebody that had experience in presidential politics and who was already in the area, and I live in New Jersey.” And, of course, there was the Sarah Palin factor. “The Palin connection was also very attractive to them because, although Palin and McCain’s campaign was not successful, I think that was sort of a marker for the anti-establishment movement… I think that that helped my credentials in this arena because I’ve shown that I was willing to take on the status quo, willing to buck the establishment, and I think that is what this campaign is all about.”
Glassner told Jewish Insider he didn’t have to use his influence to convince Palin to endorse Trump but that his prior relationship certainly helped. “They had established a relationship sometime back. And I think that her inclination is very much aligned with his.,” he said. “Mr. Trump did the persuading. I think it was helpful that she had a friend here in the campaign, somebody she knew, and I demonstrated my loyalty to her, which I think helped. But, ultimately, it was everything that he is saying about the country is in line with whatever she has been saying. I think that’s a natural alliance in my view.”
Asked to describe the transition from AIPAC to Trump, Glassner said, “This campaign is much different than any campaign I’ve been on in a lot of ways. But probably, primarily because the culture has a more corporate and a business-like approach than other campaigns. Mr. Trump is self-funding his campaign, and he’s been very effective throughout his life in maximizing his investments. And we are approaching this campaign in the same way, and you’ve seen the results of that. If you look at the results in New Hampshire, the amount of money spent per vote, I believe Mr. Trump was by far the most efficient.”

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JJ: Jeb, Cruz go after Trump for ‘neutral’ stance on Israel

Most Americans are neutral on Israel so Trump should fit right in with them.

Strangely enough, Americans seem to like a presidential candidate who puts American interests first, just as Bibi Netanyahu puts Israel’s interests first.

Jewish Journal: Republican presidential candidates Jeb Bush and Ted Cruz pounded Donald Trump for suggesting that he would take a ‘neutral’ approach to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
During a televised MSNBC town hall Wednesday night in Charleston, S.C., the Republican presidential front-runner said he would be “sort of a neutral guy” on Israel. “You understand a lot of people have gone down in flames trying to make that deal. So I don’t want to say whose fault it is – I don’t think that helps,” he explained. “If I do win, there has to be a certain amount of surprise, unpredictability, our country has no unpredictability. If I win, I don’t want to be in a position where the other side now says, ‘We don’t want Trump involved.’”
During a town hall meeting in South Carolina on Thursday, Bush called Trump “naïve and wrong.”
“We have to have Israel’s back. I’ve made this commitment from day one that I would move the embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem because I think we have to send a signal to the world that we have Israel’s back, not just because of the important security relationship we have with Israel but also because the rest of the world wonders if we are serious,” Bush said. “For security purposes, for consistency purposes, we can’t say we are going to be a neutral party. It just won’t work.“
Ted Cruz also criticized Trump while speaking to a crowd of voters in Myrtle Beach on Friday, “If I’m President I have no intention of being neutral,” said Cruz. “When it comes to murderers and the citizens, I am not neutral.”

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