I took your number for all donations, individual and group, for the pro-Israeli number over 16 years and compared it to fundraising for one presidential election. That gives the maximum benefit of the doubt to your thesis, which has now been mathematically proven wrong. You have abandoned the real world for one of hate fueled fantasy.
Rid, can you do me a favour and tone down your responses?
i have no issues with hate, I'm just in favour of human rights and a political system for the people by the people.
I'll trim out the parts that aren't related to the discussion for now, but really, the language is a bit uncalled for.
Now, I'm going to admit that I'm not going to waste a few hours researching into the funding of US politics, I really do have better things to do. I understand your $750 million fundraiser for Obama skews the results, but probably where you'd really want to look is the fundraising of all members of congress and the senate, not just the president. I'm still trying to track down the original Richard Cohen article to find out where he got his 60% from, it does seem very high, but regardless of wasting hours debating funding, funding rules, accounting and definitions of lobbying, the point is that the Israeli lobby in the US wields excessive power, relative to the population and importance of Israel.
There is a bill tabled in the US that really exemplifies the problem.
The House Foreign Affairs Committee hurriedly convened this week to consider a new "crippling sanctions" bill that seems less designed to deter an Iranian nuclear weapon than to lay the groundwork for war.
The clearest evidence that war is the intention of the bill's supporters comes in Section 601:
(c) RESTRICTION ON CONTACT - No person employed with the United States Government may contact in an official or unofficial capacity any person that -
(1) is an agent, instrumentality, or official of, is affiliated with, or is serving as a representative of the Government of Iran; and
(2) presents a threat to the United States or is affiliated with terrorist organisations.
(d) WAIVER - The president may waive the requirements of subsection (c) if the president determines and so reports to the appropriate congressional committees 15 days prior to the exercise of waiver authority that failure to exercise such waiver authority would pose an unusual and extraordinary threat to the vital national security interests of the United States.
Preventing diplomacy
So what does this mean? It means that neither the president, the secretary of state, nor any US diplomat or emissary may engage in negotiations or diplomacy of any kind unless the president convinces the "appropriate congressional committees" (most significantly, the House Foreign Affairs Committee, which is an AIPAC fiefdom) that not permitting the contacts would pose an "extraordinary threat to the vital national security interests of the United States".
That's from Al Jazeera, by the way.
Why is it that AIPAC is sponsoring a bill that prevents diplomacy and handcuffs the President?