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I never understood why Americans like Israel so much
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Because the "Democracy" is corrupt and has been overtaken by Israelis.
The last president who tried to stop them and force them to be considered foreign nationals was Shot in the Head and everyone else has been a staunch ally ever since.
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>>82683373
yeah. no. he's heard the god finally finds us movie a million times.
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>>82683373
Boomers are still around
Back when Israel was a little baby nation getting ganged up on by meanie Muslims
That was the narrative anyway
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It's also baked into US Media as a constant background propaganda from NCIS, to Local News, to A-Team, to nearly every movie produced in the last 75 years.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8SE_ktIj-ow
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=elQGTyqx2x8

If you speak out against it you get your bank account frozen, your socials locked, and you're banned from polite society because the Israelis can and will suicide you
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how 4chan actually works
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Wake me up when Iran glasses Tel Aviv again
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Why Many Baby Boomers in America Hold Positive Views of Jewish People

Baby Boomers in the United States, born between 1946 and 1964, grew up in a social climate heavily shaped by World War II and its aftermath. For this generation, the Holocaust was not a distant history lesson but a defining moral story that permeated education, media, and politics. Jewish suffering and resilience were framed as central to the struggle against fascism, and supporting Jewish people was often seen as a way of affirming human dignity and rejecting the horrors of Nazism. This historical context created an early foundation for admiration and sympathy.

Cultural visibility further reinforced these attitudes. Jewish writers, filmmakers, comedians, and musicians shaped a remarkable amount of twentieth-century American popular culture, from Broadway to Hollywood to the golden age of television. Boomers consumed this media in their formative years, often without consciously linking it to Jewish identity, but nonetheless associating it with wit, creativity, and intelligence. Comedy in particular-through figures like Mel Brooks, Joan Rivers, and later Jerry Seinfeld-helped make Jewish culture relatable and beloved.

The American emphasis on education also aligned with Jewish traditions of scholarship. Boomers came of age during a massive expansion of universities, and higher education was the primary vehicle of upward mobility. Jewish families, with their long emphasis on learning and professional careers, often exemplified the values Boomers themselves sought to embody. To many, Jewish success stories represented not privilege but the rewards of diligence, discipline, and ambition, which resonated strongly with the ethos of the American Dream.
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Politics also played a role. During the Cold War, Israel emerged as a close ally of the United States in a strategically important region. For Boomers raised in a patriotic environment, support for Israel was framed as support for democracy and freedom in opposition to Soviet influence. This geopolitical alignment carried over into cultural attitudes, with Jewish people often seen as partners in a shared democratic struggle. Evangelical Christians in particular reinforced this view by emphasizing the biblical significance of the Jewish people, which added religious depth to political solidarity.

Jewish involvement in the Civil Rights Movement further contributed to positive associations. Many Jewish Americans worked alongside African American leaders, providing legal assistance, marching in protests, and supporting reforms. Boomers who were themselves engaged in or sympathetic to social justice causes often saw Jewish allies as living proof of moral commitment to equality. This was amplified by the broader immigrant success narrative: Jewish families were frequently held up as examples of groups that overcame hardship through hard work and education, reinforcing their role as model participants in American society.

Philanthropy and community leadership provided another layer of respect. Jewish individuals and organizations contributed heavily to universities, hospitals, museums, and the arts. Boomers encountered Jewish names on buildings, scholarship programs, and cultural institutions, all of which signaled generosity and civic responsibility. Combined with the storytelling of Holocaust survival, these acts of giving framed Jewish communities as resilient underdogs who had turned tragedy into positive contribution.
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Religious identity added a further dimension. For Christian Boomers, the Jewish people were not only fellow citizens but also "the people of the Bible." Evangelical movements in particular fostered admiration by linking support for Jews and Israel with fulfilling religious prophecy. Even for secular Boomers, this association provided a sense of continuity and respect rooted in shared Western traditions.

Taken together, these factors explain why many American Boomers developed strongly positive views of Jewish people and Jewish culture. Historical memory, cultural creativity, intellectual admiration, political alliance, social activism, philanthropy, and religious narrative all converged to produce a generation that often viewed Jewish identity with respect and even reverence. While later generations may interpret these dynamics differently, for Boomers the Jewish story was woven into the very fabric of how they understood resilience, morality, and success in twentieth-century America.
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it's crazy how the dead internet isn't actually bots overrunning everyone but retards willingly copy pasting the bots
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>>82683493
>close ally of the United States
>sold secrets to the soviets
>USS Liberty Event
When it comes to the Rabbinical Synagogues, those nigguhs are never your ally
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>>82683493
>Picrel
Kek'd, what is that screenshot from?



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