Before You Make Aliyah…

Many Americans are disillusioned by the state of antisemitism today. Not only is it rampant on college campuses but alive and well in U.S. Congress from people like Rashida Tlaib, Ilhan Omar and Marjorie Taylor Greene. Jewish Americans are considering buying a home in Israel, and perhaps relocate for all or part of the year.

Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-MN), Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-MN) and Rep. Jamaal Bowman (D-NY) on November 30, 2021 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

Before they do, they should relocate within the United States.

Most American Jews live in deep blue or red states like New York, New Jersey, Florida, California and Illinois. Before moving to Israel, they should change their place of residence to one of the swing states like Pennsylvania, Georgia, Arizona or Nevada. That will enable the person to submit an absentee ballot in a state where the vote could actually impact the outcome of a presidential election, tipping the electoral college towards candidates which favor western values.

Even as the world watches the tragedy in the Middle East, many Jewish Americans have greater fear for their futures in the United States and are moving to a war zone. While abroad, they can continue to help America by making sure their votes will matter by first relocating to Philadelphia, Atlanta, Phoenix or Las Vegas.

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Peacefully Calling For The Annihilation Of Jews (May 2024)

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1 thought on “Before You Make Aliyah…

  1. Voting absentee from Israel isn’t always effective. In 2020 I sent my ballot to Arizona. They emailed me that they received it and later told me they didn’t count the absentee ballots because there weren’t enough to change the outcome of the vote in my precinct. This year I asked to vote electronically by scanning my ballot and sending it via email and I was told I couldn’t do that. Right now mail is being disrupted by the war here, and it’s taking a month for mail to arrive from the US. There is not enough time to get the ballot and return it by mail, before the election. And if they don’t count the absentees except in the event of a tie, there is little motivation. The system is still broken.

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