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 Sheldon Adelson, Bibi Netanyahu, and Mitt Romney:  The Party of Losers on November 7 US Elections  By Adam Keller Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, September 24, 2012   King Bibi in the political casino On the front page of Ma'ariv's weekend magazine appears the headline 
	  from a commentary by Ofer Shelah: “A dangerous gamble" - followed by a 
	  quote “Netanyahu features in the broadcasts of the Mitt Romney campaign, 
	  and the Republican candidate anti- Palestinian utterings seem to be direct 
	  quotations from Israel's PM. Netanyahu has put all his chips on Romney – 
	  but who will pay the bill if Obama is re-elected?"
 The Ma'ariv 
	  newspaper, a pillar of the Israeli press throughout the county's entire 
	  history, is at this moment itself in grave danger. Its fate and that of 
	  its two thousand employees hangs in the balance. Ma'ariv - and other 
	  newspapers and media outlets in Israel –suffer from the unfair competition 
	  by "Israel Today". Copies of "Israel Today" are spread in huge quantities 
	  in the streets and at the entrances to public institutions. Unlike other 
	  papers, readers do not have to pay for it. And this newspaper also offers 
	  incredibly cheap advertisements, at prices with which no other paper could 
	  possibly compete.
 
 So, how can "Israel Today" make a profit under 
	  such conditions? It does not. "Israel Today" suffers huge losses every 
	  month, but it has an owner with very wide pocket, ever ready and willing 
	  to cover the losses. Billionaire Sheldon Adelson, who gets very lucrative 
	  profits from running casinos in China and the United States, can afford 
	  this expenditure. Not by coincidence, "Israel Today" consistently and 
	  bluntly supports Binyamin Netanyahu and the policies of his government, 
	  while casualties of its wildcat competition are newspapers taking a more 
	  critical stance towards the Prime Minister. And also not by coincidence, 
	  Sheldon Adelson is also a majorsupporter and prime funder in the election 
	  campaign of Mitt Romney, the Republican Presidential candidate in the 
	  United States.
 
 In yesterday's issue of Ma'ariv also appeared a 
	  commentary by Ben Kaspit, which might be one of his lasts: “This week 
	  Obama gained a decisive advantage in the polls, and in the Electoral 
	  College which actually elects the President his situation is even better. 
	  It seems that only a miracle can save Romney and the people who have 
	  staked the fortunes upon his. It is for such a miracle that Netanyahu and 
	  Adelson are now fervently praying. (...) Based on the assumption that the 
	  miracle does not happen and that Romney is sent despondently home on 7 
	  November, the PM's men understand perfectly well what they can expect from 
	  the White House during Obama's second term: the immensity of the disgust 
	  which the President now feels for Prime Minister of Israel and all that 
	  the PM stands for; that the effort of rebuilding relations which awaits 
	  them is virtually hopeless. This is very bad news for the Right-wing, for 
	  the settlers, for everyone who tied their fate to the one who tied his own 
	  fate to Mitt Romney.”
 
 Caspit – not staunch leftist - speculates 
	  that Obama's second term would start with “another settlement freeze and a 
	  resumption of negotiations with the Palestinians (assuming that Abbas 
	  survives until then)."
 
 So, perhaps something would happen, after 
	  all? Perhaps, it would still happen after all the disappointments and 
	  frustrations and bloodshed, despite the ever increasing desperation and 
	  cynicism? Maybe the phrase "Middle East Peace Process" would still cease 
	  to be a sad and pathetic joke. Maybe a president elected for the second 
	  time, having no longer electoral constraints in settling outstanding 
	  accounts with the Prime Minister of Israel, would at long last devote to 
	  this issue a significant part of the enormous power at the disposal of the 
	  President of the United States of America? Perhaps it would still happen 
	  that the Israeli occupation of the Palestinian territories would not reach 
	  its fiftieth anniversary in 2017, but get its long overdue passing away 
	  during the second term of Barack Hussein Obama?
 
 So, would we after 
	  all have reason to a sleepless night on November 6?
 
 http://adam-keller2.blogspot.co.il/2012/09/in-political-casino.html
 
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