Job opportunity for a jew opens up in Biden administration

Started by yankeedoodle, January 04, 2024, 04:17:37 PM

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yankeedoodle

The kikes that control zio-Joe Biden have forced a Palestinian - probably the only Palestinian - in the Biden administration to resign, and, naturally, that vacant position will be filled by a jew.   <:^0

Who is Tariq Habash? Joe Biden Official Resigns Over Israel
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/who-is-tariq-habash-joe-biden-official-resigns-over-israel/ar-AA1msskk

One of the Biden administration's political appointees has resigned from the Department of Education, in response to what he claimed was President Joe Biden turning "a blind eye to the atrocities committed against innocent Palestinian lives" by Israel forces in Gaza and the West Bank.

The announcement was made by Tariq Habash, who had worked in the department for nearly three years following his appointment as a special assistant to the office of planning, evaluation and policy development in February 2021, where his work focused on student loans.

In a resignation letter addressed to Education Secretary Miguel Cardona, Habash, a Palestinian American, said the Biden administration had "put millions of innocent lives in danger, most immediately for the 2.3 million Palestinian civilians living in Gaza who remain under constant assault and ethnic cleansing by the Israeli government."

President Biden's strident support for Israel as it responds militarily to Hamas's October 7 assault on southern Israel has angered parts of his coalition, with reports his campaign volunteers are quitting "in drives" as a protest. A New York Times/Sina College poll of Americans aged between 18 and 29 found nearly 75 percent disapprove of Biden's handling of the Gaza war.

On October 7 around 1,200 Israelis were killed in a surprise Hamas attack on southern Israel, with another 240 people abducted into Gaza as hostages, according to figures from the Associated Press. In response Israel launched a major air and ground assault on Gaza which resulted in more than 21,900 Palestinian deaths, according to the territory's Hamas-run health ministry. Israel claims it has killed 8,000 Hamas militants during the fighting, though this has not been independently verified.

Speaking to MSNBC's Joy Reid, Habash described how Biden's policies had impacted him personally, saying: "I mean it's heartbreaking, it hurts.

"It is a dehumanizing thing to hear from the president of the United States, someone you worked so hard to campaign for and elect and support his policies that your life is not valuable, your identity means less than other people's identities and it's OK that tens of thousands of people who look like you, and who have similar backgrounds and heritage, are dying and being massacred."

Asked whether he'd still vote for Biden in November, Habash replied: "I think that's up to him. I did volunteer to support the campaign, I've supported the president for the last three years in every single thing I do in my professional life and the reality is the president's in power, he's the one whose name is on the ballot and it's his policies. If he wants to earn my vote, and the votes of millions of Americans who support peace and an end to violence, that's up to him."

Newsweek has reached out to the White House press office for comment by email.

Prior to joining the Department of Education Habash was involved in launching the Student Borrowers Protection Center, which campaigns on behalf of student loan holders, and previously worked as a senior policy associate at The Century Foundation, focusing on the affordability of higher education. Habash was educated at the University of Miami and the Harvard Graduate School of Education.