apparently not.
It is unclear what is meant by "take over". Israel has no interest in conquering or diplomatic Wrestling with the United States considering that the United States is Israel's strongest ally. When Prime Minister Netanyahu began to complain about his reception in Washington, the opposition leader Mofaz said, "Who is your enemy, the United States or Iran?" He did this in order to remind Netanyahu that the United States is still Israel's greatest supporter and not to worry so much about the United States.
As for AIPAC and other Israel-aligned lobbies, they have had a strong hand in American foreign policy for a while now and it has not grown or subsided in any strong way in the last decade.
Israel has no special command over US foreign policy.
How long it takes to send a gown from Israel to the US, depends on the exact location of which the gown is being sent. Generally, this can take up to 30 days if using standard shipping procedures.
Maybe the time zone changes. Not really sure.
Yes, the US sells a lot of weapons to Israel. The US government also gives a lot of money to Israel.
Israel and the US are strong Democratic allis.
Israel is roughly 5,200 miles from the nearest points in the US.
The British never took over the US.
over 10,000 competed but it is over
a cruise is organized with stops... one month, probably...
A package will typically take 4 to 6 weeks. A shipping container could take longer.
No. The AID to Israel is as helpful for the US as it is for Israel. The question of US funding in Israel is primarily for military hardware. The US does not provide economic aid to Israel. First, the US Aid to Israel makes up about 0.03% of the US GDP. To put that in perspective, it would pay for around a week in Iraq or half-a-day of Social Security. Additionally, 80% of the money earmarked for Israel can only be spent by Israel on US-produced weapons. This means that the money appropriated for Israel mostly goes to support US firms and US jobs, making it a win-win for both Israel and the US. This is aside from the fact that numerous recent technological innovations in both military and civilian technology have come to the US from Israel, providing economic gains that more than offset the remaining 20%.
Yiddish is spoken by Jewish people all over the world, mainly in Europe, the US, and Israel.