So What Does the Rest of the World think About a Second Trump Presidency?

The joy of standing in the great man's shadow is that you know that every day will be entertaining and fun .

What more can you ever sensibly want ?

See Emperor Piss Pot's reign if you choose to be silly and disagree .


And there is exactly the reason that you support The Donald .
Because he detests clinical madness and Evil .
I don't support Trump. Trump is evil. We don't vote for entertainment.
 
The western European political class is not the rest of the world yandopey white twat

They love trump in Africa
He is great white father
Africans don't like Trump. And I am not white. But keep on believing an idiot. The restof the world does not like Trump. Not just Western Europe.
 
I don't support Trump. Trump is evil. We don't vote for entertainment.

You do not vote for entertainment because you are entertainment but have no realisation of it .

And you are probably one of the old decrepit types who take party politics seriously .

Bit like a country trying to win a war with aircraft carriers and tanks --- all laughably out of date
 
Nato is a euro military construct which Trump wanted to pay their way into Ukraine vs. all the recent Dem voted bizillions

Nuland failed her position, after a near decade of negotiations , allowing it to happen

Russia's response was no different than ours when they tried to arm cuba in the early 60's, which MIC propaganda has made a pacifist out of anyone pointing out, including Trump

~S~
 
There are several foreign members in this forum, sadly some of them are trump supporters. But in reality there is an entire world out there and we live with everybody else. And everybody else doesn't seem to think Trump is the answer.

WHAT EUROPE FEARS​

American allies see a second Trump term as all but inevitable. “The anxiety is massive.”

In early april, a crowd of diplomats and dignitaries gathered in the Flemish countryside to toast the most powerful military alliance in the history of the world, and convince themselves it wasn’t about to collapse.

They arrived in a convoy of town cars that snaked down a private driveway and deposited them outside Truman Hall, a white-brick house set on 27 acres of gardens and hazelnut groves. Originally built by a Belgian chocolatier, the estate was sold to the American government at a discount—a thank-you gift for liberating Europe—and became the residence of the U.S. ambassador to NATO. Tonight, Julianne Smith, the inexhaustibly cheerful diplomat who currently holds the job, was stationed at the front door, greeting each guest.

At Truman Hall, every effort was made to keep the mood festive despite a storm looming outside. Beneath a backyard tent, Secretary of State Antony Blinken spoke, followed by NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg.

Stoltenberg, lean and unrumpled, decided to do something diplomatically unorthodox: acknowledge reality. Anxiety about America’s commitment to the alliance had been omnipresent and unspoken; now Stoltenberg was directly addressing the dangers of a potential U.S. withdrawal from the world.

“The United States left Europe after the First World War,” he said, adding, with a measure of Scandinavian understatement, “That was not a big success.”

The wind was picking up outside, pounding the flaps of the tent and making it difficult to hear. Stoltenberg raised his voice. “Ever since the alliance was established,” he said, “it has been a great success, preserving peace, preventing war, and enabling economic prosperity—”

A strong gust hit the tent, rattling the light trusses above. Guests glanced around nervously.

The undercurrent of dread at Truman Hall was not unique. I encountered it in nearly every conversation I had while traveling through Europe this spring. In capitals across the continent—from Brussels to Berlin, Warsaw to Tallinn—leaders and diplomats expressed a sense of alarm bordering on panic at the prospect of Donald Trump’s reelection.

“The anxiety is massive,” Victoria Nuland, who served until recently as undersecretary for political affairs at the State Department, told me. Like other diplomats in the Biden administration, she has spent the three-plus years since Trump unwillingly left office working to restabilize America’s relationship with its allies.

“Foreign counterparts would say it to me straight up,” Nuland recalled. “‘The first Trump election—maybe people didn’t understand who he was, or it was an accident. A second election of Trump? We’ll never trust you again.’”

You are very worried, aren't you? Trump is leading in the polls of every single swing state. If you weren't worried about Biden losing, you wouldn't be spamming the forum with endless anti-Trump posts. I love watching you squirm in fear.
 
They think we are insane for even letting him run.
Were you asleep at the wheel? I mean, sure he caught you by surprise the first time, but he's doing it again and you didn't stop him.
 
The entire world laughs at the American people for electing Biden the senile nitwit to run the country,. .. :cuckoo:

Trump has always said he's a Nationalist. Look at the Nationalists of the 20th century. That's why they fear and dislike Trump.
 
There are several foreign members in this forum, sadly some of them are trump supporters. But in reality there is an entire world out there and we live with everybody else. And everybody else doesn't seem to think Trump is the answer.

WHAT EUROPE FEARS​

American allies see a second Trump term as all but inevitable. “The anxiety is massive.”

In early april, a crowd of diplomats and dignitaries gathered in the Flemish countryside to toast the most powerful military alliance in the history of the world, and convince themselves it wasn’t about to collapse.

They arrived in a convoy of town cars that snaked down a private driveway and deposited them outside Truman Hall, a white-brick house set on 27 acres of gardens and hazelnut groves. Originally built by a Belgian chocolatier, the estate was sold to the American government at a discount—a thank-you gift for liberating Europe—and became the residence of the U.S. ambassador to NATO. Tonight, Julianne Smith, the inexhaustibly cheerful diplomat who currently holds the job, was stationed at the front door, greeting each guest.

At Truman Hall, every effort was made to keep the mood festive despite a storm looming outside. Beneath a backyard tent, Secretary of State Antony Blinken spoke, followed by NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg.

Stoltenberg, lean and unrumpled, decided to do something diplomatically unorthodox: acknowledge reality. Anxiety about America’s commitment to the alliance had been omnipresent and unspoken; now Stoltenberg was directly addressing the dangers of a potential U.S. withdrawal from the world.

“The United States left Europe after the First World War,” he said, adding, with a measure of Scandinavian understatement, “That was not a big success.”

The wind was picking up outside, pounding the flaps of the tent and making it difficult to hear. Stoltenberg raised his voice. “Ever since the alliance was established,” he said, “it has been a great success, preserving peace, preventing war, and enabling economic prosperity—”

A strong gust hit the tent, rattling the light trusses above. Guests glanced around nervously.

The undercurrent of dread at Truman Hall was not unique. I encountered it in nearly every conversation I had while traveling through Europe this spring. In capitals across the continent—from Brussels to Berlin, Warsaw to Tallinn—leaders and diplomats expressed a sense of alarm bordering on panic at the prospect of Donald Trump’s reelection.

“The anxiety is massive,” Victoria Nuland, who served until recently as undersecretary for political affairs at the State Department, told me. Like other diplomats in the Biden administration, she has spent the three-plus years since Trump unwillingly left office working to restabilize America’s relationship with its allies.

“Foreign counterparts would say it to me straight up,” Nuland recalled. “‘The first Trump election—maybe people didn’t understand who he was, or it was an accident. A second election of Trump? We’ll never trust you again.’”

Neocon Nuland. And no black dude gives a rats ass about what Europe "thinks" white boy.
 
Trump says he's a Nationalist.


Who isn't one? Are you suggesting that the USA should not exist? Are you suggesting that the people running this country, who treat illegals better than citizens, should continue with their evil wicked ways?
 
Who isn't one? Are you suggesting that the USA should not exist? Are you suggesting that the people running this country, who treat illegals better than citizens, should continue with their evil wicked ways?

There's a huge difference between a patriot and a nationalist.

Zionism is Jewish Nationalism. Muslim Brotherhood is Arab Nationalism... The Nazis were German Nationalists. Do you ever think? 🤔
 
Look at the internationalists running the EU right now.
You think their citizens are happy with how they're running things?

They are happier than Americans. Do you admire Black Nationalism or Mussolini or Hitler?
 
They are happier than Americans. Do you admire Black Nationalism or Mussolini or Hitler?

They are happier than Americans.

So fucking what?

Are EU citizens happy with their internationalist leaders?
 
There are several foreign members in this forum, sadly some of them are trump supporters. But in reality there is an entire world out there and we live with everybody else. And everybody else doesn't seem to think Trump is the answer.

WHAT EUROPE FEARS​

American allies see a second Trump term as all but inevitable. “The anxiety is massive.”

In early april, a crowd of diplomats and dignitaries gathered in the Flemish countryside to toast the most powerful military alliance in the history of the world, and convince themselves it wasn’t about to collapse.

They arrived in a convoy of town cars that snaked down a private driveway and deposited them outside Truman Hall, a white-brick house set on 27 acres of gardens and hazelnut groves. Originally built by a Belgian chocolatier, the estate was sold to the American government at a discount—a thank-you gift for liberating Europe—and became the residence of the U.S. ambassador to NATO. Tonight, Julianne Smith, the inexhaustibly cheerful diplomat who currently holds the job, was stationed at the front door, greeting each guest.

At Truman Hall, every effort was made to keep the mood festive despite a storm looming outside. Beneath a backyard tent, Secretary of State Antony Blinken spoke, followed by NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg.

Stoltenberg, lean and unrumpled, decided to do something diplomatically unorthodox: acknowledge reality. Anxiety about America’s commitment to the alliance had been omnipresent and unspoken; now Stoltenberg was directly addressing the dangers of a potential U.S. withdrawal from the world.

“The United States left Europe after the First World War,” he said, adding, with a measure of Scandinavian understatement, “That was not a big success.”

The wind was picking up outside, pounding the flaps of the tent and making it difficult to hear. Stoltenberg raised his voice. “Ever since the alliance was established,” he said, “it has been a great success, preserving peace, preventing war, and enabling economic prosperity—”

A strong gust hit the tent, rattling the light trusses above. Guests glanced around nervously.

The undercurrent of dread at Truman Hall was not unique. I encountered it in nearly every conversation I had while traveling through Europe this spring. In capitals across the continent—from Brussels to Berlin, Warsaw to Tallinn—leaders and diplomats expressed a sense of alarm bordering on panic at the prospect of Donald Trump’s reelection.

“The anxiety is massive,” Victoria Nuland, who served until recently as undersecretary for political affairs at the State Department, told me. Like other diplomats in the Biden administration, she has spent the three-plus years since Trump unwillingly left office working to restabilize America’s relationship with its allies.

“Foreign counterparts would say it to me straight up,” Nuland recalled. “‘The first Trump election—maybe people didn’t understand who he was, or it was an accident. A second election of Trump? We’ll never trust you again.’”

Who gives a shit what other nations think? They are irrelevant.
 
Back
Top Bottom