This is What the World Sees After Our Election

This is what France sees after the election of Trump. Of course we will see people who will say they don't care. But having friends is important.​

The end of an American world​


This time, they made an informed decision. In 2016, when they first entrusted him with the White House, American voters didn't know what a Donald Trump presidency would be like and were taking a leap into the unknown. In 2024, the situation is different: Not only do Republican voters know their candidate inside out, right down to his least glorious behavior, he's even more radical than he was eight years ago. Trump's electorate knows where this president is going to take them, and wants more.

It's a reality that needs to be examined with eyes wide open. The path on which Trump, strengthened for his second term by his party's success in the Senate, will take his country diverges fundamentally from the one charted by the United States since the end of the Second World War. It marks the end of an American era, that of an open superpower committed to the world, eager to set itself up as a democratic model. It's the famous "shining city on a hill," extolled by President Ronald Reagan. The model had been challenged over the past two decades. Now, Trump's return is putting a nail in its coffin.

Trump views the world solely through the prism of American national interests. It's a world of power struggles and trade wars, which scorns multilateralism. A world where transactional diplomacy replaces value-based alliances. A world, ultimately, where the US president reserves his harshest words for his allies but spares the autocrats, who are seen as partners rather than adversaries.

Europe at risk of fracturing​

Europeans rightly have bad memories of the first Trump term. The second will be even more perilous, with war raging on their continent, initiated by a Russian power that flouts all its international obligations and is increasingly aggressive. If, as he threatened during the campaign, Trump ceases military aid to Ukraine and negotiates peace with Vladimir Putin in favor of the invader, the consequences of such an outcome will go far beyond the fate of Ukraine alone. They will affect the continent's security as a whole.

Trump's victory at the end of a campaign of unprecedented populist, misogynist and racist virulence also bodes ill for women, immigrants and democracy in general. The 47th American president inherits a system he began to put in place when he was the 45th, one in which the sacrosanct checks and balances, those safeguards supposed to preserve American democratic institutions, are already weakened, and in which the Supreme Court has gone over to his side. He succeeded in downplaying the assault on the Capitol by rioters he encouraged on January 6, 2021. The image of a head of the world's leading power who calls his opponents "enemies from within," deems some of them worthy of the firing squad, vilifies dissident media and threatens to send the army to hunt down illegal immigrants in Democratic cities can only encourage illiberal leaders the world over, including in Europe.

Trump's voters chose him in full consciousness, as did the business and tech leaders who rallied behind him, following in the footsteps of Elon Musk, the iconoclastic CEO turned eminence grise. The rest of the world will suffer.

:auiqs.jpg: :auiqs.jpg: :auiqs.jpg:
 
We now have a president who is acutely aware of what it is like to be the victim of political persecution. Still, I hope that he uses his pardon power wisely.
We are all a bunch of sinners. It is a grossly inappropriate use of the power of the state to investigate people to try and find out what sins that they have committed.
Democrats learned well from their Soviet masters.

show man find crime quote.webp
 

This is what France sees after the election of Trump. Of course we will see people who will say they don't care. But having friends is important.​

The end of an American world​


This time, they made an informed decision. In 2016, when they first entrusted him with the White House, American voters didn't know what a Donald Trump presidency would be like and were taking a leap into the unknown. In 2024, the situation is different: Not only do Republican voters know their candidate inside out, right down to his least glorious behavior, he's even more radical than he was eight years ago. Trump's electorate knows where this president is going to take them, and wants more.

It's a reality that needs to be examined with eyes wide open. The path on which Trump, strengthened for his second term by his party's success in the Senate, will take his country diverges fundamentally from the one charted by the United States since the end of the Second World War. It marks the end of an American era, that of an open superpower committed to the world, eager to set itself up as a democratic model. It's the famous "shining city on a hill," extolled by President Ronald Reagan. The model had been challenged over the past two decades. Now, Trump's return is putting a nail in its coffin.

Trump views the world solely through the prism of American national interests. It's a world of power struggles and trade wars, which scorns multilateralism. A world where transactional diplomacy replaces value-based alliances. A world, ultimately, where the US president reserves his harshest words for his allies but spares the autocrats, who are seen as partners rather than adversaries.

Europe at risk of fracturing​

Europeans rightly have bad memories of the first Trump term. The second will be even more perilous, with war raging on their continent, initiated by a Russian power that flouts all its international obligations and is increasingly aggressive. If, as he threatened during the campaign, Trump ceases military aid to Ukraine and negotiates peace with Vladimir Putin in favor of the invader, the consequences of such an outcome will go far beyond the fate of Ukraine alone. They will affect the continent's security as a whole.

Trump's victory at the end of a campaign of unprecedented populist, misogynist and racist virulence also bodes ill for women, immigrants and democracy in general. The 47th American president inherits a system he began to put in place when he was the 45th, one in which the sacrosanct checks and balances, those safeguards supposed to preserve American democratic institutions, are already weakened, and in which the Supreme Court has gone over to his side. He succeeded in downplaying the assault on the Capitol by rioters he encouraged on January 6, 2021. The image of a head of the world's leading power who calls his opponents "enemies from within," deems some of them worthy of the firing squad, vilifies dissident media and threatens to send the army to hunt down illegal immigrants in Democratic cities can only encourage illiberal leaders the world over, including in Europe.

Trump's voters chose him in full consciousness, as did the business and tech leaders who rallied behind him, following in the footsteps of Elon Musk, the iconoclastic CEO turned eminence grise. The rest of the world will suffer.


# of countries Putin invaded when Biden was in the WH: 2

# of countries Putin invaded when Trump was in the WH: 0

It marks the end of BlackRock, the WEF, the MIC and CIA making fucking fortunes by starting wars
 

This is what France sees after the election of Trump. Of course we will see people who will say they don't care. But having friends is important.​

The end of an American world​


This time, they made an informed decision. In 2016, when they first entrusted him with the White House, American voters didn't know what a Donald Trump presidency would be like and were taking a leap into the unknown. In 2024, the situation is different: Not only do Republican voters know their candidate inside out, right down to his least glorious behavior, he's even more radical than he was eight years ago. Trump's electorate knows where this president is going to take them, and wants more.

It's a reality that needs to be examined with eyes wide open. The path on which Trump, strengthened for his second term by his party's success in the Senate, will take his country diverges fundamentally from the one charted by the United States since the end of the Second World War. It marks the end of an American era, that of an open superpower committed to the world, eager to set itself up as a democratic model. It's the famous "shining city on a hill," extolled by President Ronald Reagan. The model had been challenged over the past two decades. Now, Trump's return is putting a nail in its coffin.

Trump views the world solely through the prism of American national interests. It's a world of power struggles and trade wars, which scorns multilateralism. A world where transactional diplomacy replaces value-based alliances. A world, ultimately, where the US president reserves his harshest words for his allies but spares the autocrats, who are seen as partners rather than adversaries.

Europe at risk of fracturing​

Europeans rightly have bad memories of the first Trump term. The second will be even more perilous, with war raging on their continent, initiated by a Russian power that flouts all its international obligations and is increasingly aggressive. If, as he threatened during the campaign, Trump ceases military aid to Ukraine and negotiates peace with Vladimir Putin in favor of the invader, the consequences of such an outcome will go far beyond the fate of Ukraine alone. They will affect the continent's security as a whole.

Trump's victory at the end of a campaign of unprecedented populist, misogynist and racist virulence also bodes ill for women, immigrants and democracy in general. The 47th American president inherits a system he began to put in place when he was the 45th, one in which the sacrosanct checks and balances, those safeguards supposed to preserve American democratic institutions, are already weakened, and in which the Supreme Court has gone over to his side. He succeeded in downplaying the assault on the Capitol by rioters he encouraged on January 6, 2021. The image of a head of the world's leading power who calls his opponents "enemies from within," deems some of them worthy of the firing squad, vilifies dissident media and threatens to send the army to hunt down illegal immigrants in Democratic cities can only encourage illiberal leaders the world over, including in Europe.

Trump's voters chose him in full consciousness, as did the business and tech leaders who rallied behind him, following in the footsteps of Elon Musk, the iconoclastic CEO turned eminence grise. The rest of the world will suffer.

1731118768626.webp
 
Fuck France. This is what I see when someone mentions "France...

View attachment 1039071View attachment 1039073

That is what Paris looked like before the Olympics. Where did they put all of these people during the games?
I have the same question about San Francisco and Newsom when he hosted Xi. Where did all those sidewalk dwellers go for a few days?
 
We now have a president who is acutely aware of what it is like to be the victim of political persecution. Still, I hope that he uses his pardon power wisely.
We are all a bunch of sinners. It is a grossly inappropriate use of the power of the state to investigate people to try and find out what sins that they have committed.
Except we know that Joe Biden as a senator stole classified documents a long time ago. Use the Democrats playbook and put some of them away. Maybe then the Democrats might get the message.
 
By the end of the Presidential campaign, honest commentators were admitting that Harris was spectacularly unqualified and presented as many doubts about America as did Trump. There was even some consolation in at least knowing that Trump had been President. No one was happy about him, but clear vision showed the choice was not a religious issue, as so many Americans wanted to present it; i.e., "good" against "evil".
 
Our former allies are already banding together and will be fine. They can't trust us, understandably, and they won't need America.

In fact, they may follow Trump's lead and be purely transactional. No relationship, no trust, maybe we'll work with you, maybe not. We'll see. Or maybe we'll get a better deal.

The question is who will step up and lead. Maybe England. Maybe France.
 
Our former allies are already banding together and will be fine. They can't trust us, understandably, and they won't need America.

In fact, they may follow Trump's lead and be purely transactional. No relationship, no trust, maybe we'll work with you, maybe not. We'll see. Or maybe we'll get a better deal.

The question is who will step up and lead. Maybe England. Maybe France.
God i hope so, then we can pull all of our troops out of that shithole area, bring them home, man the border and repel any invaders who try to cross into our country. Talk about saving the US a lot of money.
 

This is what France sees after the election of Trump. Of course we will see people who will say they don't care. But having friends is important.​

The end of an American world​


This time, they made an informed decision. In 2016, when they first entrusted him with the White House, American voters didn't know what a Donald Trump presidency would be like and were taking a leap into the unknown. In 2024, the situation is different: Not only do Republican voters know their candidate inside out, right down to his least glorious behavior, he's even more radical than he was eight years ago. Trump's electorate knows where this president is going to take them, and wants more.

It's a reality that needs to be examined with eyes wide open. The path on which Trump, strengthened for his second term by his party's success in the Senate, will take his country diverges fundamentally from the one charted by the United States since the end of the Second World War. It marks the end of an American era, that of an open superpower committed to the world, eager to set itself up as a democratic model. It's the famous "shining city on a hill," extolled by President Ronald Reagan. The model had been challenged over the past two decades. Now, Trump's return is putting a nail in its coffin.

Trump views the world solely through the prism of American national interests. It's a world of power struggles and trade wars, which scorns multilateralism. A world where transactional diplomacy replaces value-based alliances. A world, ultimately, where the US president reserves his harshest words for his allies but spares the autocrats, who are seen as partners rather than adversaries.

Europe at risk of fracturing​

Europeans rightly have bad memories of the first Trump term. The second will be even more perilous, with war raging on their continent, initiated by a Russian power that flouts all its international obligations and is increasingly aggressive. If, as he threatened during the campaign, Trump ceases military aid to Ukraine and negotiates peace with Vladimir Putin in favor of the invader, the consequences of such an outcome will go far beyond the fate of Ukraine alone. They will affect the continent's security as a whole.

Trump's victory at the end of a campaign of unprecedented populist, misogynist and racist virulence also bodes ill for women, immigrants and democracy in general. The 47th American president inherits a system he began to put in place when he was the 45th, one in which the sacrosanct checks and balances, those safeguards supposed to preserve American democratic institutions, are already weakened, and in which the Supreme Court has gone over to his side. He succeeded in downplaying the assault on the Capitol by rioters he encouraged on January 6, 2021. The image of a head of the world's leading power who calls his opponents "enemies from within," deems some of them worthy of the firing squad, vilifies dissident media and threatens to send the army to hunt down illegal immigrants in Democratic cities can only encourage illiberal leaders the world over, including in Europe.

Trump's voters chose him in full consciousness, as did the business and tech leaders who rallied behind him, following in the footsteps of Elon Musk, the iconoclastic CEO turned eminence grise. The rest of the world will suffer.



Brown People put Trump in the White House. Specifically, Black and Hispanic men. All I can say is a very sincere thank you. Your faith and strength will be rewarded.


:afro:
 

This is what France sees after the election of Trump. Of course we will see people who will say they don't care. But having friends is important.​

The end of an American world​


This time, they made an informed decision. In 2016, when they first entrusted him with the White House, American voters didn't know what a Donald Trump presidency would be like and were taking a leap into the unknown. In 2024, the situation is different: Not only do Republican voters know their candidate inside out, right down to his least glorious behavior, he's even more radical than he was eight years ago. Trump's electorate knows where this president is going to take them, and wants more.

It's a reality that needs to be examined with eyes wide open. The path on which Trump, strengthened for his second term by his party's success in the Senate, will take his country diverges fundamentally from the one charted by the United States since the end of the Second World War. It marks the end of an American era, that of an open superpower committed to the world, eager to set itself up as a democratic model. It's the famous "shining city on a hill," extolled by President Ronald Reagan. The model had been challenged over the past two decades. Now, Trump's return is putting a nail in its coffin.

Trump views the world solely through the prism of American national interests. It's a world of power struggles and trade wars, which scorns multilateralism. A world where transactional diplomacy replaces value-based alliances. A world, ultimately, where the US president reserves his harshest words for his allies but spares the autocrats, who are seen as partners rather than adversaries.

Europe at risk of fracturing​

Europeans rightly have bad memories of the first Trump term. The second will be even more perilous, with war raging on their continent, initiated by a Russian power that flouts all its international obligations and is increasingly aggressive. If, as he threatened during the campaign, Trump ceases military aid to Ukraine and negotiates peace with Vladimir Putin in favor of the invader, the consequences of such an outcome will go far beyond the fate of Ukraine alone. They will affect the continent's security as a whole.

Trump's victory at the end of a campaign of unprecedented populist, misogynist and racist virulence also bodes ill for women, immigrants and democracy in general. The 47th American president inherits a system he began to put in place when he was the 45th, one in which the sacrosanct checks and balances, those safeguards supposed to preserve American democratic institutions, are already weakened, and in which the Supreme Court has gone over to his side. He succeeded in downplaying the assault on the Capitol by rioters he encouraged on January 6, 2021. The image of a head of the world's leading power who calls his opponents "enemies from within," deems some of them worthy of the firing squad, vilifies dissident media and threatens to send the army to hunt down illegal immigrants in Democratic cities can only encourage illiberal leaders the world over, including in Europe.

Trump's voters chose him in full consciousness, as did the business and tech leaders who rallied behind him, following in the footsteps of Elon Musk, the iconoclastic CEO turned eminence grise. The rest of the world will suffer.

Western Europe is an Islamic caliphate sans Italy. They can cope.
 
Our former allies are already banding together and will be fine. They can't trust us, understandably, and they won't need America.

In fact, they may follow Trump's lead and be purely transactional. No relationship, no trust, maybe we'll work with you, maybe not. We'll see. Or maybe we'll get a better deal.

The question is who will step up and lead. Maybe England. Maybe France.

1731167908972.webp
 
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