10/9/18: Nikki Haley announces she will be resigning as ambassador to the U. N., effective at year’s end. In a surprise press conference, she says it has been the “honor of a lifetime” to have served in the role. And look at what has happened, now that “the United States is respected.”
Yes, that has never happened before!!! Other countries, she adds, “might not like what we do, but they respect what we do. They know if we say we’re going to do something, we’ll follow it through.”
How true! They know we’re going to pull out of international
treaties having to do with climate change. They even know we may pull out of
the United Nations, in the end, which we helped create 73 years ago. They know
we’re going to say NATO no longer matters, insult our closest allies, and mean
it. They know if Trump says Trump loves Putin, you can be sure he loves Putin.
They know if the president promises to tear up the treaty that kept Iran from
getting nuclear weapons for a decade, he’s going to do it and not worry what
comes after. And if Trump promises to rain down “fire and fury” on North Korea,
but later says the North is “no longer a nuclear threat,” and the president
tells fans he “loves” Kim Jong-un, one of the world’s most brutal dictators,
well, yes. We are going to be respected at last!
You can rest assured we’re going to see this newfound “respect” reflected in a recent poll! According to Pew Research, confidence in President Trump “to do the right thing in regard to world affairs,” stands at 7% in Spain. Our allies in France and Germany are more optimistic. A whopping 9% of the French and 10% of Germans expect Trump to do what is right in the realm of world affairs.
In addition, 57% of Western Europeans answer “no” when asked if the United States respects the freedoms of its own people. It’s the first time a majority has ever answered that question “no.”
Finally, 70% of respondents believe, compared to ten years
ago, that China plays a “more important role” in the world, 41% say the same
for Russia and only 31% feel the United States is playing a more important
role. The only good news: most people surveyed still say they would prefer that the United States – and not
China – remain the world leader. Even if, under Trump, so far, we’re not.
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