"Like it or not, America has been the stabilizing force behind much of the modern world for decades."
The irony of BillJohnson saying this is that BillJohnson voted for Trump to end America's leadership role in the world.
Trump explicity stated that's what he was going to do, to the love of Trumpers everywhere. And now, they cheer for a globally destabilizing war with Iran!
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Trump Has Launched a Second American Revolution. This Time, It's Against the World.
Just two months into his second presidency, Donald Trump is revolutionizing U.S. foreign policy. His policies will upend world order by destabilizing and ultimately destroying established institutions and patterns of international cooperation. Since 1945, the United States has been the leading champion, underwriter, and guarantor of an open, rule-bound global system under international law. Now, it rejects the logic of multilateralism, including any self-restraints on the exercise of U.S. power and any responsibilities for global leadership and stability.
In its scope and speed, this wholesale reorientation in U.S. foreign policy has few precedents in American history outside responses to surprise attacks such as Pearl Harbor or 9/11. One analogue is the sudden U.S. embrace of containment during the celebrated "fifteen weeks" of February-June 1947, bookended by the enunciation of the Truman Doctrine and the launch of the Marshall Plan. The difference today is that we are not at the creation but the destruction. American hands are shattering the institutional framework for global cooperation the world has long taken for granted. On the eve of the nation's 250th birthday, Trump has launched a second American Revolution. He is declaring its independence from the world America made.
This revolution in U.S. foreign policy is reverberating globally. Even long-standing U.S. allies are stunned by the speed of the administration's about-face, from its embrace of authoritarian Russia to its snubbing of democratic allies to its dismantling of foreign aid. Like Edmund Burke in his 1790 Reflections on the Revolution in France, they are grappling with the sudden demise of the ancien rgime"and considering how best to escape its upheavals.
carnegieendowment.org
I'm not playing this game.
It's endless and tiresome.
#95 | Posted by BillJohnson
It's not a game.
It's you, refusing to reflect on yourself.