bellisarius
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Oct 22, 2017
- Posts
- 16,761
I'm launching this thread off of the below post you made in Dolf's UK protest thread so that maybe we can have a real discussion.
Post 121
I plan to cover several subjects along the way but I thought that his foreign policies would be of more interest to you and other non-US citizens.
China;
Everyone in the developed world tripped all over themselves to do business with China starting in the 90's. We (the royal we) turned a blind eye to their theft of intellectual material and their 'dumping' to gain market share. The first red flag was when Clinton allowed them to gain the technology to make their ICBM's work. Bush came along and got them to agree to crack down on the technology theft, they didn't. Then Obama got the same agreement, same result. Over a year ago Trump got them to agree to severely restrict the manufacture and export fentynyl. The Mexican cartels freaked and started to crank up their own labs, waste of money on their part. Chinese fentynyl is still pouring into the US. The point being that they've 'agreed' to everything and enforced nothing. Trump is inflicting pain now. Yes, those entities that invested in China to garner the scraps from their table are going to suffer too, tough shit. Perhaps they shouldn't have sold their soul so easily.
NATO;
Trump is right on this one too. NATO has become a joke. When the Soviet Union folded at the beginning of the Clinton admin. there was this big discussion about what to do about NATO? The answer was to refocus it as an 'economic' entity. (I'm still wondering exactly how that was to work?) The various members forgot about their military and pissed the money away on various political pork barrel projects. Trump has called NATO out on that and the Europeans don't like it. Only the UK, and possibly France, have a military worthy of the title today. The truth hurts at times.
N. Korea;
Trump is playing 'good cop, bad cop' with them. He dangles a carrot and they bite, a bit, then go back to testing if he's serious. This is going to be a drawn out process. You can't get much deeper in an economic shit hole than N. Korea already is so sanctions are of little value. What rocket boy wants is 'security assurances.' And what that means is that we're going to support his regime. Rocket boy knows that the liberalization of N. Korea means the end to him and his dynasty, he's not stupid. And we are put in the unenviable position of supporting a repressive dictatorship if we agree. Rocket boy likes the power and the adulation (even if it is forced and phony) so merely giving him safe haven isn't going to cut it. Reagan, Bush I, Clinton, Bush II, and Obama merely paid the "Dane Geld" with no tangible results. Trump has changed the game for better or worse. Doing the same thing over and over again hasn't worked.
Iran;
As I stated in the other thread, we, the US, have NO treaty with Iran. Without an act of law (congress) or a formal treaty (also congress) no president can obligate future presidents to what amounts to a personal agreement. Iran is hell bent for leather to reestablish the Persian Empire only this time under Sharia law. They are the single largest bank roller of terrorism world wide. In many respects they are no different than N. Korea in that they actively pursue a policy of cult like leader worship and seem to have no problem destituting their own people to fund said terrorism. Cutting off their source of funds is precisely the correct action to take.
Virtually all of our recent past presidents have stood at the podium waving pieces of paper and proclaiming "peace in our time" and the paper is barely worth being used to light a cheap cigar. Trump is playing a risky game, but every one else played the 'diplomatic' game to no avail. Diplomacy only works if all parties act in good faith and the appeasement of bullies only emboldens them.
Post 121
Showing him love? Yes, there are, and not just because he is President of the USA on the eve of the 75th anniversary of D-Day.
Some of us think that President Trump is addressing the world's problems in a different but effective way.
I plan to cover several subjects along the way but I thought that his foreign policies would be of more interest to you and other non-US citizens.
China;
Everyone in the developed world tripped all over themselves to do business with China starting in the 90's. We (the royal we) turned a blind eye to their theft of intellectual material and their 'dumping' to gain market share. The first red flag was when Clinton allowed them to gain the technology to make their ICBM's work. Bush came along and got them to agree to crack down on the technology theft, they didn't. Then Obama got the same agreement, same result. Over a year ago Trump got them to agree to severely restrict the manufacture and export fentynyl. The Mexican cartels freaked and started to crank up their own labs, waste of money on their part. Chinese fentynyl is still pouring into the US. The point being that they've 'agreed' to everything and enforced nothing. Trump is inflicting pain now. Yes, those entities that invested in China to garner the scraps from their table are going to suffer too, tough shit. Perhaps they shouldn't have sold their soul so easily.
NATO;
Trump is right on this one too. NATO has become a joke. When the Soviet Union folded at the beginning of the Clinton admin. there was this big discussion about what to do about NATO? The answer was to refocus it as an 'economic' entity. (I'm still wondering exactly how that was to work?) The various members forgot about their military and pissed the money away on various political pork barrel projects. Trump has called NATO out on that and the Europeans don't like it. Only the UK, and possibly France, have a military worthy of the title today. The truth hurts at times.
N. Korea;
Trump is playing 'good cop, bad cop' with them. He dangles a carrot and they bite, a bit, then go back to testing if he's serious. This is going to be a drawn out process. You can't get much deeper in an economic shit hole than N. Korea already is so sanctions are of little value. What rocket boy wants is 'security assurances.' And what that means is that we're going to support his regime. Rocket boy knows that the liberalization of N. Korea means the end to him and his dynasty, he's not stupid. And we are put in the unenviable position of supporting a repressive dictatorship if we agree. Rocket boy likes the power and the adulation (even if it is forced and phony) so merely giving him safe haven isn't going to cut it. Reagan, Bush I, Clinton, Bush II, and Obama merely paid the "Dane Geld" with no tangible results. Trump has changed the game for better or worse. Doing the same thing over and over again hasn't worked.
Iran;
As I stated in the other thread, we, the US, have NO treaty with Iran. Without an act of law (congress) or a formal treaty (also congress) no president can obligate future presidents to what amounts to a personal agreement. Iran is hell bent for leather to reestablish the Persian Empire only this time under Sharia law. They are the single largest bank roller of terrorism world wide. In many respects they are no different than N. Korea in that they actively pursue a policy of cult like leader worship and seem to have no problem destituting their own people to fund said terrorism. Cutting off their source of funds is precisely the correct action to take.
Virtually all of our recent past presidents have stood at the podium waving pieces of paper and proclaiming "peace in our time" and the paper is barely worth being used to light a cheap cigar. Trump is playing a risky game, but every one else played the 'diplomatic' game to no avail. Diplomacy only works if all parties act in good faith and the appeasement of bullies only emboldens them.