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Originally Posted by Whisky_1
Those are your words not mine. I advocate for a safer world where the US is a trusted and respected leader instead of chaotic traveling shit show circus with a pathological lier as the unethical clown for a ringmaster.
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like this traveling shit show circus?
Obama's Apology Tour And Latin American Dictators
https://www.forbes.com/sites/mikegon.../#4a4fa5df261b
“Democracies,” he piously averred, “have to have the courage to acknowledge when we don’t live up to the ideals that we stand for; when we’ve been slow to speak out for human rights. And that was the case here.”
Yes, President Obama again found a way to blame the United States for another country’s problems, while visiting that country. He started taking “apology tours” early on in his administration, and he apparently means to keep the tradition going till the end.
Obama's 'apology' complex
https://www.politico.com/story/2016/...apology-223446
Seven years after kicking off his presidency with a famous speech in Cairo reaching out to the Arab world, but that skipped Israel, Barack Obama is about to bookend it with one of his last big trips on Air Force One, landing first here in Vietnam before going on to Hiroshima, Japan.
Barack Obama's Top 10 Apologies: How the President Has Humiliated a Superpower
https://www.heritage.org/europe/repo...ted-superpower
A common theme that runs through President Obama's statements is the idea the United States must atone for its past policies, whether it is America's application of the war against Islamist terrorism or its overall foreign policy.
At the core of this message is the concept that the U.S. is a flawed nation that must seek redemption by apologizing for its past "sins."
As President Obama embarks this week on his second major overseas tour, which will take him to Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Germany, and France,
the world does not need yet another apology from the President. Rather, it is looking for strong and principled leadership from the most powerful nation on the face of the earth. American leadership is not a popularity contest, nor should it be an exercise in self-loathing. Rather, it is about taking tough positions that will be met with hostility in many parts of the globe. Above all, it demands the assertive projection of American power, both to secure the homeland and to protect America's allies.
thank you valued bat!