The Inevitable New The Inevitable Trump Mocking Thread

You should be more concerned with our snowflake neighbor from the north.
He will fall in line.
Trump is the snowflake in chief . . . the most thin skinned man this side of Kim Jong un or Putin. He just wishes that, like the other two do, he could have his detractors erased and I'm sure you agree with him.
 
Trump is the snowflake in chief . . . the most thin skinned man this side of Kim Jong un or Putin. He just wishes that, like the other two do, he could have his detractors erased and I'm sure you agree with him.

‘We’re America, B*tch’: Official Describes The Trump Doctrine
 

Dennis Rodman Sheds Tears Over North Korean Summit, Says Obama Would Not Recognize His Efforts
June 11th, 2018
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Dennis Rodman talks Trump and Ki Jong Un meeting. (CNN/Screenshot)


Former NBA star Dennis Rodman shed tears over the summit between North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and President Trump in Singapore Tuesday, saying that former President Obama would not give him the time of day with his diplomatic efforts.


WATCH:






Rodman described how he had received death threats and how he “couldn’t even go home” after meeting with Kim in 2014, but that he continued to hope that North Korea would change. He also said he knew the meeting between Trump and Kim would be prolific.



He added that Rodman ad reached out to Obama for years, but to no avail.


“If you can do certain things, I would listen, my ears would be open,” Rodman said. “And I tried to do that with Obama. And Obama did not give me the time of day. I asked him, I said I have something to say from North Korea and he brushed me off. And that didn’t deter me. I still kept going back.”

He went on to say that “Donald Trump should take a lot of credit for” the diplomatic meeting between the two hostile countries.
 
America's Europe Problem
https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2018/06/americas_europe_problem.html

By Peter Skurkiss
What with President Trump blowing up the recently concluded G-7 summit in Canada, it is likely that the Europeans now know that Trump's 'Make America Great Again' rhetoric is not idle talk. This is a shock for Europe, especially with the G-7 meeting coming soon after America's imposition of steel and aluminum tariffs and its withdrawal from the Obama-Iran nuclear deal. It is hard for Europeans to believe that America is willing to depart from the script of the last 70 years.

That script was basically that the United States would maintain international order at its own cost and allow its markets to be open to allies without the expectation that their markets would be equally open to American exports.

Europe (and others) flourished under such treatment. Their defense expenditures were at bargain basement prices and the door to the massive U.S. market was open wide. America benefited, too, as such a strategy was needed to contain and ultimately defeat the USSR. But the Cold War ended 30 years ago. What was good for the U.S. then is a millstone around America's neck now.
 
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