Sort:  

There must have been one, if the USA is withdrawing from it; if the other signatories are hustling around trying to avoid this elephant from entering the international glass store and dragging them along. What i think Americans may be asking in a few months (if things get ugly) is: was there ever an election? how did this guy get into the white house?
I don't know about you, guys, but i don't think radical nationalism or isolationism is going to do any good to the USA. History says otherwise.

There must have been one, if the USA is withdrawing from it; if the other signatories are hustling around trying to avoid this elephant from entering the international glass store and dragging them along.

I clicked around on the official documents and I couldn't find any, where is it? "There must be one" does not suffice.

What i think Americans may be asking in a few months (if things get ugly) is: was there ever an election? how did this guy get into the white house?

So far things have been going great, looks like little rocketman is coming to the table, weren't Trump's words supposed to start WW3 then as well?

I don't know about you, guys, but i don't think radical nationalism or isolationism is going to do any good to the USA. History says otherwise.

What evidence is there of either "radical nationalism" or "isolationism" in actual Trump policies?

Trump is nationalistic as opposed to being a globalist who wants to destroy the USA but what are you calling radical?

Shouldn't everyone who leads a nation be a nationalist to some degree?

You are right in regards to North Korea (although we should wait some more to conclude that Trump broke rocketman). I personally always thought that idiot was just bluffing (it was just a matter of confronting him head-on). However, Trumps discourse is clumsy, impulsive and always leading towards untimely conservatism, antiforeignism (if you allow me the word).
True, any leader should gather strength and support from their fellow countrymen and women, usually appealing to some kind of common ground, but in a country such as the USA, with such complex history of immigration, discourses like Trump's only alienate and separate (both internally and internationally).
I can understand the fear to foreigners, especially with these bunch of crazy ass fundamentalists, but over generalizations only lead to injustice and excess, the same things America has criticized from dictatorships around the world.
Balance, i guess, is the key word. America has the man power, the technology and the history of heroic deeds that have contributed to the good of humanity; it also has the history of screw-ups from which it should learn to avoid future embarrassments that will only fuel more financial crisis or, worse, terrorism.

You are right in regards to North Korea (although we should wait some more to conclude that Trump broke rocketman). I personally always thought that idiot was just bluffing (it was just a matter of confronting him head-on). However, Trumps discourse is clumsy, impulsive and always leading towards untimely conservatism, antiforeignism (if you allow me the word).

Except in that case it seems to be leading to peace in America's longest running war, there is an unprecedented meeting with Trump and Kim scheduled, something no president has achieved in decades. After that meeting Trump should get the Nobel peace prize. How is that " untimely conservatism, antiforeignism"?

True, any leader should gather strength and support from their fellow countrymen and women, usually appealing to some kind of common ground, but in a country such as the USA, with such complex history of immigration, discourses like Trump's only alienate and separate (both internally and internationally).

Trump is pro immigration. He only opposes criminal illegal aliens. Something that is good for Americans and ultimately the illegal aliens themselves, anyone who supports illegal immigration supports exploitation.

I can understand the fear to foreigners, especially with these bunch of crazy ass fundamentalists, but over generalizations only lead to injustice and excess, the same things America has criticized from dictatorships around the world.

Then why do you keep making these unfounded overgeneralizations?

Balance, i guess, is the key word. America has the man power, the technology and the history of heroic deeds that have contributed to the good of humanity; it also has the history of screw-ups from which it should learn to avoid future embarrassments that will only fuel more financial crisis or, worse, terrorism.

Trump is doing everything he can to extract us from those long running conflicts. Peace in Korea, removing our military support for Europe, ending the conflicts in the Middle East are all on the horizon for the first time ever.
It's 3D chess, Trump is just bluffing, but he does it so well that you can't say for sure if he is or not right?
That's how Trump operates, he plays the role of the crazy idiot, then he makes a threat and you have to take it seriously, because he is a crazy idiot he just might do it right?
Have you ever read his book?

I haven´t read his book. Can't afford it from my part of the world.
I don't think i made any unfounded overgeneralizations.
There are crazy fundamentalists messing up around the world (not all of them Muslims, by the way). I am not the one saying, for instance, that illegal immigrants are criminals or do not have skills. Many decent, skilled people have been forced to cross borders illegally, not only USA borders. In any case, i guess time will judge the extent of Trump's achievements as a statesman.

you called Trump an isolationist, he is anything but. Who said only Muslims were messing up? What other fundamentalists are blowing themselves up on the regular?
Illegal aliens are criminals by definition, I am sure I didn't say whether they had skills or not.
We have many options for legal immigration into the US, there are even ways for illegals to become legal citizens so why are you defending criminals and exploitation?

Here is a link to a download of the paper http://researchbriefings.files.parliament.uk/documents/CBP-7178/CBP-7178.pdf but if you want to see the signature I thing you will have to write to the secretary of State office for an copy.

So no signature there either? I've read everything the US State Department has and no signatures there either. Seems like this was never actually an agreement. It should be published, I shouldn't have to send away for a copy.

Coin Marketplace

STEEM 0.21
TRX 0.25
JST 0.038
BTC 95691.61
ETH 3343.89
USDT 1.00
SBD 3.03