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The media does still focus on the view inside the US, and I think voters would be surprised if they knew long-time international friends had views like this one, expressed on the BBC website today:
I don't know that many US voters, especially those young enough not to remember Reagan, would care about the "spheres of interest" thing, but if they/we -- many of us still sharing the European values of our immigrant ancestors -- could all understand that the actions of today in DC have lumped us together with Putin's Russia in the eyes of the world, this deniable coup of the oligarchy would be stopped. Permanently.
Find someone who can communicate such things, as well as a positive e pluribus unum vision of America, and the voters would flock to them (which means they would also have to have a saintly background and an immunity to bullets, poisons, etc., at least until the thug brigades understood that such things are unacceptable to the American people; this will not happen as long as the American people stay passively quivering in shock at home while the thugs and their front people continue taking the active role in American daily life).
...On the flipside, certain Trump supporters see in Putin a strong leader who embodies many of the conservative values they themselves share.
To some, Putin is an ally in a "war on woke".
...
Some think the division is about more than Trump's particular views and that Europe can not just sit tight waiting for his term in office to end.
"The US is becoming divorced from European values," argues Ed Arnold, senior research fellow at the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) in London. "That's difficult [for Europeans] to swallow because it means that it's structural, cultural and potentially long-term. "
"I think the current trajectory of the US will outlast Trump, as a person. I think Trumpism will outlast his presidency."
...
Trump appears ready to turn the page on the post-Cold War rules-based international order of sovereign states that are free to choose their own destinies and alliances.
What he seems to share with Vladimir Putin is a desire for a world in which the major powers, unconstrained by internationally agreed laws, are free to impose their will on smaller, weaker nations, as Russia has traditionally done in both its Tsarist and Soviet Empires.
That would mean a return to the "spheres of interest" system that prevailed for 40 years after the Second World War..."
I don't know that many US voters, especially those young enough not to remember Reagan, would care about the "spheres of interest" thing, but if they/we -- many of us still sharing the European values of our immigrant ancestors -- could all understand that the actions of today in DC have lumped us together with Putin's Russia in the eyes of the world, this deniable coup of the oligarchy would be stopped. Permanently.
Find someone who can communicate such things, as well as a positive e pluribus unum vision of America, and the voters would flock to them (which means they would also have to have a saintly background and an immunity to bullets, poisons, etc., at least until the thug brigades understood that such things are unacceptable to the American people; this will not happen as long as the American people stay passively quivering in shock at home while the thugs and their front people continue taking the active role in American daily life).