The president of the United States has had success in achieving Congress’ approval for his plan to face the financial crisis in his country. In just the last three months, one and a half million North American workers lost their jobs, making this achievement vital to Barack Obama’s administration. Furthermore, he knows that the world will be attentive as the luck of the world economy will depend in great measure on what occurs in America.
For critics in all parts of the world, left or right, perhaps this is not the best plan, but they must recognize that it was the result of a wide consensus in which every side had to make concessions.
For those impatient ones, this is too much. They don’t want to wait. They don’t understand that if this open attitude is conserved, then with the same method they will be able to make all the perfections that they require in the future.
After all, this is how democracies function: listening and refining.
Para los crÃticos de la derecha y la izquierda en todo el mundo quizás este no sea el mejor plan, pero incluso ellos deberán reconocer que es resultado de un amplio consenso, en el que todas las partes hicieron concesiones.
If the United States continues to indulge in ... power and military might ... and ignores the rule of law and the alliance system that have made [it] great, then that power and might will eventually slip through its fingers.
Trump behaves like a child who goes trick-or-treating at Halloween. People, including the Norwegian prime minister, don’t know whether to laugh or cry.
With his reliance on naked power and rejection of all constraints on his authority, Trump represents the opposite of everything that made the U.S. great.
The United States’ demand for drugs destroys Mexico’s everyday life, and those who escape from this destroyed life are again met with the guns of U.S. ICE agents.