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New World Order Title: Donald Trump is committed to globalisation, Davos told © Bloomberg A senior member of Donald Trumps team insisted that the president-elect was committed to globalisation, open trade and Nato, despite recent comments that unsettled Americas allies. Anthony Scaramucci, Mr Trumps newly appointed public liaison official, told the World Economic Forum in Davos on Tuesday that the European and American elite had misunderstood Mr Trump and would change their views when he took office. In particular, he argued that it was wrong to assume that Mr Trump was opposed to free trade. He was simply seeking to ensure that trade deals were symmetrical, rather than organised as a means for the US to help other countries. Every single trade deal that the US has [created] since 1945 were these asymmetrical deals. Because we were trying to help countries improve their living standards, he said. We call those agreements free trade but they were free asymmetrically. So all were asking for now is to create more symmetry in these trade agreements. Mr Scaramucci, former owner of SkyBridge, a hedge fund, added: If the Chinese believe in globalisation they have to reach to us and create this symmetry because the path to more prosperity is via the American middle class and workers. Trump could be one of the last great hopes for globalism. He also denied that Mr Trump was seeking to dismantle Nato, despite comments in an interview with a British newspaper at the weekend in which he said the alliance was obsolete. Mr Scaramucci argued that the president-elect was trying to renovate or update a treaty that has been forged after the second world war in vastly different conditions from the present. Nato was designed to fortify the western European democracies against the spectre of a communist threat. Today the world is dramatically different from the world we lived in before Trump says we need to spend less time focused on Communism and more on radical Islamic terrorism. We have renovated our homes and our wardrobes since the 1940s. We have to change the treaty. The absence of anybody else other than Mr Scaramucci from the Trump inner team at Davos provoked concern from some CEOs, amid fears that they may be playing down their protectionist instincts in a bid to win corporate support. Scaramucci is trying to sell him hard but we just dont know what we can believe, an American CEO observed. Mr Scaramuccis comments were relatively well received by many of the Davos delegates, not least because other Republican figures have also been trying to present a reassuring message to Europe and Asia in recent days. However, others expressed concern over whether they could actually believe the upbeat message, given the unpredictable nature of Mr Trumps campaign and communications in recent months. Some pro-Trump business leaders and mainstream Republicans have been using private breakfast and dinner meetings to make the case to their European and Asian colleagues for giving the new administration the benefit of the doubt. We need to be optimistic, one senior American executive, with close ties with the Trump team, told a group of Asian and European officials and executives. Or as another Wall Street executive argued: We have to work with this administration to get the best outcome its in our interests that Trump succeeds, not fails. The team around Mr Scaramucci has been seeking to make this case by citing several key points. One is the fact that Trump has appointed a number of senior business executives into cabinet roles and some of these, such as Rex Tillerson, former head of ExxonMobil, are already well known to the attendees at Davos. Secondly, the Trump team has stressed to the Davos delegates that the incoming administration has business-friendly policies, that aim to unleash so-called animal spirits and growth. It also pointed out the fact that the House, Senate and White House are all under Republican control has raised the chance for meaningful action after a long period of gridlock. They stressed that voters had called for radical change and warned that if that call was not heeded, there could be even more radical social and political protest in the coming years. People such as Mr Scaramucci have also tried to persuade their counterparts that they will push the administration to take responsible approaches to managing the dollar and global relations. Poster Comment: Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: hondo68 (#0)
I seriously doubt that Trump supporters are in agreement with that. Si vis pacem, para bellum Rebellion to tyrants is obedience to God. There can be no divided allegiance here. Any man who says he is an American, but something else also, isn't an American at all. We have room for but one flag, the American flag... We have room for but one language here, and that is the English language... and we have room for but one sole loyalty and that is a loyalty to the American people."Theodore Roosevelt-1907. I am concerned for the security of our great nation; not so much because of any threat from without, but because of the insidious forces working from within." -- General Douglas MacArthur
Globalists Like Obama, and Mitt |
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