Why would world leaders be frightened of a Trump presidency? The main reason is that the exploitation of America will stop if Trump is elected. Obama opened up America to the world – which has raped and pilfered our country with the help of Obama by allowing all of these illegals to enter the country. Where else in the world has a country allowed people to enter and immediately under a lawless regime receive free health care, free welfare (housing and food), and now wanting to allow them to vote in our political system. Nothing will change if Kasich and Cruz are elected because they are both a part of the Elite Republicans and sponsored by the lobbyists and Wall Street.
Compared to what we have today with Obama, it will be a structured country again. Enough can’t be said about Obama and how he, the Supreme Court, the Congress, and the Senate have deliberately destroyed this country. All of this began with Bush I and his One World order and their wealth distribution. The story that has unfolded is that the world has lived above their means and are now looking for a bailout – which is America. Folks, that is where we are with Obama not having any allegiance to this country and trying to destroy it.
These countries and America are at a crossroad and realize if Trump is elected “their free lunch will come to an end.” And I pray every day that will happen. Just hope people in this country see that too!
Friday, April 22 2016
Politico: World Leaders Frightened of Trump Presidency
By Greg Richter | Thursday, 21 Apr 2016 05:55 PM
World leaders are privately terrified Donald Trump will be elected president, but are keeping quiet publicly over fears of retaliation should the billionaire businessman succeed in his quest for the White House, Politico reports.
The website quoted more than two dozen U.S. and foreign officials, saying world leaders are in “full-boil panic” at the prospect of a Trump presidency and are not comforted by President Barack Obama’s assurances that Trump will either fail in his effort to secure the Republican nomination or will lose to Democrat Hillary Clinton in the general election.
Most have watched as numerous predictions that Trump wouldn’t go far in the primary process have failed miserably.
“They’re scared and they’re trying to understand how real this is,” one American official was quoted. “They all ask. They follow our politics with excruciating detail. They ask: ‘What is this Trump phenomenon? Can he really win? What would it mean for U.S. policy going forward or U.S. engagement in the world?’ They’re all sort of incredulous.”
Many are rushing to make deals with the Obama administration.
“In Europe, we are concerned about the U.S. possibly turning toward a more isolationist orientation. That would not be good for United States, good for Europe, good for the world,” said Olli Rehn, Finnish minister of economic affairs. “We need the U.S. engaged in global affairs in a constructive, positive way.”
“However much people recoiled from George W. Bush or have been disappointed by Obama, they see Trump as off the Richter scale,” said Peter Mandelson, British Cabinet member for prime ministers Tony Blair and Gordon Brown. “The reason for that is not that he must be stupid — nobody thinks that — but that he’s disdainful, unscrupulous, prepared to say anything to harvest the populist vote. And that makes people frightened.”