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Americans need to stop thinking there is help coming from outside their borders.

I'm sorry but you all need to straighten out your mess on your own because the rest of the world is too busy running around the globe in Crisis Mode forming new economic and security partnerships, re-evaluating and when possible, discarding ties to the US.

We, Canada, the EU, Australia, and other countries, are facing an Emergency because the majority of US voters chose Trump, Project 2025, and desired a political shake up supposedly to form a new new "democracy".

Now the US is threatening to invade several countries, and has proved they won't hesitate to follow through.

All US voters and abstainers,
All US citizens are responsible for the global political destabilization.
It's your job to sort this out!

You needed to realize because You control the Wealthiest Economy and Most Powerful Military, You had a Responsibility to Worldwide Political and Economic Stability.

YOU Failed Your Duty To The World

๐Ÿ‘‰ No one can solve this problem except Americans.๐Ÿ‘ˆ

#USA

cc @VeroniqueB99
here's my edited earlier post similar to yours

@SnowyCA @VeroniqueB99 I agree about the americans having to solve the problems on their own but I have no anger towards the american people only their regime. With Gerrymandering and a fixed two party system it is hard for an alternative voice to be heard in usa

@Robo105 @VeroniqueB99

No offence, Robin however, sometimes we need to pull on our grown up pants and face reality.

The time for niceties are over!

Our kind thoughts will be of no comfort to our relatives as US troops cross our border, or when Supreme Lunatic Leader hit the nuclear bomb button.

@SnowyCA @VeroniqueB99 I agree with you there but remember we are friends with the Germans after WW2
@Robo105 @SnowyCA Oh that's a good example... do you know how long it took for countries the most affected by WWII (The UK, France, Holland, Belgium, to name a few) to trust someone hailing from Germany. I can tell you: decades. 2 generations to be exact. It took not only not remembering first hand (for the silent generation and the boomers were shot), it took Gen X who had been raised by a generation who was a kid when the war ended.... no one trusted Germany for 30 or 40 years easy.
@VeroniqueB99 True and it was probably easier for Canadians as we didn't have devastated rubble filling our countries and cities
@Robo105 ...indeed... and rumbles wasn't the only problem... people not coming back or coming back walking from whereverthefuck with holes full of maggots in their backs... I could go on... that's what Americans don't get at. all. They can't even conceive of it. That's why Europe is so much quicker at standing up.

@VeroniqueB99 @Robo105 WW-II left holes everywhere. In society, in families, in trust. Bicycles. As you said, it takes at least two generations for that to heal and, I would say, three to forget.

I can vividly remember the empty space outside Rotterdam Central Station in the late seventies, early eighties (my teenage years). The temporary, low buildings that were put there after the heart of the city was destroyed in the 10 May bombardment of 1940. (1/2)

Damn right the Dutch did not trust or even hated Germans. There was still a very good chance at the time that visiting Germans had been there before, only wearing Wehrmacht or SS uniforms. It was only when grandchildren no longer had grandparents who lived through the occupation, that that resentment faded. (2/2)
@ArtHarg @VeroniqueB99 This is partly which I am suggesting sustained peaceful protests as opposed to violent street fights is a better way forward. I don't think the usa ever recovered from the war of independence and civil war
@Robo105 @VeroniqueB99 The USA never recovered from colonisation and immigration by religious fanatics. Its formative events were shaped by people who found it okay to exploit, kill, rob and displace people that were not like them, or people who held fundamentalist religious views that they felt allowed them to impose their views on others. That fault has been present in the US from the beginning and, unlike in Canada or Middle and South America, it was never sufficiently addressed.
@ArtHarg @Robo105 ๐Ÿ˜ฅ half my family didn't come back and those who did weren't really 'there' for decades afterwards.
@VeroniqueB99 @Robo105 My father told about his father being taken for Arbeitseinsatz, but he came back at least. I canโ€™t imagine what it would have been like to lose half my family. Jewish survivors of WW-II could, of course.
@ArtHarg @Robo105 ...not only Jewish...lots of people were not.
@VeroniqueB99 @ArtHarg True, Roma, Poles, Communists, Homosexuals etc