ROHDE: “So it’s fascinating. I’m here in Munich. There was a piece written earlier this week by Joel rosenthal. He’s head of a group called the carnegie council for ethical affairs. The big moment in Soros was when prime minister, the prime minister of Canada, talked about a moral, I’m sorry, a rupture between Europe and Canada and the us. And what this piece that what Joe rosenthal thought was that it was a moral rupture, that the basic values of democracy, of alliances, of truth, of speaking and facts is what’s dividing these two sides. So there’s a sense of energy here that this is sort of this is like the pushback in Davos, but it’s more aggressive and it’s an aggression towards sort of the way this administration acts. So there was a panel just one last anecdote that Mike Wallace, he’s the us ambassador to the UN was on. And he was repeatedly asked do you, you know, will the United States fight for this rules based order sort of system of ethics, if you will? And, you know, democracy and belief in alliances and, you know, fighting authoritarianism and walls instead sort of just brought up Europe doesn’t pay enough for its, you know, for NATO. And now Europe does pay more. Trump again succeeded in that policy choice. And there’s just sort of a stance here where you have a Trump Administration official talking about Americans in, you know, certain congressional districts being frustrated about that past situation with NATO payments. So there is this”
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David Rohde on Europe-U.S. Relations: There’s a Sense of Energy Here That ‘This Is Like the Pushback in Davos, But It’s More Aggressive’‘Trump again succeeded in that policy choice‘News & Politics,InternationalRUSH EXCERPT:ROHDE: “So it’s fascinating. I’m here in Munich. There was a piece written earlier this week by Joel rosenthal. He’s head of a group called the carnegie council for ethical affairs. The big moment in Soros was when prime minister, the prime minister of Canada, talked about a moral, I’m sorry, a rupture between Europe and Canada and the us. And what this piece that what Joe rosenthal thought was that it was a moral rupture, that the basic values of democracy, of alliances, of truth, of speaking and facts is what’s dividing these two sides. So there’s a sense of energy here that this is sort of this is like the pushback in Davos, but it’s more aggressive and it’s an aggression towards sort of the way this administration acts. So there was a panel just one last anecdote that Mike Wallace, he’s the us ambassador to the UN was on. And he was repeatedly asked do you, you know, will the United States fight for this rules based order sort of system of ethics, if you will? And, you know, democracy and belief in alliances and, you know, fighting authoritarianism and walls instead sort of just brought up Europe doesn’t pay enough for its, you know, for NATO. And now Europe does pay more. Trump again succeeded in that policy choice. And there’s just sort of a stance here where you have a Trump Administration official talking about Americans in, you know, certain congressional districts being frustrated about that past situation with NATO payments. So there is this”Video filesFullCompactSort byDateSummaryRelevancePopularityPer page81216Audio filesFullCompactSort byDateSummaryRelevancePopularityPer page81216Recipient e-mailMessage (optional)Preview
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