One very nice truth right now obviously, is that Ang Moh globally are wanting Trump's ass more than anybody:
More than Muslims, More than Russians, More than Chinese, More than NK Kim Jong Nuke, More than Iran, More than Cuba More than Venezuela etc.
It is American and Europeans & even Aussie Kangaroo Ang Mohs, who want Trumps ass, THE MOST BADLY!
HUAT AH!
http://www.politico.eu/article/us-p...fugee-ban-stirs-european-unease-condemnation/
Trump’s refugee ban stirs European unease, condemnation
Leaders react to the president’s order to ban people from 7 Muslim-majority countries.
By Simon Marks
1/29/17, 3:41 PM CET
Updated 1/29/17, 7:10 PM CET
U.S. President Donald Trump’s decision to ban people from seven Muslim-majority countries from entering the United States elicited rebukes from European allies and put two of the leaders he has courted — Britain’s Theresa May and Germany’s Angela Merkel — in a politically difficult situation at home.
The White House move, which sparked protests at airports and legal challenges in the U.S., looks likely to strain the transatlantic alliance at the start of the Trump presidency. Merkel has pledged to work with the new American leader to shore up that alliance, while May is seeking to build a close relationship as Britain gets ready to leave the EU.
Heightening their discomfort, the new American president’s rhetoric and now actions on Muslim migration echo the positions of Europe’s far-right parties, which pose a challenge to the Continent’s political establishment.
In the past two years, it is the EU and not the U.S. that has repeatedly been hit by terror attacks carried out by people who claim allegiance to the Islamic State, most recently last month in Berlin. Europe has a much bigger population of Muslims than the U.S. does and has seen hundreds of thousands of migrants, many of them from war-torn countries in the Middle East, seek refuge in their countries.
These considerations were reflected in Merkel’s response to Trump. The German chancellor spoke to the new president by telephone Saturday and their joint statement didn’t mention his executive order on migrants from Muslim countries. On Sunday morning, her spokesman issued a cautiously worded statement expressing “regret” about the move. It seemed aimed at a domestic and European audience more than Trump.
President Trump Speaks With German Chancellor Angela Merkel On The Telephone
U.S. President Donald Trump in the Oval Office speaking on the phone with Chancellor of Germany Angela Merkel, January 28, 2017 | Drew Angerer/Getty Images
Merkel is “convinced that the necessary, decisive struggle against terrorism does not justify a general suspicion against people of a certain origin or a certain religion,” said Steffen Seibert, the chancellor’s spokesperson. He also said Merkel has explained the rights of war refugees on humanitarian grounds as stipulated in the Geneva Convention on Refugees during the telephone call with Trump on Saturday.
Britain’s Prime Minister May faced backlash at home after her embrace of Trump in Washington Friday. The White House issued its order only hours after she left. Asked about it by the traveling press corps three separate times at her next stop in Ankara, May refused to criticize Trump. By the time she arrived in London late Saturday night, her spokesman issued a statement to say the British government did not agree with the ban.
“Immigration policy in the United States is a matter for the government of the United States, just the same as immigration policy for this country should be set by our government,” the statement said. “But we do not agree with this kind of approach and it is not one we will be taking.”
As part of its reaction to the new administration’s approach on immigration, Britain will make so-called “representations” to the U.S. government to protect the rights of British citizens looking to enter the Unites States, the statement added.
U.S. President Donald Trump
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British Conservative lawmaker Nadhim Zahawi said he would no longer be allowed to enter the U.S. since he is a dual national. “I don’t think I have felt discriminated since little school when the kids were very cruel, as a young boy coming from Iraq of Kurdish origin,” he told BBC One’s Andrew Marr Show on Sunday.
Former UKIP leader Nigel Farage, however, lauded Trump for his decision. “He’s fully entitled to do this and as far as we’re concerned in this country, yes I would like to see extreme vetting,” Farage told Andrew Neil on BBC One’s Sunday Politics show.
“I call on the American president: Remember your forerunner, Ronald Reagan. Remember his words: ‘Tear down this wall”’ — The mayor of Berlin, Michael Müller
First Minister of Scotland, Nicola Sturgeon, echoed a tweet from Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Saturday evening, saying “those fleeing persecution, terror & war” would be “welcome to Scotland, too.”
The executive action affects nationals from Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen but not Afghanistan, Saudi Arabia and Pakistan. It also suspends the entry of all refugees to the U.S. for 120 days. A judge blocked deportations of those who were being held at U.S. airports.
France’s President François Hollande said Saturday he intended to have a “firm discussion” with Trump regarding his policy and urged EU countries to respond. Presidential candidate Emmanuel Macron, who broke away from the Socialist Party to start his own political movement, said on Twitter: “I stand with the people fleeing war and persecution. I stand with the people defending our values.”
London Mayor Sadiq Khan, a practicing Muslim, on Sunday morning called the ban “shameful and cruel.”
The mayor of Berlin, Michael Müller, criticized Trump’s policies on migration, including his stated promise to build a wall along the Mexican border. “I call on the American president: Remember your forerunner, Ronald Reagan. Remember his words: ‘Tear down this wall’,” he wrote. “And so I say: ‘Mr. President, don’t build this wall.'”
Authors:
Simon Marks
https://www.yahoo.com/news/europe-must-firm-response-trump-hollande-142646979.html
Hollande urges 'firm' European response to Trump
[AFP]
Brigitte HAGEMANN, Hervé ASQUIN
AFPJanuary 29, 2017
French President Francois Hollande said Europe must "engage in a firm dialogue" with the US with a goal towards solving global problems
View photos
French President Francois Hollande said Europe must "engage in a firm dialogue" with the US with a goal towards solving global problems (AFP Photo/Adam BERRY)
Lisbon (AFP) - French President Francois Hollande urged Europe to form a united front and provide a "firm" response to US President Donald Trump, at a gathering Saturday of southern European Union leaders.
"We must conduct firm dialogue with the new American administration which has shown it has its own approach to the problems we all face," he said at the end of the gathering as he was flanked by the other leaders who took part.
Trump has rattled America's traditional European allies with a range of radical policy plans.
He has called NATO "obsolete", announced he would rip up a planned transatlantic trade plan and supported Britain's move to leave the EU, praising the decision as "a wonderful thing" during a meeting Friday with British Prime Minister Theresa May.
On Friday he also signed a sweeping executive order to suspend the arrival of refugees and impose tough controls on travellers from seven Muslim countries.
During his first phone conversation with Trump late Saturday, Hollande stressed the "economic and political consequences of a protectionist approach", adding that the principle of "acceptance of refugees" should be respected.
"Faced with an unstable and uncertain world, withdrawal into oneself is a dead-end response," Hollande was quoted as saying in an Elysee Palace statement.
Hollande had earlier told the gathering that "when he adopts protectionist measures, which could destabilise economies not just in Europe but the economies of the main countries of the world, we have to respond".
"And when he refuses the arrival of refugees, while Europe has done its duty, we have to respond."
- Ready to cooperate with Trump -
While officially the new administration in Washington was not on the agenda, the six other European leaders who took part in the summit also alluded to Trump.
Italian Prime Minister Paolo Gentiloni said Europe was "ready, interested and willing to cooperate" with the Trump administration.
"But we are Europe, and we cherish our values," he added.
Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy defended the EU project, saying it had helped transform Europe into the world region with the "highest level of progress, civil rights and well being".
Also meeting in Lisbon were the leaders of Malta, Cyprus, Greece and Portugal.
The summit was a follow up to a first gathering in Athens in September 2016 as part of a push by Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras to create a strong southern "axis" to counter the influence of nations in northern Europe.
The group is often referred to -- sometimes dismissively -- as "Club Med", even though one of its members, Portugal, is not on the Mediterranean.
It includes some of the nations hardest hit by the financial crisis.
Portugal and Greece both needed international bailouts worth tens of billions of euros which came with demands for tough austerity measures and economic reforms.
- Boost investment -
As in the first meeting in Greece, the mostly centre-left leaders gathered in Portugal urged Brussels to do more to boost flagging growth in the bloc.
A joint declaration signed by the participating countries said the EU should boost funding for strategic investment.
"We share the urgency of promoting investment, growth, employment, with a special focus on youth employment," it read.
The Lisbon summit comes ahead of a February 3 meeting of EU leaders in Malta to look at the future of the bloc without Britain, its second-largest economy and its richest financial centre.
Rajoy said Madrid would host a third summit of southern EU nations in April.
"These countries meet informally and they have no other goal other than to work for the people of the entire European Union," he said.
The goal is not to create an "organisation" inside Europe but to act "in the service of the entire European Union," added Hollande.
The so-called Visegrad group -- made up of Hungary, Slovakia, the Czech Republic and Poland -- have also held their own meetings to present a united front.
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