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Jack Bergeron's avatar

The United States has no business in Ukraine, in Europe or any other countries. Our first President wisely advised future generations of Americans to treat all foreign nations with benevolence and to avoid foreign entanglements. Instead of seeking ways to mutually coexist with Russia, the United States with NATO has taken an aggressive stance against Russia. Why? It makes no sense. We need to bring all our military and equipment home and secure our own borders. We should immediately end all foreign aid, money we lend from China. On a personal level would anyone here take out a mortgage you couldn’t afford and then give the money to help an unfriendly neighbor? We are fools! We have been blessed with a land of tremendous abundance, more than sufficient to meet all our needs. We should not trade with other countries that do not adhere to similar clean air, clean water and labor standards as our states have adopted and implemented. Anything less is not fair trade. It’s still not too late to heed our first President’s wise advice.

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John Cougar Misanthrope's avatar

"More subversively, and probably unintentionally, the interview also deeply undermined the Biden Administration, by starkly contrasting our two leaders."

Knowing the history of how Putin came to power, I continue to believe that ultimately Putin is one of "them". That being said, the main takeaway from the interview was the deep contrast between Putin and Biden. Putin gave a history lesson. He talked about macroeconomics. He even shared his thoughts on the challenges of AI governance. Meanwhile, the current occupant of the White House probably can't name the VP.

Great round-up, sir. Happy Friday.

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