Trump’s Win Has Global Implications

It is interesting how negative speculation about the effect a Trump presidency would have on South Africa’s trade with the US has suddenly given way to cautious optimism (Business Report, November 11).

Fears that Trump’s tariff-premised trade policy would alienate South Africa and other African states stem from how he pursued matters during his first presidency. But global circumstances are now markedly different with respect to the power blocs that have emerged and the threat of war.

What is not emphasised by the opinion-imposing mass media is that apart from righting matters in the US, Trump’s mission is to blunt the WEF globalists’ Orwellian subversion of nation-states and their subservience to a totalitarian oligarchy.

In that respect, Trump’s trade policy is not aimed at driving countries into the arms of the Orwellian WEF but at shrinking their deceitful influence. In South Africa’s case, it could mean nudging us away from BRICS which, as Professor Michael Walsh states, would have implications with our relations with China, Iran and Russia. A further corollary would then concern attitudes to Israel and Taiwan.

Within 72 hours of  Trump’s landslide victory, its implications were apparent:

  • An upward surge in the US stock market;
  • The latest migrant caravan headed for the US disbanded in Mexico;
  • Qatar agreed to evict Hamas leaders;
  • Hamas now wants to end the war;
  • The Taliban seeks a new US relationship;
  • The EU wants to buy US gas, not Russian gas.
  • China says it wants peaceful co-existence.

Trump’s return to the White House portends a wave of implications worldwide which should be welcomed by all who cherish peace, national sovereignty, liberty and free speech and who strive to live in a God-fearing world.

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