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Trump's 2017 address to Congress

E. Ablorh-Odjidja

March 01, 2017

 
"My job is not to represent the world," Trump said. "It is to be the president of America."

Problematic or not, the statement was self-evident and had much to offer, just by itself and or watching how Democrats reacted to Trump as he spoke to Congress on February 28, 2017.

Overall, it was deemed a great speech, but not for the Democrats.

 

But let's begin our review from the outside.

Part of the uncomfortable part of Trump's speech was how it forced one to reflect back to Africa to wonder when any president on this continent had recently been this bold, in the attempt to be transformational.

Trump's spoke about a vision for a renewed America.  We need one for Africa.

For America, it was for creating jobs, invigorating educational chances through school choice programs, making dangerous communities safer for citizens, building crumbling infrastructures and repealing and replacing Obamacare.

With School Choice, the individual could pick the school his child would attend and not leave that choice to bureaucrats to decide, based on the deplorable school choice by zip code assignments.

By repealing Obamacare and its mandate, the individual gets to free himself from the current expensive, bureaucracy imposed health insurance dispensing system.

Under the intended Trump's health plan, the individual could look to the market for solutions and not the government.  He could buy needed health insurance coverage on market at less cost, which will be guaranteed by competition.

Additionally, government policy would assure that pre-existing conditions are covered at the health market.


Health insurance companies would compete in an environment called the market, where the customer would be the determinant and not government issued mandates.

For foreign affairs, the consideration would be America first, Trump said.

There could be some who might think little of this statement. They would label it selfish, isolationist, uncharitable and inward-looking policy that would do humanity no good, just because it said America first.

But don't take the above complaints seriously. They are complaints of convenience.

 

Many in this same group do already protest that America was meddling too much in the affairs of the world.

 

 America the occupier. They didn't like Bush meddling in Iraq. Nor appreciated the neo-cons who thought the American ideal of democracy must be imposed on other countries in the world.

Trump, in his speech, withdrew America from the old America superpower worldview.

In truth, many of Trump's foreign critics would prefer the continuation of the old policy that provided largesse, that doled out loads of cash like a drunken rich uncle, on the rest of the world, instead of this America First policy approach.

 

Like it or not, it was the dislike of that old American related policies that made the election of Trump possible. 

 

A big segment of American society, like Trump, got tired of the old approaches for America supremacy.  No longer would they allow America to extend herself as a super-power policeman for a world that didn't appreciate her sacrifices of wealth and blood.

The expense of many foreign interferences has been heavy on American coffers.  Some 6 trillion dollars spent so far on wars in the Middle East alone and nothing concrete achieved, as Trump observed.

The interference fatigue produced has also resulted in Trump's America First policy. It is apparent today that America is no longer in the regime change business.
 
But if America had to come to the defense of a distressed nation, Trump would expect that nation to carry part of the cost.  No more free-loading at America's expense by other nations.

It is the same message for all. 

 

The same also for NATO, in this case, a preexisting understanding in the formation of this group, but one that had been conveniently ignored by the other member nations.

 

Now, they all would have to pay their fair share of the NATO bill.  Not surprisingly, the members quickly agreed.

There were more surprises in the speech about Trump's new approach.

He began by honoring Black History month and seemed genuinely concerned about the plight of civil rights in America; a refreshing feeling and not one driven by political correctness.  Make America great again would be for all the races.


Many agreed that his speech was “so thematic and consequential. “It was Trumpism "without the affects," they claimed.

Some said Trump became truly "the United States president' on the night of February 28, 2017," on the back of his speech.

But Democrat members of Congress were not so receptive to Trump's speech.  Their reluctance to honor Trump from the start was overt.

 

Only a few on the Democrat's side showed outward signs of appreciation. 

The majority watched malevolently and hoped that Trump would implode on the dais.

 

Some said Democrats, by their reaction to the speech, "did themselves a disfavor,” as Trump grew larger with every word he spoke and every point he made, many vastly unassailable.

Liberal stalwarts like Rosie O'Donnell, who earlier before Trump's address at Congress was at a protest on a park across the street from the White House, still maintained Trump was undeserving of the presidency because he was anti-woman and a pro-war advocate. She insisted that she was the real anti-war personality and advocate of peace.


Rosie, the antiwar hero and of non-specific gender, was now a declared champion for women.  Evidently, Rosie knew Trump hated women just as much as we already knew about her feelings for a real man!

Bob Woodward, another liberal icon of Watergate fame, surprisingly claimed Trump “knows how to dominate a room.”

The reality was, for once, Democrats in Congress were looking at a specter they had feared; not the demon they had created in their speeches - the Manchurian candidate the Russians bought for the American electorate.

There on the dais was a man who looked more presidential than ever. 

 

The man they had fought against as unfit, whom they hadn't given five minutes’ worth of a presidential honeymoon, was standing there on the dais, speaking sense credibly from the heart.

As elsewhere, Democrats in Congress were looking at an incarnation of their worst fear, the strong possibility that a successful Trump's presidency might unfold for the best.  

And Trump did all this with one speech.

 

E. Ablorh-Odjidja, Publisher www.ghanadot.com, Washington, DC, March 01, 2017
Permission to publish: Please feel free to publish or reproduce, with credits, unedited. If posted at a website, email a copy of the web page to publisher@ghanadot.com . Or don't publish at all.


 
 
 

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