Statements by US President Donald Trump about the losses of the USSR in The Second World War does not correspond to historical data. This was announced today, January 23, by the press secretary of the President of the Russian Federation Dmitry Peskov.
Trump’s “America First” philosophy is often described as a return to the kind of isolationism that prevailed between the two world wars. But that’s not quite accurate. He wants to stride the global stage. But he’s advocating a foreign policy where America is dominant in its own hemisphere and engages elsewhere selectively.
Next up was Charlie Chaplin’s 1941 black comedy, “The Great Dictator,” an anti-fascist spoof that, along with his capitalism-critical movie “Modern Times,” was used as evidence of the silent film star’s communist sympathies during the Red Scare of the late 1940s and early ’50s.
Not a single Democrat objected to the barrage of fascist threats made by Trump in the course of his inaugural address.
Loyalists are lined up to help push an economic and social agenda that is sure to hearten his supporters and fuel an even deeper disdain among his detractors.
The trio have expressed their anger after Donald Trump threatened Russia and said that Moscow helped the U.S. win World War II.
It would appear Russian President Vladimir Putin sees Donald Trump‘s reinstatement to the White House as a new era of reduced hostility between the two nations, as he congratulated the new president and emphasized the need to prevent a Third World War.
Richard Nixon recorded the lowest approval rating in history—24 percent—just before resigning in August 1974 amid the Watergate scandal. Other low exit approval ratings include Harry Truman (32 percent in December 1952), Jimmy Carter (34 percent in December 1980), and George W. Bush (34 percent in January 2009).
It’s called the Voice of America, the storied news outlet promising “the truth” since it first broadcast stories about democracy into Nazi Germany during World War II
As Donald Trump takes the oath of office again, the world watches with a sense that, this time, those outside the U.S. have a better idea what to expect.
President Donald Trump threatened to impose "high levels" of sanctions on Russia and tariffs on imports from there if the country did not reach a settlement to end its war against Ukraine. Trump's warning,