Subject: A Russian lurker's view
Author:
Posted on: 2016-11-11 22:24:00 UTC

Well, I'll admit that my first reaction was relief as well. Relief at knowing USA had elected a President more open to a multi-polar world, a President who is not going to try to go for another attempt at regime change, in my country or elsewhere, a President who's consistently signalled he's going to leave our Syrian operation be and not plunge the country into further chaos by giving more weapons to terrorists and imposing a "no-fly zone".

Of course, the human brain is naturally wired to detect threats and plan for them rather then rest on laurels, so now I'm also terrified about what he'll do to climate, alongside basically everyone else who takes heed. Though, I have learnt today that he signed a letter alongside lots of other businessmen telling Obama to do more about climate change before Copenhagen.

An uncharitable interpretation is that he only did it to spite Obama, of course, and his later denialism was his real view... but he has to understand it now, or else he wouldn't be building seawalls for his Scottish properties. Moreover, there was that thing he said about his deal-making principle when discussing the Iran deal, I believe: to first terrify everyone and get lots of concessions, but ultimately go along with the spirit of it. In that case, the current panic might even be more beneficial in long term than the complacency Hillary's years would've brought.

If all that fails and he does what he currently says... he's an enormously unpopular US leader worldwide, who would be taking up a position every other country's leader understands is highly dangerous for them. If that's not a perfect storm for open defiance of USA that will lead to the imposition of global sanctions, I don't know what is. In that case, the impact on the economy and the associated decrease in consumption will also help to reduce emission and probably counter much of his coal-loving.

As someone who doesn't live in the US and so isn't affected by its domestic policy (as fascinating as it can often be, for right and wrong reasons), these global-reaching issues were of main importance to me. From reading the board, I understand that many of you have legitimate grievances and reasons to feel unsafe now, but again, it's only four years before you can radically beat the tide back. The US is still one of the better countries in the world to be LGBTQ+, etc., and four years won't undo that.

Your prisons and police are a disgrace of course (in Russia, it's actually illegal for police to open fire without giving warning), and this is set to get worse, but like it or not, the rest of the world will barely notice this in comparison to above. Perhaps, you'll finally manage to recognise great and capable candidates before it's too late next time. You still had you could vote for in this election of course, named Jill Stein. Would've loved if she won it somehow, and hope she and Baraka will manage to put these four years to good use regardless.

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