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Donald Trump Says He’s Glad World Leaders Are ‘Rattled’

Once again, like many Republican elitists, world leaders and even Barack Obama are ostracizing Donald Trump and his supporters as a small group of renegades that are merely in the way of their globalism experiment.

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Obama isn’t exaggerating; the leaders of many nations have voiced their opposition to Trump’s more radical positions – and the list isn’t short.

President of the United States of America, Barrack Obama, today said that the Republican Presidential party nominee, Donald Trump, is rattling world leaders. Fredrik Logevall, the Laurence D. Belfer professor of global affairs at Harvard University, said in an email that outgoing presidents “typically maintain a low profile in these situations”.

He is to become the first United States President to visit the Japanese city where the first atomic bomb was dropped. They seek to remain above the fray – it’s more dignified, more presidential.

A week later, the president delivered the commencement address at Rutgers University, where Obama went much further in mocking the presumptive Republican nominee. Mr. Obama suggests that the party unifies and sticks to issues concerning the country rather than making personal jabs. Romney repaid the favor to Obama during a trip to Europe and Israel four years later.

Pledging to improve ties with Russian Federation, urging U.S. allies in North Atlantic Treaty Organisation and Asia to pay their fair share of defense costs, and threatening to pull military forces out of Japan and South Korea are some of Trump’s proposals.

He has proposed building a wall on the Mexican border and has taken a harsh line against China over the USA trade imbalance. He’s said he and British Prime Minister David Cameron, who called him “stupid and wrong”, would not get along and sparred with the newly-elected Muslim mayor of London over his proposed ban on Muslim immigration. Trump has said that allies in Europe and Asia should finance more of their own defense, he would seek to improve relations with Russian Federation and he would alter security agreements with South Korea and Japan.

“Trump: You base your statements on photoshopped pics?”.

Trump went on to say that Obama is a “president who’s done a frightful job”.

He added, “Sometimes our politics doesn’t express all the goodness of the people, but usually the voters make good decisions and democracy works, so I’m optimistic we’ll get through this period”.

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He added, “I guarantee you that the eventual nominee sure wishes it were over now”.

President Barack Obama leaves the podium after a news conference at the Shima Kanko Hotel in Shima Japan Thursday