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🇺🇸⚠️This isn’t anti-American. It’s about permanently weakening US interests. The transatlantic alliance remains the biggest force multiplier for US power. That’s precisely why this approach is so damaging. Sanctioning Europeans over EU tech law doesn’t pressure Brussels into backing down. It misunderstands how the EU works, and weakens the...

72,813 次观看 • 6 个月前 •via X (Twitter)

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What many Americans don’t seem to grasp is that in Europe, the damage to US–EU relations is no longer a historical debate. It’s an ongoing reality. Trust collapsed before, and now the same patterns are back: tariffs, hostility toward allies, threats to NATO commitments, and open contempt for European institutions. Public trust in US leadership across Europe remains extremely low. Polling shows widespread skepticism, and European governments openly talk about “strategic autonomy” because reliance on Washington is seen as politically unstable. That conversation didn’t exist at this scale before. Trade tensions are back, diplomatic rows are back, and even visa and regulatory disputes have returned. European businesses and governments are openly planning around the assumption that the US may again act unpredictably. This isn’t anti-American sentiment. It’s damage control. When the same behavior repeats, people adjust accordingly. And the longer this goes on, the harder it becomes to undo. Trust, once broken twice, doesn’t reset easily. Even future administrations will inherit skepticism, contingency planning, and a Europe that no longer assumes the United States is automatically reliable. You can say “fuck off” if you want, but the consequences don’t care: Europe will keep hedging, diversifying alliances, building autonomy, and planning as if US support might disappear again, because that’s what repeated instability teaches allies to do.

Pete

194,513 次观看 • 6 个月前