Induveca wrote:Lastly the most sickening portion of coverage today was Belgium's coverage of US CNN's attempt to "shock" the public with a "default" countdown 24/7. Their message was this isn't a game and impacts all world currencies. Irresponsible and childish not only in government but US media as well.
Like it or not, Obama.....as a leader/face of a governmental institution is labeled a monumental failure globally.
It was not the US attempting the shock the world, it was a wing nut joke political party doing it. They did it once before as well. The other side outlining the impact of this nonsense and specifically say it wouldn't just hurt the US, but all the world.
Your claim that Obama is viewed as a failure globally is a total joke and more propaganda. You discredit yourself again. The person and party that was a failure was Bush, his cronies like Darth Channey, and the Rs that feel in line with him.
http://globalpublicsquare.blogs.cnn.com ... -or-obama/
Europeans have had a four-year love affair with Barack Obama: 87 percent of Germans, 86 percent of French and 80 percent of the British have confidence in Obama, according to a 2012 poll by the Pew Research Center’s Global Attitudes project. In each case this is higher than public confidence in their own national leader. And 92 percent of the French, 89 percent of the Germans and 73 percent of the British want Obama reelected.
In the long run, if Romney wins, none of this may matter, as Europeans get to know him. But, in the short run, it could matter. A 2005 Pew Research Center survey found that in Britain, France, Germany, Spain and the Netherlands, strong majorities said the 2004 re-election of George W. Bush led them to have a less favorable opinion of the United States. A newly-elected Romney administration may have to contend with a similar European reaction if the popular Obama is defeated in what will come to a surprise to many of them.












