BEAUTIFUL SCOTLAND - A FILM BY JOHN DUNCAN |
Our Scottish friends are Conservatives (Tories,) and so each day we would read The Daily Telegraph to get our news. (The Telegraph is a long-standing, well-known, conservative-oriented newspaper in the United Kingdom (U.K.) and is referred to by our friends as “The Torygraph.”) On the Thursday following the U.S. elections the headlines in The Telegraph read: “America stays divided after the midterm elections” with a sub-headline stating “President is stronger than you might think.” Both, I thought accurately reflected what was going on in our national politics back home.
On the 11th hour, of the 11th day, of
the 11th month, 2018, church services and ceremonies across Europe
marked the end of that horrific war. However,
the message of American sacrifice made in bringing it to an end became subsumed
in personal controversy because the President “tweeted” his disgust with Macron
and then cancelled a scheduled trip to an American World War I cemetery.
All of this is to say that America continues to be widely
covered in the European press and what our President does (or says) is a big
part of that. There is also some
yearning in the U.K. that the political “glue” that holds the United States
together is needed right now in Europe.
The current government headed by Prime Minister Theresa May could fall
because what she is proposing for “Brexit” is splitting her own Conservative
Party, and people are realizing that the past 70 years of relative peace and
cooperation in Europe is not something that can be taken for granted.
So where do the British think American politics are going in
the future? One of the articles
mentioned above ended with this analysis:
“Demography is destiny and there’s no escaping the sense that Trump speaks for those who are essentially trying to preserve a way of life—rather than the younger, more culturally liberal Americans who are trying to build a new one.”
Though a bit broad-brushed, I thought that this statement
pretty well summed up where we are politically in America. It also describes the rural part of the
country where I live and vote. The more
things change in the country—the more they seem to remain the same around here.
Rolland Kidder
Stow, NY
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