Saturday, April 7, 2018

Hussein (O) in China-Track Events.


 Q !xowAT4Z3VQ ID: db01ff 914569

>>914510
When was Hussein in China?
Track events.
Timeline.
We are in control
W

https://thediplomat.com/2017/12/a-closer-look-at-obamas-trip-to-china/

Former U.S. President Barack Obama concluded his visit to China, India, as well as France last week. During this three-country tour, Obama met with all his former counterparts — Chinese President Xi Jinping, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, and French President Emmanuel Macron. Notably, Obama’s trip to Asia took place just weeks after his successor, Donald Trump, made his first appearance in the region. Multiple news outlets thus claimed that Obama had come back to the world stage, but Obama’s tour actually looked more like a mixture of lecture circuit and insignificant private meetups. During his time in China, Obama first visited Shanghai and attended a business conference organized by Global Alliance of SMEs (a self-proclaimed non-profit multinational non-governmental organization founded by the U.S.-China Exchange Association). At the conference, Obama gave a 20-minute speech to more than 2,500 business people. Shanghaiist.com reported that the event was closed to the media and top tickets “cost a bundle.” Although the conference organizer didn’t disclose whether it had paid Obama for his appearance this time, it’s widely assumed that a large speaking fee would be paid to such a high-profile former president at this kind of business event.
Barack Obama and Xi Jinping sit on an inscribed redwood park bench at the Annenberg Retreat at Sunnylands in Rancho Mirage, Calif., June 8, 2013.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=80jMU0b8PR0
http://www.scmp.com/topics/barack-obama
Barack Hussein Obama II, born August 4, 1961, is the 44th and current President of the United States, and the first black US president. He defeated Republican rival John McCain in the general election of 2008, and was inaugurated as president on January 20, 2009. Obama was named the 2009 Nobel Peace Prize laureate in October 2009. He was re-elected president in November 2012, defeating Republican nominee Mitt Romney. 
Defeated John McCain?? All Part of The Plan. This Article right here Lies. 
Keep Track of the Dates. John McCain is known as War Hero (MY ASS) he sacrificed 1000's of Americans still trapped in POW back in Vietnam war in 1973-1974 
Obama also Ran Against Hillary. It Was not much Choice in This election, either O, Hillary or McCain either Way we were Fucked 3 way the Last 8 years O was President. It was all part of the NWO plan, aka Bushes, aka, Rothschild, aka, Soros, All For Gun Control, Human Genocide. 
https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/obamas-china-visit-gets-off-to-rocky-start/2016/09/03/a188b2c6-71df-11e6-b786-19d0cb1ed06c_story.html?utm_term=.53db1a38299d
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2017/dec/01/o

bama-and-xi-all-smiles-as-veteran-cadres-reunite-in-beijing
 Former US President Barack Obama meets with Chinese President Xi Jinping at the Diaoyutai State Guesthouse in Beijing. Photograph: Li Xueren/AP

http://www.newsweek.com/barack-back-obama-returns-politics-visits-china-and-india-725005



HERE'S THE LINK KEEP TRACK OF DATES:
https://www.axios.com/how-trumps-first-visit-to-china-was-similar-to-obamas-1513306803-f779da72-5376-42a2-8f74-9b9ebacb7fb8.html

Trump in China in 2016; Obama in China in 2009. Photos: Andrew Harnik / AP, Charles Dharapak / AP
President Trump has largely taken it easy on China during his two-day stop in Beijing, something Barack Obama was criticized for during his first trip to China as president, which took place under surprisingly similar circumstances.
The parallels: Obama and Trump both visited China in November of their first years in office as a part of larger multi-country swings through Asia as major legislative packages hung in the balance back home. And each of their trips garnered criticism for being largely deferential to their Chinese hosts — though both presidents might argue that their decisions were part of a larger strategy to establish stronger relations with the United States' biggest competitor on the world stage.

Their prior rhetoric

  • During his 2008 campaign, Obama called China a currency manipulator, which he cited as the cause for the United States' trade deficit with the increasingly powerful country. But he largely took a moderate path on China at this stage in his presidency, hoping to bait them into supporting sanctions on Iran or taking action on climate change.
  • Trump took a strikingly hard tack on China — now a bonafide superpower — throughout his 2016 campaign, accusing the country of unfair trade practices, including steel dumping on the international market, on multiple occasions. The apotheosis of Trump's criticism of China came in May 2016, when he declared that he wouldn't "continue to allow China to rape our country" via currency manipulation.

The lead up

  • Obama had concentrated much of his political capital at home attempting to push the Affordable Care Act through Congress in the months before and after his stop in Beijing in mid-November 2009. That left him unable to bring a plan to China for some of his more grandiose visions, like action on climate, as congressional Democrats already had too much on their plate. And notably, Obama postponed a meetingwith the Dalai Lama just before his trip to avoid tensions with Chinese leaders upon his arrival.
  • Trump's relationship with China heading into his visit had also been a balancing act between his coarse rhetoric regarding trade imbalances and his attempts to pressure the Chinese into action on North Korea. He seemed to have some success on the latter issue, getting China to agree to stop its banks from doing business with North Korea.

While there

  • China largely held firm against Obama's biggest demands during his trip, refusing to take action on the issues most important to the U.S. like Iran and human rights. Obama's town hall meeting with Chinese students in Shanghai was blocked from wider broadcast around the country. During joint press statements with then-Chinese President Hu Jintao, Obama mentioned human rights — but no questions were taken from reporters. Perhaps tellingly, he mused while standing on the Great Wall during his visit, ""It gives you a good perspective on a lot of the day-to-day things. They don't amount to much in the scope of history."
  • Trump, too, remained largely deferential to his Chinese hostssoaking in the pageantry of Chinese welcome ceremonies and also agreeing to a demand that no questions be asked during his press statement with Xi. Notably, his compliment to China on "taking advantage" of the U.S. on trade was a much softer approach than he showed on the campaign trail. One concession Trump did get from his hosts: the ability to tweet from behind China's Great Firewall.

The headlines

From Obama's trip:
From Trump's trip:

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