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Global perception of US falls to two-decade low
#1
The findings of the Pew Research Center poll reflect public perceptions of the US in 13 countries.
Positive views of the US has fallen to a median of 34% across the countries surveyed, and only 16% confidence in President Trump.
An overwhelming majority - 84%- said the US has handled coronavirus badly.
Though favourable views of the US has been falling in recent years, in 2020, the perceptions in several countries were the lowest Pew had seen since it began polling on the subject some 20 years ago.
In only one country surveyed - South Korea - did a majority of the public view the US favourably. Only a quarter of Germans and less than a third of Frenchmen and women view the US thus.
The majority of the public in every country surveyed did not have confidence in Mr Trump, with Belgians expressing the most scepticism - only nine percent said they had confidence in the US president.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-54169732 [Chart at LINK]
The president's highest rating among the countries polled was in Japan, where a quarter of those surveyed said they trusted Mr Trump.
Fewer than one in five Britons had confidence in US leader, and only 41% said they had a favourable view of the country, a nadir for the survey.
The Pew Global Attitudes survey of 13,273 people was conducted from June to August in Australia, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, South Korea, Spain, Sweden, the UK and the Netherlands.
The results of the survey come as long-term questions swirl over America's leadership on the global stage, and as the country continues to battle coronavirus. The US has recorded over 6m cases and nearly 200,000 deaths due to Covid-19.
Dr Richard Wike, a director of the Pew survey, said: "What we've seen in our polling over the past few years is that many people around the world see the US stepping away from a leadership position in world affairs, and that's had a negative impact on what they think of the country."
This year, the dynamic has been borne out through the pandemic, as reflected in the survey.
Despite the trend, however, "people haven't necessarily given up on the US," Dr Wike said. "They still want the US to play a leadership role on the international stage."

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#2

Yay South Korea!

And at least no one is laughing at us anymore. This is so much better.
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#3
Yeah I have an expat child in Germany, and among her friends she gets a lot of questions that can just be summarized as WTF.  It's tough in meetings, she can really feel the vibe change when they find out she is an American.  She's been living there on and off since 2009 and finally married and moved permanently in 2015. She doesn't just work with Germans exclusively, and her in-laws have been different the last couple of years. 
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#4
Just broadcast Fox News globally and the rest of the world can be as delusional as we are. 
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#5
Quote: @MaroonBells said:
Just broadcast Fox News globally and the rest of the world can be as delusional as we are. 

You can find batshit crazy anywhere, it's that we have succumbed to as a culture.  WTF will we do next or fail to do, we lost our seat at the big table.  Yeah and Rupert Murdoch news is where you go to see where delusional is marketed.  
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#6
Good, can we stop paying for everyone else's NATO, UN and other aid programs?  Seems silly to me to pay for other countries to become the best place to live by printing out own currency into existence and saddling our kids with debt they'll never be able to pay. 
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#7
How does this compare to other countries?


I would imagine that most countries leaderships are viewed
pretty pessimistically right now, except for maybe South Korea and some of Scandinavia.
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#8
Quote: @AGRforever said:
Good, can we stop paying for everyone else's NATO, UN and other aid programs?  Seems silly to me to pay for other countries to become the best place to live by printing out own currency into existence and saddling our kids with debt they'll never be able to pay. 
Well...some of us believe humans in shithole countries have value, too. By the way, 1% of our federal budget goes to foreign aid. That's money well spent since it's also an effective bulwark against the kind of instability that leads to terrorism. A war on terror will cost 1,000 times that. 

Eliminating every penny of foreign aid wouldn't even make a dent in our debt. You want to cut the debt? Try eliminating tax cuts for the wealthy and then do something about our disastrous healthcare system. 
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#9
Quote: @medaille said:
How does this compare to other countries?


I would imagine that most countries leaderships are viewed
pretty pessimistically right now, except for maybe South Korea and some of Scandinavia.

Most western leaders are doing okay, from what I hear, Merkel is the only one I have direct insight for.  As far as leaders Trump, stands out as trying to make the pandemic a popularity thing .  Here's an article from Forbes back a few months sure it not to stale.
Most World Leaders See Approval Ratings Surge Amid Coronavirus. Not Trump.
Forbes StaffMarkets
Updated Apr 18, 2020, 10:49am EDTTOPLINE
Approval ratings of democratic leaders around the world have soared
since the start of the coronavirus pandemic, but some heads of
state—particularly Trump, Brazil’s Bolsanaro and Japan’s Abe—have seen
far smaller boosts, or even declines, amid criticism of how they’ve
handled the crisis.
[*]
[*]
https://www.forbes.com/sites/sergeiklebn...df0148e5a0

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#10
Certainly we can give more dollars to humanitarian causes if the Europeans pay for their own defense, right?  I say make em pay more gradually until they cover their own cost.  American forces in Europe are deployed for the old model of warfare, large scale tank battles and soldier versus soldier.  Paying for NATO is outdated and served its purpose.
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