US Political News and Trump’s China visit

Trump finishes by saying he's a 'real estate person at heart'
BBC

Donald Trump speaks at the Board of Peace event


Image source, Reuters

We reach the end of the ceremony with one final address from the US president.

Trump discusses his team's work on Gaza, saying he's a "real estate person at heart".

"I said look at this location on the sea," he continues. "People that are living so poorly are going to be so well, but it all began with the location."
 

Gaza conflict now 'little fires', Trump claims​

BBC

Donald Trump holds up a signed document at the Board of Peace meeting


Image source, Reuters

Rounding off his speech, Donald Trump invites representatives from Bahrain and Morocco to sign a charter document for the Board of Peace.

The three then smile and hold up the documents, before other members of the board are invited to sign.

During his speech, Trump also spoke about Gaza, which he says is where the plan for the Board of Peace started.

A peace deal was struck earlier this year, involving the exchange of Israeli hostages and Palestinian prisoners.

Trump said the war in Gaza was "really coming to an end" - that the conflict now consists of "little fires" that he says can be put out easily.

Hamas "probably will" do what they promise to do, Trump said. "They have to give up their weapons and if they don't do that, it's going to be the end of them."

At least 466 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza since a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas began on 10 October, according to the Hamas-run health ministry.
 
No one should be surprised about Greenland:

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Jan 22, 2026 2:08 PM ET

The U.S. Has Pulled Out of the WHO. Here’s What That Means for Public Health​


The U.S. was one of the first countries to join the World Health Organization (WHO) when it was created in 1948 as part of the United Nations. But on Jan. 22, 2026, it officially withdrew from the global health group.

The U.S. has historically been the largest funder to the WHO, through both its assessed and voluntary contributions, so the departure is poised to disrupt both global and domestic health. “This is one of the most penny-wise and billion-dollar-foolish moves,” says Michael Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota.

Here’s what to know.

Is the U.S. officially out of the WHO?​

The WHO’s charter does not contain a clause allowing member states to withdraw. But in agreeing to join decades ago, the U.S. Congress included an option to leave the organization as long as the U.S. gave a year’s notice and met its financial obligations by paying its dues in full.

The first condition appears to have been met: A year ago, President Donald Trump gave notice that the U.S. would withdraw. But the U.S. has not paid its outstanding dues—including from the final year of the Biden Administration.

The WHO’s principal legal officer Steven Solomon said during a press briefing on Jan. 13 that the matter will be discussed by the organization’s executive board, which is scheduled to meet in February, and those talks could extend to the General Assembly that meets in May. “We look forward to member states discussing this,” he said. “Because these questions of withdrawal—questions of the conditions, the promise, and agreement reached between the U.S. and World Health Assembly [of the WHO]—these are issues reserved for member states, and not issues WHO staff can decide.”

Will the U.S. be prevented from working with the WHO?​

Dr. Tedros Ghebreysus, WHO Director-General, has said he is open to accepting the U.S. back as a member and hopes it will reconsider the decision to withdraw.

“WHO has signaled—very intentionally, I think—that they want to continue to work with the U.S.,” says Dr. Judd Walson, chair of international health at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. “The flag of the United States continues to fly outside the WHO building [in Geneva], and that’s not a mistake. It’s a very intentional signal that they welcome us to re-engage.”

Read More: Bill Gates: I’m Still Optimistic About Global Health

Osterholm says researchers will likely continue to stay in touch with their global-health colleagues, but on an individual level that lacks the coordination and clout of federal-level participation. The yearly update of the flu vaccine is a good example. “The flu world has always been very close globally,” he says. “I am quite convinced that there will be unofficial information-sharing among this group. The question is, at what point does that information have to be official in order for companies to take action deciding which vaccine strains they are going to use?”

Walson sits on a few WHO committees and says he asked his colleagues there whether the U.S. decision changed his ability to participate. “They said absolutely not—that as a U.S. citizen, I still have the capacity to participate in the workings of the WHO. And there are scientists and technical experts engaging to continue to maintain our access [to the WHO] at the individual level. Clearly we have lost the coordination of all of these activities, but we will still have some engagement.”

Solomon echoed that intention. “While there is an open question when and how withdrawal happens, there is not an open question about what the constitution says about WHO’s overall mission. The constitution sets out the objective for the organization, of health for all people, wherever they live and without discrimination.”

What will change now that the U.S. is no longer a member of the WHO?​

One of the first things that could change for U.S. scientists is their access to databases that are important for monitoring infectious diseases like influenza, as well as emerging threats that could affect the health of Americans, such as COVID. While many of these data sources are public, and U.S. scientists will continue to access them, they might not have as much insight into how the raw data were collected and processed, says Walson. That could be important for understanding how to interpret the information and for getting a head start on potentially dangerous outbreaks of new infectious diseases.

One major dataset involves tracking influenza strains as they emerge around the world—an important tool for determining which strains of the virus are dominating in a particular year, and therefore which strains vaccine makers should target in the annual flu shot. The WHO makes public recommendations each year to guide manufacturers’ decisions, and it’s unclear how much access the U.S. will continue to have to this data in advance of the WHO’s recommendation.

“By pulling out, we are not just losing our ability to provide data, but also to contribute to the dialogue and make sure we have a say in understanding why the flu vaccine is being composed in the way it is every year,” says Dr. Jeanne Marrazzo, CEO of the Infectious Diseases Society of America and former director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. “It takes the seat at the table away from us. And those tables are where global health decisions are made.”

The effects on U.S. and global health “will be a slow bleed,” says Walson. “Most Americans will not wake up on Jan. 23 and say, ‘Look what happened when the U.S. withdrew from WHO.’ But the problem is that the impacts will be difficult to reverse once they happen.”

That includes being less aware of emerging disease threats, which could become worse if the U.S. is unprepared for them. Early detection is critical for avoiding large-scale outbreaks and avoiding disease and deaths, says Osterholm. “Early detection is a priceless gift in terms of responding. It’s like a forest fire. If the fire is only five acres big, that’s different from responding to a fire that is 5,000 acres big. Unfortunately, we may now find ourselves in the 5,000-acre scenario when it comes to disease outbreaks.”

That could have implications for how well health officials can respond to those threats. “We are not going to know when the next concerning outbreak of pneumonia happens, and we won’t be able to prepare with a drug or vaccine or whatever response is appropriate,” says Marrazzo. “We won’t be able to tell [Americans] who travel abroad about health risks. I’m worried about missing sentinel events because we pulled back.”

Walson, who is currently collaborating with the WHO on projects in Kenya, says “people are much more skeptical of the motivations of Americans and American institutions in engaging in global collaboration” than they used to be. “There is a sense that we have always been a wolf in sheep’s clothing, and have just now revealed that to the world. It’s harder to say that we are going to work together to resolve problems when people feel we continue to have ulterior, self-serving motives.”

The withdrawal of the U.S. from the global health community also has important geopolitical implications. While the WHO’s policies are determined by consensus by all member states, the absence of the U.S. now creates room for other countries to exert more influence, which could affect global health priorities. “Countries like India, Saudi Arabia, Russia, and China are stepping in to make up some of the void left by the U.S.,” Walson says. “That has consequences for who is setting priorities and who has influence in the halls of WHO to guide policy and guidelines.”

Even more damaging than the immediate effects on specific health programs, he says, is the broader economic and political impact of weakening global health programs. Since the U.S. has been the largest funder of the WHO, the withdrawal has forced Ghebreyesus to revise the budget and rely less heavily on dominant donors, which he told TIME in 2025 he had already begun doing before Trump’s decision to withdraw. He said at the Jan. 13 briefing that while the organization now has 75% off its needed budget covered, 25% remains to be raised.

Still, the restricted budget potentially means fewer resources to support the health of low- and middle-income countries, which rely on the WHO for financial support and guidance on health policies and recommendations. “A lot of countries rely on technical expertise from WHO, and as the work force shrinks, that becomes less available,” says Walson. “As countries experience worse health—more mortality and morbidity—economic conditions worsen as sick populations can’t work, and the economic situation of already poor countries deteriorates further. Political instability follows, with mass migration, war, and conflict, and now things start spilling over borders.”

Those countries aren’t the only ones that are likely to suffer, he says. “The degradation of political systems as a result of worsening health will have consequences for U.S. health, as that will further the spread of disease.”

What’s more, Walson says, the economies of developed nations like the U.S. depend on the strength and stability of the developing world, which makes up the market that sustains these economies. “When we are no longer supporting them to help them grow, we are constraining our own markets,” he says. That recognition of the need for a multi-lateral approach to global health was the impetus behind creating the WHO in the first place, based on the reality that countries interact and depend on one another—and the health of one affects the health of all.

“Withdrawal from the WHO is a lose for the United States, and also a lose for the rest of the world,” said Ghebreyesus at the briefing. “It also makes the U.S. unsafe and the rest of the world unsafe. It’s not really the right decision.”
 
“Withdrawal from the WHO is a lose for the United States, and also a lose for the rest of the world,” said Ghebreyesus at the briefing. “It also makes the U.S. unsafe and the rest of the world unsafe. It’s not really the right decision.”

This could be great opportunity for China to show it cares for world health by providing the funds as the next superpower, and turn USA's loss into China's win.
 
This could be great opportunity for China to show it cares for world health by providing the funds as the next superpower, and turn USA's loss into China's win.

China does not care about WHO. China spends most of its funds on military. China is a fascist country. China adores darwinism, survival of the fittest, natural selection. China kill off weak people to improve the quality of its gene pool. Chinese are among the most healthy people in the world. China reports 0 covid deaths to WHO.

 
The world hasn't shown it can do much without a babysitter.

Well... time to put up I guess.

For years, financial interests could be furthered, new markets opened and explored...
Low cost guinea pigs used for experimental drugs and processes. Reactions and ramifications weighed.

"The world is my oyster" or was?

Net zero!
Understand that term... money changes hand in a market... things are built... everyone keeps doing what they're supposed to, or one that finds a niche... an equilibrium remains.

Break that equilibrium, sow chaos and reap dividends... however now you have a permanent imbalance. It will take time to patch up...

What fiat and interest leeches didn't assume correctly was that... within extraction paradigm whatever tangibles are built, remain for the in coming to benefit... and here where the rest of east Asia finds it's self in a never ending sinkhole the Chinese could plateau, perhaps just for bit, due in part because of their sheer size(population)...
And ability or foresight to build a parallel system while being part and parcel of the other...

And here... an inevitable... just like the Nixon shock provided another few decades of seeming endless prosperity... reaching its ultimate conclusion.

Those who seek authority figures to guide them through because they don't know any better will find themselves on par with the trailblazers.
Ones with agenda will lead the charge.
 
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US officially leaves World Health Organization​


After nearly 80 years of membership, the U.S. is officially no longer part of the World Health Organization (WHO).

President Trump initiated the removal process in an executive order on Jan. 20, 2025, the first day of his second term. He cited the organization’s alleged “mishandling of the COVID-19 pandemic” and “other global health crises.”

The president also complained of “unfairly onerous payments” paid by the U.S. as part of its membership in the international organization. The WHO is funded through voluntary donations and its member states’ dues, which vary based on each country’s population size and wealth.

The executive order contained directions to pause all U.S. funds to the WHO, reassign American contractors working for the organization and seek out other health organizations the U.S. could join instead.

In a press conference earlier this month, WHO Director General Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus expressed his “hope that the U.S. will reconsider its decision and rejoin” the organization.

Ghebreyesus called the decision a “lose-lose” situation for both the U.S. and the “rest of the world.”

“It’s not really the right decision, I want to say bluntly, because I believe that there are many things that are done through WHO that benefits the U.S., and only the WHO does, and especially the health security issues,” he said. “That’s why I say the U.S. cannot be safe without working with the WHO.”

Trump previously attempted to pull the U.S. out of the organization during his first presidential term.

Following the 2025 executive order, the WHO said in a statement it “regrets the announcement” and noted the U.S.’s role as a key partner and founding member of the organization.

“With the participation of the United States and other Member States, WHO has over the past 7 years implemented the largest set of reforms in its history, to transform our accountability, cost-effectiveness, and impact in countries. This work continues,” the organization said. “We hope the United States will reconsider and we look forward to engaging in constructive dialogue to maintain the partnership between the USA and WHO, for the benefit of the health and well-being of millions of people around the globe.”

In an asterisk note at the bottom of the WHO website’s member country list page, the international organization discloses that the United States expressed “its intention to withdraw from the World Health Organization, with a stated effective date of 22 January 2026.”

“This notification is pending consideration by WHO’s governing bodies,” the note reads. “References to the United States of America within the WHO context, including any display or otherwise of its national flag or insignia, should be understood as subject to, and without prejudice to, such consideration by WHO’s governing bodies.”

On Thursday, the removal process was official.

While the WHO’s bylaws do not specify the process by which member states can leave the organization, the U.S. Congress provided terms for an American withdrawal process when it approved the country’s membership into the organization under the Truman administration.

In the 1948 joint resolution, the lawmakers stated that the “United States reserves the right to withdraw” after providing the organization with one-year notice — a rule the Trump administration has followed.

The legislation also stipulated that the U.S. must have fulfilled all of its “financial obligations” to the WHO. While a two-year congressional budget had already allocated funding to WHO into 2025, Trump’s executive order required the cessation of U.S. funds to the organization.

In a document prepared and published by the nonpartisan Congressional Research Service soon after Trump’s executive order was issued, the office acknowledged the “uncertainty” of whether the U.S. is required to pay its dues through the end of 2025 or into 2026, given the lack of direction from the WHO and the unspecific language in the U.S. requirements.

However, the State Department said in a statement to NPR that the U.S. “will not be making any payments to the WHO before our withdrawal.”

“The cost born by the U.S. taxpayer and U.S. economy after the WHO’s failure during the Covid pandemic — and since — has been too high as it is,” the department said.

https://thehill.com/policy/international/5702306-us-officially-withdraws-from-who/
 
Who lied through it's teeth on Corona and we saw the end result. Trash. Perhaps China will step in?
 
Really? I thought the world couldn't do much because babysitter dictates what the world is allowed to do. Anyone in the world not listening, gets sanctioned or bombed.

What you've stated is different from the thread's topic. Without the U.S., the WHO is practically functionless; the U.S. provided the logistics and lift capabilities. What other nation will come close? Then you have the pharmaceutical industry, research and development, heavily funded by the West, and the capacity to manufacture and deliver, and the COVID era was on full display for the world to see.

The U.S. capacity to bomb and kill is different from its capacity to deliver when it counts the most.
 
China doesn't have the luxury to just print the money and distribute.
 

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