Trump’s economic and geopolitical failures took center stage at Pope Francis’ funeral
The post Trump’s economic and geopolitical failures took center stage at Pope Francis’ funeral appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The funeral of His Holiness Pope Francis on Saturday inside St. Peter’s Basilica turned into a full public reckoning for US President Donald Trump, whose failures at home and abroad unfolded in real time for the world to see, according to Bloomberg. As thousands packed St. Peter’s Square, cheers erupted not for Trump, but for Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelenskyy. Inside, Trump stood surrounded by France’s Emmanuel Macron and Britain’s Keir Starmer, all caught up in tense conversations that had nothing to do with honoring the late pope. During the homily, Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re delivered a sharp reminder of the Church’s position on immigration, praising Francis’ legacy for advocating refugees and recalling his famous call to “build bridges, not walls.” Those words first came back in 2016 when Trump was just kicking off his campaign by pushing for a wall along the US-Mexico border. Cameras zoomed in on Trump, catching his mouth slightly open as Re’s message landed hard. Francis spent years rebuking Trump’s immigration and foreign policies, including his public stances on Ukraine and Gaza. He was a very special person indeed. Trump’s meetings with leaders expose his growing isolation By seating chart luck, based on the French alphabet, Trump landed between the leaders of Estonia and Finland, two nations that back Ukraine heavily. But the first row spot still reflected his status as the sitting US President. Before the Mass even began, an unofficial meeting between Trump and Zelenskyy caught the world’s attention. It was their first face-to-face since a disastrous February Oval Office meeting where Zelenskyy had been scolded on live TV, leading him to lose an economic deal for Ukraine’s rare earth minerals. Presidents Donald Trump and Volodomyr Zelenskyy meet at the Vatican. Source: Ukrainian Presidential Press Service Macron and Starmer, who had flown into Washington to…

The post Trump’s economic and geopolitical failures took center stage at Pope Francis’ funeral appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.
The funeral of His Holiness Pope Francis on Saturday inside St. Peter’s Basilica turned into a full public reckoning for US President Donald Trump, whose failures at home and abroad unfolded in real time for the world to see, according to Bloomberg. As thousands packed St. Peter’s Square, cheers erupted not for Trump, but for Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelenskyy. Inside, Trump stood surrounded by France’s Emmanuel Macron and Britain’s Keir Starmer, all caught up in tense conversations that had nothing to do with honoring the late pope. During the homily, Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re delivered a sharp reminder of the Church’s position on immigration, praising Francis’ legacy for advocating refugees and recalling his famous call to “build bridges, not walls.” Those words first came back in 2016 when Trump was just kicking off his campaign by pushing for a wall along the US-Mexico border. Cameras zoomed in on Trump, catching his mouth slightly open as Re’s message landed hard. Francis spent years rebuking Trump’s immigration and foreign policies, including his public stances on Ukraine and Gaza. He was a very special person indeed. Trump’s meetings with leaders expose his growing isolation By seating chart luck, based on the French alphabet, Trump landed between the leaders of Estonia and Finland, two nations that back Ukraine heavily. But the first row spot still reflected his status as the sitting US President. Before the Mass even began, an unofficial meeting between Trump and Zelenskyy caught the world’s attention. It was their first face-to-face since a disastrous February Oval Office meeting where Zelenskyy had been scolded on live TV, leading him to lose an economic deal for Ukraine’s rare earth minerals. Presidents Donald Trump and Volodomyr Zelenskyy meet at the Vatican. Source: Ukrainian Presidential Press Service Macron and Starmer, who had flown into Washington to…
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