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The United States of America: Facts,  Analysis, and Strategy
The United States of America: Facts,  Analysis, and Strategy
The United States of America: Facts,  Analysis, and Strategy
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The United States of America: Facts, Analysis, and Strategy

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The US will have a 1-billion population by 2061.
The author believes that an active and open immigration policy is beneficial to the United States in the long run.
The bipartisan duopoly must be broken in order to incubate a more competitive election ecology.
Five hundred regional economy engines (REE) are proposed to be built across the United States to revitalize the community economy.
A New Marshall Plan is recommended to expand the whole-spectrum presence of the US globally.
For the benefits of the people of both the US and China and world peace, the author boldly conceived that the USA and China to form a union to create a trans-Pacific “Pacific Union” by peaceful negotiation, not war.

The author does not consider that the pandemic, protests, mass looting, two-party struggles, vote-counting, Occupying the US Capitol, bias media, economic difficulties, illegal immigration, and international rivals, and so on pose a real threat to the United States. The various “symptoms” that have manifested indicate that the United States is facing an unprecedented, comprehensive transition period. However, the nation has not fully awakened, so it is necessary to have a reminder.

The book has eleven chapters, including (1) The Mirror of History, (2) The United States in 1946, (3) Korean War, Vietnam War, and Star Wars, (4) President Donald John Trump, (5) President Joseph Robinette Biden Jr., (6) Cultural transformation, (7) US Economy, (8) US Foreign Affairs in 2020 and Comments, (9) The US during 1944–2020, (10) Strategy, (11) Script: Dreams, and Outlook. There are descriptions of and comments on events in 2020 from brand-new perspectives.

The starting point of the book is to place the interests of the country and the people of the United States first. The book will be a good friend to those who are serious about the future of the United States, whether they are voters, the US presidents, or members of Congress, governors, mayors, members of nonpartisan political organizations, teachers and students in political science, researches in American studies, and anyone who cares about world peace. You will surely get unprecedented inspiration and useful advice from it.

This is the book that deserves every American to read. It will help you in the next forty years.
LanguageEnglish
PublisherAuthorHouse
Release dateApr 11, 2021
ISBN9781665521758
The United States of America: Facts,  Analysis, and Strategy
Author

Dr. Wenyi Yu

In April and May 2021, Dr. Yu’s monograph “The United States of America: Facts, Analysis, and Strategy” (AuthorHouse, IN, April 11, 2021) was ranked by Amazon.com as follows: (1) New releases of Politics Literacy Criticism: #1; (2) Best Sellers of Politics Literacy Criticism #3; (3) New releases of Economic Policy & Development #19; (4) New Releases of Development & Growth Economics #13; (5) New releases of Literacy Subjects & Themes #41; (6) New releases of Business Biographies & History #52; and Japan’s Rakuten.com Foreign books Attention ranking: #1. The paper book and the e-book have been distributed in the US, Canada, Japan, Australia, France, Germany, Hungary, Denmark, Brazil, India, etc.

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    The United States of America - Dr. Wenyi Yu

    © 2021 Dr. Wenyi Yu. All rights reserved.

    No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted by any means without the written permission of the author.

    Published by AuthorHouse  04/09/2021

    ISBN: 978-1-6655-2176-5 (sc)

    ISBN: 978-1-6655-2175-8 (e)

    Any people depicted in stock imagery provided by Getty Images are models,

    and such images are being used for illustrative purposes only.

    Certain stock imagery © Getty Images.

    Because of the dynamic nature of the Internet, any web addresses or links contained in this book may have changed since publication and may no longer be valid. The views expressed in this work are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher, and the publisher hereby disclaims any responsibility for them.

    For a

    better America

    AU%20PHOTO%20RECROPPED.jpg

    Dr. Wenyi Yu, the author

    OBAMA%20LETTER.jpg

    Letter from President Barack Obama to Dr. Wenyi Yu

    4.jpg

    Letter from Mr. Roy K.J. Williams, Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Economic Development, U.S. Department of Commerce to Dr. Wenyi Yu

    79710.png

    Email from President Donald J. Trump to Dr. Wenyi Yu

    79728.png

    Email from President Joe Biden to Dr. Wenyi Yu

    NEUTRAL STANDPOINT

    STATEMENT

    The author tried his best to maintain the neutral stance academically and undertook independent analysis of the figures, political parties, countries, international relations, events, incidents, facts, and data in the book.

    As a monograph on the United States of America, the national interest of the United States is set as the benchmark for evaluation. For the internal and foreign affairs of the United States, they are valuated positive provided they were beneficial to the national interest of the U.S.; otherwise, negative.

    To analyze objectively, the pros and cons were weighed on the topics involved.

    The author did not intent to offend anyone and apologize in advance if happened.

    PREVIEW

    You have the dream of becoming the President of the United States, or just used to ordinary life, whatsoever, when you are available, please read this book carefully.

    The monograph covers the span from 1944 to 2061. It will take you into a colorful thinking about the United States of America. You may find the perspectives, facts, date, observation results, ideas, solutions, strategy, and forecasts you are looking for.

    Contents

    Neutral Standpoint Statement

    Preview

    Chapter 1 The Mirror of History

    Chapter 2 The United States in 1946

    Chapter 3 Korean War, Vietnam War, and Star Wars

    Chapter 4 President Donald John Trump

    Chapter 5 President Joseph Robinette Biden Jr.

    Chapter 6 Cultural transformation

    Chapter 7 US Economy

    Chapter 8 US Foreign Affairs in 2020 and Comments

    Chapter 9 The US during 1944–2020

    Chapter 10 Strategy

    Drama Script: Dreams

    Appendix by Chapter

    Vocabulary Index by Chapter

    Reference by Chapter

    Special Thanks to the Citing Sources

    Acknowledgments

    Outlook

    About the Author

    List of Diagrams

    Diagram 1.1 The US global military presence

    Diagram 3.1 The geography and Korean War, 1950-1953

    Diagram 3.2 South Vietnam and North Vietnam during 1955–1975

    Diagram 5.1 Nancy Pelosi and Democratic lawmakers observed the silence for nearly nine minutes

    Diagram 9.1 The growth trend of the US real GDP and population during 1944-2020

    Diagram 10.1 The double and triple population growth of China and India in thirty-one to forty-seven years—both reached one billion population fast, showing an inherent, natural growth inertia of population

    Diagram 10.2 Japan’s population growth tendency was not significantly affected by WWII

    Diagram 10.3 A forecast of one billion population in the US by 2061

    Diagram 10.4 The down tendency of the populations of China and India in the second half of the 21st century, estimated by United Nations

    CHAPTER 1

    The Mirror of History

    ■ ■ ■ ■¹, Buffalo, NY 14216

    AT THIS ADDRESS IS A two-story house painted green, and it was built before the 1901 The Pan-American Exposition. The wall on the garage driveway side seems a slight askew, but it’s sturdy enough to live safely. In summer, the ivy behind the house crawls all over the wall, and some ants snake along the ground. The concrete steps in front of the house lead to a red–painted wood plank balcony on which a steel swing with a grass-green canvas roof stands. The front door of the house is a product of glass and wood. The mailbox is mounted on the right lower side of a glass–wooden wall beside the frame of the door. The postman drops letters inside by pushing the one-way copper valve. It is a safe community. The front door of the house is often unlocked and ajar.

    ■ ■ ■ ■ is a medium-size community road with a green belt in the middle. Residents put their flowers neatly here. The block club holds meetings to discuss the landscaping, road construction, and other issues twice a year. Neighbors actively put forward comments and suggestions. They are very familiar with the planning and development of the city. The discussion is quite lively. One hour may not be sufficient. People bring homemade foods, drinks and so on. Buffalo snows for almost five months a year, and neighbors are happy to help when the wheels slip occasionally. No matter what season it is, dog owners walk on the sidewalk regularly–once or twice a day, and short and warm greetings will be encountered from time to time.

    In the green belt opposite the house is McKinley Shooting Rock, where President William McKinley (1843–1901) was assassinated. Visitors stop to hang out or offer flowers, and occasionally tour guides come with them. The thrilling moment of firing two shots 120 years ago has long passed, and now it is calm enough to be inaudible to the sound of car horns. Take a few steps east to the intersection of ■ ■ ■ ■ and Lincoln Parkway, and walk three blocks south, there is a pedestrian overpass on which people can ride bikes up and down into Delaware Park.

    The Olmsted Conservancy’s Delaware Park, built during 1868 and 1876, belongs to the historic park system and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982. The big land was also a migratory bird habitat and ecological reserve. To the north of the park is mirror-like Hoyt Lake, with fountains in summer, and fish roaming quietly under the clear bottom of the lake. The white open building by the lake has the bride and groom’s party. The west side of the lake borders Albright-Knox Art Gallery. Hoyt Lake was also built for the Pan-American Exposition in 1901 and was regarded as a feature of the Exhibition venue by the 50,000 attendees.

    The creativity of the Buffalo people did not stop after the exposition. Since 1976, there has been an annual open-air Shakespeare drama festival on the south side of the lake: Shakespeare in Delaware. The 2013 show includes Hamlet and Measure for Measure. Performances run at 7:15 PM from Tuesdays through Sundays from mid–June through the third week of August, except for Mondays and heavy storms. The two-hour show is also one of the largest outdoor Shakespeare theatrical festivals in the United States. The audience always arrives a half hour prior to the start. They take chairs and sit on the hillside to watch the performance on the temporary stage built in the valley. This hill, which is about twenty-five degrees oblique, is called Shakespeare Hill.

    To the west of Shakespeare Hill is a flat soccer field surrounded by trees. It has no stands. Youth like to play soccer here, which is free of charge as are other sports facilities, such as the golf course, four baseball diamonds, cross-country running, and tennis courts, and the same is true of performances. On the top of the Shakespeare Hill is Rose Garden, in which all kinds of rose are planted. The west side of the Rose Garden is Lincoln Parkway. There is a statue of young Lincoln on the meadow next to the entrance to the park. On the right side of the road, heading south of Lincoln Parkway towards downtown Buffalo, is a well-preserved mansion belt in which the prices of houses are between $1 million and $2 million. Those luxury buildings have the stories of prosperity, wealth, and glory of Buffalo.

    The Albright-Knox Art Gallery was founded in December 1862, as the Buffalo Fine Arts Academy with President Millard Fillmore(1800–1874)among its incorporators. It is the sixth-oldest public art institution in the United States. One of its collections could be worth tens of millions of dollars in the auction market. The existing gallery was built for the 1901 Fine Arts Pavilion of the Pan-American Exposition, but it was not completed until 1905. It is a four–season art gallery that hangs the original paintings of Vincent Van Gogh, Salvador Dalí, Edgar Degas, Paul Gauguin, Henri Matisse, Claude Monet, Pablo Picasso, and more on the walls of the hallways for the convenience of visitors to look at. A restaurant is placed on one side of the museum’s central, huge, transparent courtyard for the relaxation of visitors and the gathering of ladies and gentlemen.

    To the west of the Albright-Knox Art Gallery is Burchfield Penny Art Center, a new gallery of Buffalo State College, New York State University, which focuses on the collection of art products from western New York. Buffalo State College evolved from a teacher-training school, offering solid skills in teaching art, music, drama, literature, history, and creativity. It is also home to a variety of domestic and overseas students who major in the humanities and natural sciences.

    At the midpoint between Buffalo State College and ■ ■ ■ ■, at the northwest corner of Delaware Park, is a Japanese garden that was founded in 1962, after Buffalo and Japan’s Kanazawa became sister cities. The garden is known as Cherry Blossom Park. The park is small but exquisite, and now visitors can’t smell the air of the Pacific War between the United States and Japan eighty years ago. To the east of the Japanese garden is a statue of musician Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756–1791), which creates a good cultural atmosphere. At the center of the garden is a small lake. On the north shore of the lake, a splendid building stands on a flat lot. It was originally built by the Pan-American Exposition, and is now the museum of the Buffalo and Erie County Historical Society. It is the only building that the Exposition has retained to this day since 1901, when it was New York State Pavilion.

    September 2013

    Japanese Garden

    Buffalo

    Eight students from Buffalo State College, who loved American history, were inspired by Shakespeare’s play festival. They were holding a rehearsal of a time-travel play The Mirror of History that imitated famous American politicians. The eight students were Mike, Jake, Kenneth, Ben, Edward, Jon, Jimmy, and John, who played the parts of Benjamin Franklin, George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, William McKinley, Theodore Roosevelt, Harry S. Truman, Ronald Wilson Reagan, and Grand Justice of History, respectively. For the sake of simplicity, let’s replace them with the names of the people they acted. They sat randomly on a forty-five-degree hillside meadow by the small lake, with Grand Justice of History sitting on the last row—the highest place. The actor of Grand Justice of History was a master’s degree candidate who had good knowledge of US history. The most impressive part of the plot was the judgment that Grand Justice of History read before the politicians. They wanted to know their influence on US history so they were a little nervous.

    Grand Justice of History read about McKinley’s contribution to the United States first. Born in 1843, McKinley was promoted from a private in the Union Army to a brevet major in The Civil War. He now stood up, and others listened respectfully and silently.

    Grand Justice of History opened the notebook. He read:

    During your time from March 4, 1897, to September 14, 1901, the US economy was growing rapidly. In order to push the US economy to a new peak, on September 5 and September 6, 1901, while the security official sent you the alert of risk, informed you that the security was difficult to guarantee, and gave you the case as the last year’s assassination of the king of Italy by anarchists, you insisted on attending the events for two consecutive days. Finally, you exposed yourself to the assassin, who had waited for the opportunity to get close to the front desk. You were shot in the abdomen, and sacrificed your life at the age of fifty-eight.

    Grand Justice of History continued:

    You imposed tariffs to protect the manufacture and the factory workers from foreign competition, and in 1900 you built the international reputation for American finance through the Gold Standard Act. In 1898 you led the US and won the Spanish–American War. You used peace talks and purchases to bring the Spanish colonies Puerto Rico, Guam, and the Philippines into the United States, and gave Cuba independence under US military protection. You drove the Europeans out of South America and held South America under US asylum. You said We need Hawaii just as much and a good deal more than we did California, and finally got Hawaii. You expanded the southern frontier of the United States and the nation’s influence on the Pacific Ocean and gave the United States a strategic geographical advantage hence become a great power. You are Peter the Great of the US. You have the United States of America’s territory as far as into Asia and the Pacific Ocean so you have the feat of expanding territory. Your modest character makes history almost forget your name.

    The crowd clapped and felt they couldn’t compare with McKinley.

    McKinley just gently hummed:

    We are all going, we are all going. God’s will be done, not ours... Nearer, My God, to Thee"

    This was his last voice on September 14, 1901, at 2:15 a.m.—the time of his death.

    The crowd fell silent, McKinley sat down, and Grand Justice of History read the name Theodore Roosevelt Jr. (TR, 1858–1915). He took the oath of office as the US president in Buffalo, the address was at 641 Delaware Ave, Buffalo, NY 14202, not far from Delaware Park. Not many photos of the inauguration were taken for the haste and security concerns. The United States at the turn from the 19th century to the 20th century, was on the rise, did not decay due to the death of a hero, but instead, a talented new hero began his most splendid political career from Buffalo.

    On October 27, 1858, TR was born at 28 East 20th Street in Manhattan, New York City. The energetic president has the triple–characters of biologist, American cowboy, and warrior spirit. He had not McKinney’s accomplishments of expanding territory for the United States, but is listed as the top four presidents of the United States. Grand Justice of History read:

    In 1898 you led the troops to Cuba to fight Spanish and showed courage and perseverance. When you are forty-three years old you served as the 26th president of the United States. In 1902 you ended the Philippine–American war but kept the strong presence in Asia. Unlike the European colonial powers, you created a symbol of democratic country for the United States and showed the difference of values between the old imperialism and the emerging power. Following the Spanish–American War, you foresaw the United States to become a world power and accepted the invitation to mediate the conflict between Japan and Russia. In 1907–1909 you sent the ‘Great White Fleet’ circumnavigation to enhance the international image of the United States.

    Grand Justice of History rested his tongue and continued:

    In 1909 you established the world’s second-largest fleet you not only extended McKinley’s influence in the Far East but also resolved the long-standing Alaska Boundary dispute with the British Empire and achieved results in favor of the United States. In 1903 you decided to invest in the construction of Panama Canal. The Canal opened in 1914, which allowed the US Navy to move easily from the Pacific to South America to European waters. The implicit threat of the ‘big stick’ of the military power provided leverage to ‘speak softly’ resolved quietly the conflicts in numerous cases hence created a new way of American diplomacy.

    While heard this, the personate of TR took out a piece of paper and glued it to his chest with transparent tape with the following words printed on it: During my presidency in which not one shot had been fired against a foreign foe. We were at absolute peace, and there was no nation in the world with whom a war cloud threatened, no nation in the world whom we had wronged, or from whom we had anything to fear. The cruise of the battle fleet was not the least of the causes which ensured so peaceful an outlook.

    Grand Justice of History read:

    In the United States, you, as an eco–conservation expert, founded the United States Forest Service, and declared five National Parks, the first fifty-one bird reserves, four game preserves, 150 National Forests, and 121 forest reserves in thirty-one states. The area you placed under public protection totals 230 million acres. In 1906 you signed Antiquities Act and listed eighteen new US National Monuments. Your firm anti-corruption ideology promoted the integrity of government; you were paid the price to be called the ‘trust-buster’ in order to promote American business democracy; you opposed the monopoly of the country’s economic resources; you launched the ‘New Nationalism’ program to safeguard American democracy; you dealt with the labor issues caused by unethical bosses; and you restricted the corporate political contributions and proposed political donations to be prohibited.

    At this point, everyone clapped, but TR said:

    There are as many people who criticize me as the people who affirm me.

    Grand Justice of History continued:

    You amplified human natures to the maximum, both good and evil.

    The student dressed as Benjamin Franklin added the words:

    Great good and evil, the talent of governing the country.

    Breeze was blowing at noon. Fish leaped out of the water occasionally in the lake. The weather was a little hot.

    Grand Justice of History called out the name of Benjamin Franklin—the British American who was born in 1706. The actor stood up, he was dressed in simple, clean, and neat—a style of preserving the Puritan character that featured Franklin’s practice of his self-restraint plan—the thirteen virtues. The actor was very much the human spirit of that era, he copied the thirteen virtues by handwriting on two papers and stroked the edges with a blue marker pen. The two papers were posted side by side on the clothing before his chest. You could see the first few at a glance: 1. Temperance. Eat not to dullness; drink not to elevation. 2. Silence. Speak not but what may benefit others or yourself; avoid trifling conversation. 3. Order. Let all your things have their places...

    Grand Justice of History read.

    You have an extraordinary talent for business. At the age of twenty-three you became a rich man as the editor and printer of the successful newspaper Pennsylvania Gazette. You founded the predecessor of the University of Pennsylvania. You were a physicist, inventor, philosopher, and enlightenment. You set up the first national communications network. From 1757 to the mid-1770s, you represented Pennsylvania Assembly and resided in London for long-term. From July 26, 1775 to November 7, 1776, you served as the first United States postmaster general. From March 23, 1779 to May 17, 1785, you are one of the earliest ambassadors of the United States after independence, was appointed by Continental Congress as United States State Minister to France. You’ve been widely praised in Paris’s diplomatic circles for setting up the positive Franco–American relations. It was your efforts that won the French military support for American independence.

    The actor, who was impersonating George Washington, interjected:

    We can’t win the British without the help of France.

    Grand Justice of History continued:

    As a politician of the Independent Party, you are one of the Founding Fathers of the United States; you founded Philadelphia’s first fire department and many civic organizations; you were a pioneer of modern American social organizations. From 1785 to 1788 you served as the 6th President of Pennsylvania. Few Governor made such a significant contribution to the United States. You are the greatest American of your time.

    The crowd clapped after listening.

    It was Jake’s turn. He was playing the part of George Washington. Jake stood up, his delicate skin and curly hair around his ears slightly presented the style of Washington, the first president of the United States. George Washington was born in 1732. The difference between a student and a professional general and political leader is large, which didn’t stop him from loving Washington.

    Someone suggested whether to buy a cup of coffee at the History Museum, but Washington stuck to finish the rehearsal first.

    Grand Justice of History cleared his throat and read:

    You are the Founding Father of the United States. On June 16, 1775, the Colonies Congress appointed you "General & Commander in chief of the army of the United Colonies and of all the forces raised or to be raised by them.

    Washington fought in Massachusetts, Eastern New York, New Jersey, Delaware, Pennsylvania, and Virginia during the American War of Independence, Buffalo was not a boring thing for him, she did not add any trouble for American independence. George Washington might not have been to Buffalo, NY in his lifetime.

    Grand Justice of History kept read:

    On July 2, 1776, more than a hundred ships and thousands of British troops came to Staten Island to surround NYC. On July 4, 1776, the Declaration of Independence was made. On July 9, 1776, you issued the general command the Congress had stated the united colonies to be a free and independent state. We can see your courage and determination for independence. You fought hard for five years until October 19, 1781. You defeated the British, with the help of the French. In 1787 you presided over the Constitutional Convention, which was founded the US Constitution and federal government and led patriotic forces to victory in the country’s War for Independence. From 1789 to 1797, you served as the first president of the United States and set precedents for the presidency, including the title ‘Mr. President’. You urged broad religious freedom and freed slaves in a 1799 will. You are celebrated as "first in war, first in peace, and first in hearts of his countrymen.

    Now it’s Lincoln’s turn. The student who played the role of Lincoln was a thin, tall man, almost six feet and four inches (193 cm) tall, very physically similar to Lincoln.

    Abraham Lincoln, born in 1809, was familiar with Buffalo. He spent two nights in Buffalo in his 12-day train journey to the inauguration of the presidency, and went to Niagara Falls. He stayed in New York City for two nights as well, as he did in Buffalo, before turning to Washington, D.C. Lincoln’s wife, Mary Todd (1818–1882), had hoped to enjoy the Buffalo river view on the way back. Lincoln was later assassinated, and his coffin passed through Buffalo, where thousands of people went to see him off.

    The thin tall man stood up. His head was almost as high as that of Grand Justice of History, who sat behind the group.

    Grand Justice of History read:

    From March 4, 1861 to April 15, 1865, you served as the 16th president of the United States. On April 12, 1861, the new Confederate States fired the Union fort in the South, the purpose was to secure the Southern independence. On April 15, 1861, you sent detachments totaling 75,000 troops to recapture forts, protect Washington, and preserve the Union. Your call forced states to choose sides. On September 22, 1862, you signed the Emancipation Proclamation. On November 19, 1863, you delivered the Gettysburg Address and said: this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom—and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth. On April 9, 1864, the war ended, the north–south reunification set the foundation of today’s continental United States.

    Lincoln said:

    But this war resulted in 1,030,000 casualties, about three percent of the population, including 620,000 soldiers, and 50,000 civilians. Eight percent of all white men aged thirteen to forty-three died in the war, including six percent in the North and eighteen percent in the South. About 56,000 soldiers died in prison camps during the War. An estimated 60,000 men lost limbs in the war. The war was the first of its kind, however, no better solution could be found then.

    At this moment, everybody looked back at Grand Justice of History. Grand Justice of History continued, without changing his rhythm and tone.

    You are thin, but clear–thinking, logical, firm–willed, decisive, and unhesitating. You are the best representative of a US president of law service perspective. Your number one contribution to the United States is the protection of the Union and rejected division without hesitation though it paid the expense of the greatest sacrifice. You defined Union’s complete boundaries with positive responses—It is not the North only but the North and the South as a whole—the North and the South altogether are the geographical basis of the United States; your second contribution is the proposition that people shall bear the full responsibility and enjoy all the rights as well. Therefore, the Constitution shall be amended once the fundamental human rights are not guaranteed. To do this, you paid the greatest sacrifice to establish a concept what was called American. You defined the administrative boundaries of the nation and the meaning of human beings.

    The crowd clapped.

    Grand Justice of History continued:

    Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction. You led the nation through the Civil War, overcame the country’s constitutional, political, and moral crisis. You set a precedent that the United States, in the face of internal divisions, human rights destruction, and unavoidable wars, will not hesitate to use war to resolve conflicts. This will lead to the retreat of separatists and racists. Washington fought for Union’s independence by war and you used the war to unify the country. You died, but thirty years later, such as McKinley and TR, the country grew up fast. You are ranked as one of the greatest presidents in American history.

    Several people clapped warmly, then there were a few seconds of silence. Only Mike, who was acting the part of Benjamin Franklin, said it was impossible to solve the problem with diplomatic communication.

    Grand Justice of History concluded:

    When you took office, the national debt was $90,580,874, at the time of your death it was $2,680,647,869, and the debt increased by 2859% over a five-year period; During your tenure, inflation averaged 14.8% a year, the highest in the US history, and that was the economic cost of the national unity.

    The silence of the people….

    The rehearsal went on, and it was Truman’s turn. At this time everyone was a little hungry, or tired, but decided to go on. Several people who sat on the ground for a long time, now stood up, stretched out, and then sat down in turn.

    Harry S. Truman, born in 1884, was a poor child—like Lincoln, but the assassination to him failed and he lived eighty-eight years. Truman, an artillery veteran during World War I, was so miraculous that he could bring his team back to the United States in its entirety. From April 12, 1945 to January 20, 1953, Truman served as the 33rd President of the United States. He implemented the Marshall Plan to rebuild the economy of Western Europe and established the Truman Doctrine and NATO. On October 9, 1952, 9:30 p.m., President Truman made address at the Memorial Hall in Buffalo. Earlier, Senator Truman, from Missouri, spoke exclusively in a radio interview in Buffalo, the topic focused on playing basketball.

    Harry Truman is clearly a president who has been grossly underestimated.

    Grand Justice of History read:

    After the death of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, you succeeded the President of the United States on April 12, 1945. You’ve quickly won the battlefields of Europe and Asia. You led the USA to go through the most difficult post-war periods, and overcame the most difficult problems, including the settlement of the veterans, unemployment, high inflation, large fiscal deficits, negative economic growth, strike, and Europe’s post-war reconstruction; you are so marvelous that it took only two years to achieve a fiscal surplus and a decline in debt in 1947, 1948, 1949, and 1951. As a president of military origin, you have made great achievements in economic governance. By the time you left office in 1953, the national debt had increased by only 2.86 percent, in the amount of less than $8 billion, including the spending on the three-year Korean War.

    The crowd clapped.

    Grand Justice of History continued:

    You are the rebuilder of the postwar international order and the perfecter of the US government’s management system, and made America stronger than ever. In 1947 you announced that Truman Doctrine, proclaiming the beginning of the Cold War against the USSR and the socialist line-up; in 1948, you announced the Marshall Plan to rebuild Europe, the restriction-support policy portfolio consolidated the West against the East. You actively supporting the creation of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization expanded US involvement in Europe and reinforced Western Europe as the first line of defense against the USSR. You have completely changed America’s image—no longer only the market and supplier for Europe, but identified the US as the protector of them. The America’s presence in Western Europe is important for the late change of Eastern Europe countries from socialism to market economy—it took forty years. On May 14, 1948, eleven minutes after Israel’s declaration of statehood, you, on behalf of the United States, acknowledged the State of Israel then made the United States be the most reliable strategic ally of Israel. Since then, the US has had a bright eye in the Middle East. All these decent actions greatly increased America’s intangible assets. You signed the National Security Act of 1947, created the predecessor of the Department of Defense, US Air Force, and CIA. You insisted on the racial integration in the military and federal agencies. It was wise to make the Korean War a limited one without falling into a deeper and deeper swamp².

    Heard about these, other actors stood up and applauded Truman, and some said that Truman’s personal poor private economy after he ended his presidency showed that he was very clean and worthy of praise.

    All the eight actors stood up. They had sat for a long time. Only President Reagan waited for Grand Justice of History’s assessment. Reagan also visited Buffalo when he sought re-election. As the second-largest city of New York, Buffalo periodically met the president. It also produced the 13th President of the United States—the financial master Millard Fillmore (1800–1874), who made the US Debt decreased by –5.75%. Fillmore returned to Buffalo after retired from the presidency, since then, no longer left.

    John impersonated President Ronald Wilson Reagan. who was born in 1911, He said:

    I was born in a low-income family in a small town of northern Illinois, and I was able to achieve something because of America’s good political system.

    Grand Justice of History read:

    From January 20, 1981 to January 20, 1989, you are the 40th president of the United States. Your policy was the combination of lower tax rates, economic deregulation, and reduction in government spending, which brought a reduction of inflation from 12.5% to 4.4% and an average real GDP annual growth of 3.6% for ninety-two months over an eight-year period. Your ability of domestic administration was prominent. Also, your arts of Cold War accelerated the collapse of socialist countries in Eastern Europe, including the USSR, and finally relieved nearly forty years of Cold War pressure since WWII. The Revolutions of 1989 in Eastern Europe and the USSR’s collapse in 1991 ended the Cold War. Since then, the United States has been the world’s only superpower, creating the highest international status for the US since the Independence in 1774. After more than 200 years of efforts, the country, that began from the seaside thirteen states now the earth’s first power, created a human miracle!

    Everyone clapped warmly.

    Reagan said:

    I didn’t invest enough in AIDS when I was in place. It was a mistake.

    Around 2:00 pm,

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