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Trump PANICS as XI REFUSES to GREET HIM!!!

[media=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LMRwZIhOZNE]

MeidasTouch host Ben Meiselas reports on Donald Trump panicking after being stood up by China’s President Xi Jingping when Air Force One landed in China as the trip is already off to a bad start.
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Crazywaterspring · 61-69, M Best Comment
Xi should have a state dinner with chopsticks only.
Nanoose · 70-79, M
@Crazywaterspring That would be hilarious. Cheers!
Windigo1 · 70-79, M
@Crazywaterspring Best Answer of the day lol

Nanoose · 70-79, M
According to Fox news Trump got the red carpet treatment when he arrived. Bet baby Trump leaves the meeting early. Cheers!
@Nanoose He got his nose rubbed in the Red Carpet
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Pretzel · 70-79, M
Did he not let him know when he was arriving?
Nanoose · 70-79, M
@Pretzel He did but the Chines official that took the call said - what I can't hear you kaaaaaaaaaaaaaa - I'm driving through a tunnel kaaaaaaaaaaa. Cheers!
@Nanoose He was greeted by Chinese schoolgirls waving Chinese flags. I would like to think that this was a show of solidarity with the Iranian school girls who died by Demented Donnie’s and Kegsbreath’s outdated missile target list…
Pretzel · 70-79, M
@KunsanVeteran given his ties to Epstein I wonder if that was wise .....
JSul3 · 70-79
To lift a quote from '39 Son of Frankenstein, as Wolf von Frankenstein approaches the gathering of Town Council officials and a number of curious villagers, the
Bugormaster steps towards him and says:
"We come to meet you ....not to greet you."
Trump China Meeting Shut Down As Trip Instantly Backfires

[media=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wjrbue4w7qY]
MoveAlong · 70-79, M
It will be interesting to see how this shakes out. We won't know for a while though. Trump's version will be a blatant lie. That you can count on.

BTW, Tim Cook and other business leaders accompanied trump. I understand trump was overheard asking Cook "how do you make a smartphone anyway".
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@JSul3 Xi may not have meant it as a snub. But, yeah, Trump was probably ticked off --bigly.
@JSul3
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@JSul3 FROM THE NEW YORK TIMES

President Trump arrived Wednesday night in Beijing, where he was welcomed by a military band, an honor guard, hundreds of Chinese youth waving flags and China’s vice president, Han Zheng.

Such carefully designed receptions for foreign leaders telegraph Beijing’s attitude toward these visits. Sometimes Beijing sends a lower-level official to convey displeasure or distance. Sometimes they send someone senior and influential to signal a high degree of respect.

This time, they sent someone who is high-level but whose position is mostly that of a figurehead — which could be a way to send a layered message.

“Beijing sent Han Zheng to Trump’s inauguration and knows that his title of vice president, even though it is a ceremonial role, will impress the status-conscious American president,” said Julian Gewirtz, a China historian at Columbia University who served in senior China policy roles in the National Security Council under President Biden.

“It’s an example of how, throughout this summit, China is hoping to trade symbolism for substance — using protocol and Trump’s preference for pageantry to hold off a return to economic escalation and buy time for China,” he said.

In his role as vice president, Mr. Han is often sent to formal diplomatic events, such as the coronation ceremony in Britain of King Charles III or Mr. Trump’s second inauguration as president. But Mr. Han, who stepped down from the elite Politburo Standing Committee, the apex of power in China’s ruling Communist Party, now has little influence over policymaking.

The choice of Mr. Han could also signal how Beijing is approaching a visit by the leader of the most powerful country in the world, but who now faces a more defiant and assertive Beijing. It would suggest that Mr. Trump could be feted with the honors of a formal state visit but not given special treatment beyond that of any other power in the world.

“In Chinese diplomacy, protocol is substance, especially during a state visit,” said Evan Medeiros, a professor of Asian studies at Georgetown University who served as an Asia adviser to President Barack Obama. “The arrival ceremony is the first threshold in the protocol game; it is how China signals respect.”

Mr. Han’s presence is a slight downgrade from the welcome Mr. Trump received in 2017, some analysts say. During that state visit, Mr. Trump was greeted by Yang Jiechi, China’s top diplomat and a member of the Politburo, the party’s second-most powerful body. At the time, Xinhua, China’s official news agency, described the presence of such a “heavyweight” as a sign of “the importance China attaches to the meeting” between the two leaders.

“If they sent someone who is a Politburo member, it means they really think this is so important and you are our most important guest,” said Wei-Feng Tzeng, an associate research fellow at National Chengchi University in Taipei who has researched Chinese diplomatic protocol.

Still, U.S. presidents have recently enjoyed higher-level airport greeters than have leaders of other countries considered closer to Beijing. During a state visit in 2024, President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia was received by the state councilor Shen Yiqin, whose position is lower than Mr. Han’s.

China has made these subtle changes in reception before. In 2014, President Obama visited Beijing amid his “pivot” to Asia, which involved shoring up alliances in the region to constrain a more-assertive China. He was treated to a more standard protocol of a ministry-level official: the head of China’s foreign ministry, Wang Yi.

Compare that to 2009, when Mr. Obama became the first U.S. president to visit China during his first year in office. He was greeted by Xi Jinping himself, who was also vice president but a member of the Politburo Standing Committee. At the time, he was already seen as the likely successor to Hu Jintao as China’s leader.

 
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