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Maga is damaging America's reputation John Major

The Observer

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October 19, 2025

For most of the postwar years, America has been the rock upon which democracy prospered.

Maga is damaging America's reputation John Major

Its influence was overwhelmingly benign when President Truman committed to "support free people who are resisting attempted subjugation by armed minorities or by outside pressure".

So was it when, more than a decade later, President Kennedy committed to confront "the common enemies of man - tyranny, poverty, disease and war".

The purpose behind these noble sentiments was to create a freer and safer world, in which the strong pledged their help to the weak. No price was asked for this. No deal demanded. No investment or payment expected. It was high politics in a harsh world, when to help others was not seen as a business opportunity.

This approach, it seems, is now out of fashion. Today, the United States has a less altruistic policy. The president's ambition is to "Make America Great Again" - although it is puzzling that being the richest and most powerful nation in the world is not already seen as an indication of greatness.

In the Maga quest, the US has embraced national self-interest. Donald Trump, with the support of the world's richest man, abruptly cut off aid to the poorest people in the world and those organisations whose role is to cure the diseases that most afflict them.

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