Donald Trumps Twin Brothers in Arms

caption id=attachment_17331 align=aligncenter width=400width=400 TIBERIU DIANU Donald Trumps Twin Brothers in Arms (Tiberiu Dianu © 2016)/caption For those of you who might think Donald Trump is a unique phenomenon -- although the man beats everybody in terms of number of impersonators -- Ive got news. Trump has twin brothers. Not only in ideology but in appearance as well. One is the British brother Boris (Johnson). Boris was the emerged victor of the June 23 2016 Brexit deal. A former London mayor (from 2008 to 2016) Boris represents the right wing of the British Tories a kind of Tea Party wing of the U.S. Republican Party. He has been a vocal supporter of the U.K. exiting the E.U. which put him at odds with the former prime minister David Cameron. Cameron a more moderate conservative initiated the referendum but he chose to remain" in the Bremain" camp. On July 13 2016 Johnson assumed the office of Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs in Theresa Mays cabinet. The other one is the Dutch brother Geert (Wilders). Geert is the founder and leader of the Dutch Party for Freedom and a parliament member of the Dutch House of Representatives. He was listed as the most threatened politician in the Netherlands for his staunch anti-immigration and anti-Islam positions. For these reasons Geert was banned to enter the U.K. (in February 2009) but the ban was overturned later on by a British immigration tribunal (in October 2009). The ruling was praised as a triumph for freedom of speech." In 2011 a Dutch tribunal acquitted him of charges of hate speech considering that his speech was  legitimate political debate but on the edge." In light of the victorious Brexit Geert is pushing for a Nexit" but chances for the Netherlands to have soon a referendum with identical result are lower. Among factors the Netherlands is in the eurozone and the percentage of Nexiters" does not surpass for now 20. Ideologically Trump Johnson and  Wilders are related. In terms of the political creed Trump is considered an eclectic" with political views ranging from paleoconservatism to libertarianism (he has listed different party affiliations over the time). Johnson describes himself as a classic mildly euroskeptic Conservative" who embraced modern social liberalism" and adopted a more libertarian perspective. Wilders considers himself a right-wing liberal" and an iconoclast. He lists Margaret Thatcher as a model not Le Pen Haider or the rightist fascist groups." The three countries the U.S. the U.K. and the Netherlands also have striking resemblances in their history economy and language that might persuade them to follow a common path. First all three countries used to have and still have a sizeable number of former colonies and territories mainly in (but not limited to) the Caribbean and the Pacific areas. Second all three of them are bastions of capitalism. The New York Stock Exchange (aka The Big Board acquirer of the first traded securities in 1792) located in Wall Street Lower Manhattan New York City is the worlds largest stock exchange by market capitalization of its listed companies at US$19.00 plus trillion. The London Stock Exchange (part of the Royal Exchange opened in 1571) with a market capitalization of US$6.00 plus trillion (short scale) is the third-largest stock exchange in the world. And the Amsterdam Stock Exchange (the Bourse established in 1602) is considered the oldest modern" securities market in the world. Third there is a common language factor that situates them in the Anglosphere." English is the common language in the U.K. and the U.S. The Netherlands on the other hand was rated the third European country most proficient in English (with 90 after the U.K. and Ireland both with 95) and the second in the world most proficient in English as a second language. For the still reluctant ones Trump was born in New Amsterdam part of the colony of New Netherland later on turned into the British colony of Province of New York. So how can anybody still be surprised by how much these three brethren share in common?   NOTE - A version of the article was published previously in AMERICAN THINKER.   Tiberiu Dianu has published several books and a host of articles in law politics and post-communist societies. He currently lives and works in Washington DC and can be followed on MEDIUM. https://medium.com/@tdianu   *****      
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