Li Hongqi (Professor Emeritus of the City University of New York) After 2007, I went back to Taiwan to teach, and it was not until the past two or three years that I retired and returned to the United States, where I could spend more time living an average American life near New York. The first thing I noticed was how the doctor's clinics in the United States are now very beautiful, even magnificent, with nurses and general assistants shuttled in the front hall. I told my wife that this is very different than it was more than ten years ago.
It seems that the U.S. government must have invested a lot of medical insurance budget, otherwise how could even an ordinary chiropractic (or pedicure) clinic photo background removing have a two-story single-family house, covering an area of more than half an acre, and it is a steel frame The concrete building is incomparable with the old brick bungalows! I smiled and said that Americans enjoy the world's resources anyway. As long as they don't have enough money, they will go abroad to search for them, and they will never be afraid of the day when they will be deficient. I'm joking, of course, but there are truths that are hard to imagine or unwilling to face.
It can be said that the United States is the most powerful country in the world, and Americans are of course the first priority to enjoy the world's resources, there is no doubt about this. If America collapses, the world's resources must be exhausted. What terrible news this is. Since the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers in 2008, we often hear a sentence: This company is too big to let it fail, and the government must come to the rescue. If this is the case, then the United States, as an economy, must not let it collapse, let alone declare bankruptcy. Seriously, America today is really an empire that everyone fears will collapse; is this the ultimate fate of liberalism or democratic human rights? The chaos of this US presidential election cannot but make us reflect