Talk:List of Presidents and World Leaders (Joe's World)

I would like to see some more elections on this page.

Anonymous173.57.37.111 16:12, December 17, 2012 (UTC)

USA
What happens to the USA after 2033? Anonymous173.57.37.111 17:55, December 17, 2012 (UTC)

I am not sure yet of the way the American political process will evolve. Still looking at other opinions and trends. But I suspect a split of both parties... At the moment I'm writing up medium-term futurology. Jakeepping (talk) 18:04, December 17, 2012 (UTC)jakepping

2033: The president represented is an independent who enters the national spotlight in the independent wave of 2022 (most likely as a governor of a Northern state or Western state) or a non-elected influential figure. My assumptions are that he will follow the Perot-Bloomberg model of being a billionaire former CEO capable of self-financing and with mythical technocratic ability. I assume he is around 30-40 today. Unless he invents/invests in a new technology/brand or rides into wealth in a boom 10 years from now perhaps he is already listed on Forbes:


 * Dustin Moskovitz, CA (28. Internet entrepreneur: Facebook, Asana. Seems left-wing)
 * Mark Zuckerberg, CA (28. Internet entrepreneur: Facebook. Involvement in politics & independent cred with Chris Christie fundraiser. But many already have an opinion on him)
 * Scott Duncan, TX (30. Inherited: Oil and natural gas pipelines)
 * Sean Parker, NY (33. Internet entrepreneur: Napster, Facebook Airtime. Seems economically left-wing)
 * Jack Dorsey, CA (36. Internet entrepreneur: Twitter, Square. Democrat)
 * Nicholas Woodman, CA (37. Entrepreneur: GoPro cameras)
 * Chase Coleman III, NY (37. Hedge funds)
 * Ryan Kavanaugh, CA (38. Film producer. Moderate Republican)
 * John Arnold, TX (38. Hedge funds, retired. Libertarian. Involved in efforts to privatize pension funds)
 * Larry Page, CA (39. Internet entrepreneur: Google. Democrat. Many people have an opinion on Google)

2041: Fiona Cabot-Lodge represents New England old money, Rockefeller Republicanism, and someones who represents the corporate class and has socially liberal or no positions on social issues. Jakeepping (talk) 14:06, March 16, 2013 (UTC)

UN Secretary general
Barack Obama can not become UNSecrataryGeneral because "These include a limit to two five-year terms, regional (continental) rotation of the appointee’s national origin, and the appointee may not be a citizen of any of the Security Council’s five permanent members."--Fero (talk) 03:50, April 27, 2013 (UTC)
 * Also Lisa Ann of Jamaica can not represent Latin America, is just a "commomwealt spy" --Fero (talk) 03:55, April 27, 2013 (UTC)

Is weird that a tiny white anglosphere NZ as Helen Clark take down the USA-UK power in UN in 2018, sound like a betrayal, Bachelet in 2021 sound more rational rising the south (asia-africa-latinamerica)--Fero (talk) 04:37, April 27, 2013 (UTC)

Your first point is completely true, so I will correct this silly notion I have place in my timeline. Your second point is  a bit out there, a Caribbean candidate might not be favoured by South Americans but they would probably get a lot of backing from Africa and Europe. But perhaps South American nations may have more power in promoting an alternative. Your third point: Helen Clark doesn't owe the USA-UK anything. Its in her interest to bring balance to other world regions (as an ignored part of the world she would know). But if you insist, the person most likely to "betray you" is someone you thought you trusted.Jakeepping (talk) 11:06, April 27, 2013 (UTC)

Ted Nugent
No. This 64 year old musician who puts out shocking statements is not going to be a federally elected politician.Jakeepping (talk) 11:22, August 31, 2013 (UTC)