Presents: “The Torch of Freedom in a Changing World”
A Special Edition on Vision, Sovereignty, and America’s Future
🦅 FEATURE ARTICLE:
“Discussing U.S. President Trump’s U.N. Speech”
Moral Lessons of the Global World and America’s Freedom
In an era where global elites stress climate alarmism while neglecting border security, President Donald Trump used the world stage of the United Nations to deliver a different message. He defended America’s sovereignty, demanded respect from other nations, and reminded the world that freedom and independence must serve humanity—not endless wars or destructive systems.
🔑 Inside This Edition:
- Freedom as a Moral Compass – Why Trump’s message of sovereignty and independence recalls America’s founding ideals.
- From Darkness to Light – The metaphor of a people emerging from long confinement, and how America must rediscover its higher purpose.
- Breaking with the Old Order – Wall Street, London finance, and the deep state versus a new labor-driven economy.
- From Bloodshed to Peace – America’s legacy of enmity abroad, and Trump’s pledge to build fairer cooperation among nations.
ADVERTISMENT











https://www.instagram.com/hairsenta?igsh=MXAzOThhNGZ0Nm15dQ==
✨ Hair Senta
Where Unprecedented Beauty Inspires Confidence
At Hair Senta, we believe beauty fuels imagination, courage, and joy.
We are a trademarked shopping & retail brand, proudly shipping the finest human hair extensions from Ghana to the world.
📦 Worldwide Shipping
💇🏾♀️ Premium Human Hair Extensions
🌍 From Ghana to Every Corner of the Globe
Visit Us:
📍 24 Jungle Avenue, Accra, Ghana – 00233
🌐 www.hairsenta.com
Call or WhatsApp:
📞 +233 0544 354 455
📞 +233 0248 629 769
Let your beauty speak volumes — choose Hair Senta. If you’d like a version for radio, social media graphics, flyers,
Featuring Global Perspectives

DZIGBORDI KWAKU-DOSOO
Global Keynote Speaker | CHPC™ Coach | Trusted by 500+ Global Brands & 100K+ Leaders.
°“Trump’s speech challenges us to see freedom not as an old slogan, but as a living promise of dignity, labor, and peace.”

GIORGIA MELONI. ITALIAN PRIME MINISTER
°“Leadership today means rejecting barbarism and reimagining prosperity for humanity.”

MS ASSUMPTA-GAHUTU. CEO and Principal of Babies and Toddlers Daycare and Co-Founder of Assumpta Newsletter Publication Magazine.
°Great leadership sparks not just hope, but a generational shift in vision and values.”
📌 Coming Monday, September 1st — Stay Tuned
This edition is more than analysis — it’s a compass for the future.
📌 This Edition is not just commentary—it’s a compass pointing toward America’s future role in the world.

Discussing U.S. President Trump’s U.N. Speech
Moral Lessons of the Global World and America’s Freedom.
At the United Nations, U.S. President Donald Trump called on every nation to respect America. He spoke firmly about defending U.S. sovereignty against unfair international rules and criticized global elites for pushing climate hysteria while ignoring real border security.
Trump emphasized that America needs reliable energy—not just wind turbines that fail when most needed. He even highlighted something as simple as American-made hats, presenting them as a symbol of jobs, self-reliance, and patriotism.
For many years, we have been reminded of the significance of America’s freedom and the influence it has carried worldwide. In analyzing Trump’s U.N. speech, we might compare America’s journey to that of a person who, after long confinement in a dark prison or deep well, finally emerges into the light.
Yet America has not always lived up to its promise. Too often, its freedom and independence were used to serve selfish or destructive purposes. Now, Trump presents himself as a leader looking not only at the present but also toward a new future.
He sincerely believes in America’s freedom and independence, and unlike those who dismiss him as a populist, he has shown himself to be a man of principle. Trump recognizes the historical weight of leaders like Hamilton, Lincoln, and McKinley, and rejects the lingering influence of the British imperial system.
By challenging entrenched “deep state” institutions and shifting focus toward building an economy based on productive labor and higher wages, he signals the end of the old money-driven systems of Wall Street and London finance.
Throughout history, America has built bridges of bloodshed and enmity with other nations. President Trump, in his own way, seems determined not to expand this legacy through endless wars, but instead to promote peace, sovereignty, and fair cooperation among nations.
This is why Trump’s U.N. speech stands out as exceptional—different from all others before it.
“The Philosophy Behind Making America Great Again”
Unity, Humanity, and the Rejection of Barbarism
The theme of “Making America Great Again” is not just a campaign slogan—it is deeply consonant with President Trump’s philosophy, perhaps more than with any American president before him. While past Senates and Congresses of the 19th, 20th, and 21st centuries often emphasized foreign invasions and sanctions, Trump shifted focus to caring for humanity.
His philosophy, even in its idealistic form, rests on the idea of the unity of mankind. This, in part, explains why Europeans and others across the globe have listened to him—some even agreeing with his broader vision.
In fact, Trump’s idea of “Making America Great” has never been narrowly nationalistic. Instead, it has consistently encouraged service to the people, dignity for humanity, and the rejection of barbarism.
Inside This Essay:
- A Philosophy of Care – Why Trump placed humanity before endless wars and sanctions.
- Unity as a Guiding Light – How his vision echoes a call for global dignity and cooperation.
- Beyond Nationalism – Why “Greatness” means rejecting barbarism and serving humanity at large..
The Bussola Global Dialogue Series
Hosted by La Bussola Newsletter Magazine
Special Edition: “The Source of New Thought – Leadership, Sovereignty, and the Future of Nations”
PANEL INTRODUCTIONS



🎤 Host & Moderator: Dzigbordi Kwaku-Dosoo
A globally respected keynote speaker, CHPC™ Coach, and advisor to over 500 multinational brands and 100,000+ leaders across continents. Known for shaping conversations on leadership, human development, and global economic transformation, she brings clarity and depth to high-level discussions.

🎙️ Guest: Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni
Italy’s first female Prime Minister and a leading conservative voice in Europe. She has positioned Italy as a sovereign actor in an era of shifting geopolitical powers, speaking on national identity, global realignment, and the future economic order.

🎙️ Guest: Ms. Assumpta Gahutu
A global affairs commentator and political analyst with a Pan-European and African perspective. She is recognized for her commentary on world leadership, sovereignty, energy security, labor rights, and the changing multipolar world.
OPENING THE DIALOGUE

Dzigbordi Kwaku-Dosoo (Host):
“Good day to our global audience, from Europe to Africa, from the Americas to Asia. Welcome to this landmark conversation hosted under the Bussola Newsletter Magazine’s Special Edition:
‘The Source of New Thought – Trump, Sovereignty, and the Future of Global Power.’
We are here to unpack a deep and timely question surrounding world leadership, economic philosophy, and the cost of progress. With me are two extraordinary voices: Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni and Ms. Assumpta Gahutu. Ladies, you are most welcome. It’s an honor to have you both on this dialogue.”
(Brief pause)
Dzigbordi continues:
“Let me first begin with you, Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni. I want to frame our conversation with a reality that many overlook when celebrating America’s global achievements.”
Dzigbordi’s Opening Question to Giorgia Meloni

Dzigbordi Kwaku-Dosoo:
“The dark truth behind America’s progress is one most people ignore.
Whenever there is a dominant narrative that says America is the best country on earth — that everything is rosy and the economy is booming — we must always look at the shadow, where the pain, the burden, and the cost are being borne.
We were always told that industrial agriculture in America has improved food availability. Yet millions suffer and die from food-related disease. Why are Americans battling chronic illnesses when food is supposed to bring health?
Beyond that, over 90% of species have disappeared due to industrial agriculture whose very instruments — pesticides, insecticides, herbicides — destroy the biodiversity that sustains life.
The machines and technologies of this system might appear as progress, but from an integral and ecological perspective, they form part of a wider ecocide.
So here is the question: When we trace the deeper causes of America’s unreliable economy and collapsing social health — do you believe the philosophy behind President Trump’s vision can redirect America toward the dignity of life?”
🇮🇹 Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni Responds

Giorgia Meloni:
“Thank you, Dzigbordi, for this question and for the clarity with which you have framed the paradox of American progress. It is true — modern power often hides its cost in the shadows: in the soil, in the human body, and in the communities that no longer have a voice.
What you described — the silent destruction of biodiversity, the industrialization of food systems, the chronic illnesses that follow — is not an American problem alone. It is the global model that emerged from a certain vision of dominance:
economic dominance, agricultural dominance, military dominance.
For decades, America pursued expansion through systems that rewarded speculation over labor, technology over nature, and intervention over sovereignty. This is why the cost is not only ecological, but also moral.
Now, regarding President Trump — whether people admire him or oppose him, one thing cannot be denied: he broke with the old script. He is not a man shaped by the ideology of technocratic globalism. He speaks to a part of America that remembers work, land, faith, and family — not only profit.
You asked if his philosophy points toward the dignity of life. I would say this:
If the United States is to restore the dignity of life, it must redefine the meaning of strength — not as the ability to dominate others, but as the ability to protect one’s own people, resources, and cultural identity.
Trump challenged the idea that progress is measured only by financial markets, industrial expansion, and military intervention. He placed sovereignty — national, economic, and human — back at the center of the debate.
But whether this becomes a philosophy that heals or merely disrupts depends on the choices that follow. The United States must choose between remaining an empire of consumption or becoming again a nation rooted in responsibility — to its land, its people, and its future generations.
So yes, the potential for dignity is there. But dignity is not achieved through slogans. It is achieved through the courage to abandon systems that kill life while pretending to sustain it.”

Dzigbordi Kwaku-Dosoo (Host):
“Prime Minister Meloni, thank you for such a grounded and unapologetically honest perspective. You have made a powerful distinction — between an empire of consumption and a nation of responsibility. And you touched on something essential: that sovereignty, if it does not protect human life, becomes only another flag over a dying system.
Let me now bring in a voice that has studied the ripple effects of Western economic models on the Global South and Europe alike.”

Turning to Ms. Assumpta Gahutu
“Ms. Assumpta, Prime Minister Meloni spoke about biodiversity loss, industrial agriculture, and the moral cost of dominance. She also pointed out that Trump disrupted — but did not yet redefine — America’s path.
I want to ask you this:
When a superpower’s progress is built on ecocide, food insecurity, disease, and speculation instead of labor — what does ‘leadership’ look like in response?
And do you believe that Trump’s economic and sovereignty-based philosophy — if applied beyond America — could inspire correction or simply replacement of one dominant system with another?”

Ms. Assumpta Gahutu Responds
“Thank you, Dzigbordi, and thank you, Prime Minister Meloni, for setting the tone so precisely.
When we talk about the American model — industrial agriculture, chronic disease, collapsing biodiversity, the commodification of life — we are really talking about a system that has exported both its promise and its poison to the rest of the world.
For decades, Western economic power has operated on three silent assumptions:
- That nature is an infinite resource.
- That the human body can absorb toxicity without consequence.
- That the rest of the world exists to feed the consumption of a few.
Now, the illusion is cracking. Not because people suddenly became enlightened — but because the consequences are now impossible to outsource. The soil is sick. The people are sick. The ecosystems are collapsing.
You asked: What does leadership look like in response?
True leadership in this century must do three things:
- Restore sovereignty over food, labor, and land.
- Replace extraction with reciprocity.
- Break with the mythology that power justifies harm.
This brings us to President Trump. Whether one agrees with him or not, he represents a rupture — not yet a revolution, but a rupture — in the Western narrative. His rejection of certain globalist structures signaled something the world had not heard from an American president in a long time:
‘We cannot keep pretending that the empire is sustainable.’
But here is the distinction: A philosophy can disrupt without healing. If sovereignty is not linked to responsibility, it becomes another mask for power.
Trump’s emphasis on labor, national industry, and the rejection of endless wars opens a door — but it does not define what walks through it. If America continues to dominate through finance, technology, and environmental destruction, then we replace only the rhetoric, not the reality.
However, if the philosophy evolves into a respect for the dignity of work, the land, and nations that refuse to be exploited, then yes — it could inspire a correction rather than a replacement of one empire with another.
The deeper question is this:
Will America rediscover humility before nature and humanity — or simply redesign its dominance with new slogans?”

Dzigbordi Kwaku-Dosoo
“Thank you, Ms. Assumpta, for that deeply layered perspective.
What you’ve highlighted is something the world is only beginning to confront — that power without accountability becomes a form of ecological and human debt. And when that debt is not paid, it returns as crisis: in the soil, in the body, in the social order.
Now, before I turn back to Prime Minister Meloni and open the next layer of this conversation, allow me to anchor our audience — because this dialogue is part of a broader reflection we’re making in this month’s edition of La Bussola Newsletter Magazine.”
La Bussola Newsletter Magazine
Presents: “The Torch of Freedom in a Changing World”
A Special Edition on Vision, Sovereignty, and America’s Future
🦅 FEATURE ARTICLE:
“Discussing U.S. President Trump’s U.N. Speech”
Moral Lessons of the Global World and America’s Freedom
In a time when global elites warn of climate catastrophe yet overlook border insecurity and collapsing social structures, President Donald Trump took the UN stage with a different doctrine:
- Sovereignty before submission
- Pragmatism over ideological hysteria
- Freedom with responsibility — not empire-building
He reminded world leaders that independence is not isolationism — it is stewardship. That America’s strength must not fuel endless war, but serve humanity.
Inside This Edition:
1. Freedom as a Moral Compass
How Trump’s defense of sovereignty echoes the founding spirit of America.
2. From Darkness to Light
The metaphor of people emerging from confinement — and why America must rediscover purpose beyond power.
3. Breaking with the Old Order
Wall Street, London finance, and the deep state versus a new labor-based economy.
4. From Bloodshed to Peace
A nation once defined by conflict abroad — and Trump’s claim to reshape that legacy through cooperation grounded in fairness.

Dzigbordi (continuing):
“Now, with that framing, I want to bring Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni back into the conversation.
Prime Minister, you have navigated the tension between sovereignty and global expectation in Europe.
Given what Ms. Assumpta has just outlined — the cost of progress without conscience — I’d like to ask you:
Can a nation reclaim dignity without withdrawing from international responsibility?
And do you see Trump’s doctrine as a break from Western hegemony — or as its rebranding in a different moral tone?” Let me pause here and give you the floor.”

🇮🇹 Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni Responds
Giorgia Meloni:
“Thank you, Dzigbordi. And thank you, Assumpta, for speaking with such clarity about the consequences of a world driven by unchecked interests rather than responsibility.
You asked a crucial question:
Can a nation reclaim dignity without abandoning its responsibility to others?
I believe not only that it can — but that it must. Because responsibility without sovereignty is submission. And sovereignty without responsibility becomes domination.
For many years, Europe, like America, was told there was only one acceptable model: global markets without limits, borders without meaning, and values without roots. The result has not been harmony — it has been fragility.
Now, regarding President Trump:
I do not see his doctrine as a rebranding of Western hegemony. I see it as an interruption — a refusal to continue pretending that power structures built decades ago are still serving their people.
Sovereignty, as he describes it, is not a retreat — it is a re-centering.
It says: A nation must first stand firmly on its own feet before it can walk with others.
In Europe, we face a similar battle. We are told that defending our identity is extremism, that protecting our workers is selfishness, that energy independence is defiance. Yet these are the foundations of stability.
If America shifts — even partially — from exporting war, ideology, and financial pressure to encouraging fair cooperation among equal nations, this would not isolate the West. It would mature it.
But — and here I agree with Ms. Assumpta — sovereignty must come with a conscience.
If America simply replaces one empire with another language, nothing will change. But if sovereignty is linked to dignity — of labor, of land, of culture — then we enter a new era.”

Dzigbordi Kwaku-Dosoo (Moderator & Host)
“Thank you, Prime Minister. What you’ve said brings us to a crucial turning point in this dialogue.
We are no longer speaking only about sovereignty as a political expression — we are now confronting sovereignty as a moral test in a world that has exhausted its illusions. And that takes us directly to the question of America’s self-definition, its leadership, and the speech delivered by President Donald Trump at the United Nations.
This month’s special edition of La Bussola Newsletter Magazine invites the world to reflect on that very moment — not as a performance of power, but as a philosophical statement about identity, responsibility, and the end of a certain era.”

“Discussing U.S. President Trump’s U.N. Speech — Moral Lessons of the Global World and America’s Freedom”
At the United Nations, Trump did not speak the language of apology or submission. He spoke the language of sovereignty — and demanded that the world respect America on its own terms.
He challenged what he called climate hysteria while exposing the contradiction of nations that preach sustainability but ignore borders, energy security, and labor realities.
Even a symbol as ordinary as an American-made hat became, in his framing, a declaration of patriotism, dignity of work, and economic independence.
He described a nation emerging from the shadows of its own contradictions — like a person rising from a prison’s darkness into unexpected light.
And yet, he acknowledged — directly or indirectly — that America has not always used its freedom in service of humanity. That its independence has sometimes fueled exploitation, conflict, or imperial ambition.
Trump positions himself not as a populist, but as a restorationist — someone who believes that freedom must be reoriented toward labor, dignity, sovereignty, and peace rather than endless war.
His model rejects:
- The deep state machinery,
- The dominance of London and Wall Street finance,
- And the habit of exporting chaos in the name of order.
And perhaps most importantly, as this edition explores — he does not speak of American greatness as domination, but as service, unity, and the rejection of barbarism.

Dzigbordi (continuing):
“Ms. Assumpta, I’d like to bring you in here.
Given the symbolism and claims of that UN speech — from energy and labor to sovereignty and America’s moral direction — how should the world interpret this shift?
Is this a true departure from the old imperial posture, or is it a turning of the same wheel with a different language?
And more importantly — does Trump’s framing of ‘America’s freedom’ hold any deeper relevance for nations who have endured the consequences of that freedom in its darker form?”

Ms. Assumpta Gahutu Responds
“Thank you, Dzigbordi. The question you raised — whether this is a rupture or a repetition — is one that many leaders quietly ask themselves.
When President Trump spoke at the United Nations, what struck many of us in Europe was not the tone, but the target. He was not pleading for approval, nor was he trying to preserve the global architecture that America once used to control outcomes. He was warning that sovereignty is not negotiable — not for America, not for anyone.
That is a very different message from the past.
For decades, American ‘freedom’ too often meant the freedom to interfere — economically, militarily, culturally. But in that speech, Trump drew a boundary:
America first does not have to mean others last.
It means: take care of your people, respect your borders, build your economy, honor your workers.
Many global elites heard this as aggression because they have grown accustomed to a borderless ideology where responsibility disappears behind bureaucracy. But leaders — real leaders — heard something else: an invitation to stand upright.
Let me say this clearly — Trump’s rejection of climate hysteria was not a rejection of environmental responsibility. It was a rejection of hypocrisy.
You cannot demand wind turbines while outsourcing energy dependency to unstable regimes. You cannot preach sustainability while leaving entire nations without water, land, or livelihood.
And when he spoke of American-made hats, many laughed. But in Italy, we understood. He was not talking about fashion — he was talking about symbolism: labor, dignity, and the right of a nation to make what it uses and use what it makes.
As for the moral question — yes, America has made mistakes. But the difference now is that a leader is finally acknowledging that freedom without restraint can become destruction. Trump does not apologize for America — he redirects it.
Whether the world likes his methods or not, his message signals the end of a system that treated nations like markets and people like data. And that is why his speech stood apart.
But — and I must emphasize this — sovereignty must not become a fortress. It must become a foundation. Only then can cooperation exist without coercion.
So to answer you directly:
No, I do not believe this is the old imperial voice dressed in new rhetoric. I believe it is the beginning of a political realism the world has been avoiding — one where respect replaces illusion, and peace is built not through submission, but through strength and dignity.”

Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni Respond
“Ms Assumpta Gahutu has touched a truth that many avoid: the world is not resisting Trump because he is disruptive — it is resisting him because he is exposing foundations that were never moral to begin with.
When America speaks of sovereignty today, it sounds radical only because the previous era trained us to believe that power must be centralized, values must be imposed, and nations must apologize for existing.
Trump’s UN speech challenged three illusions:
- That global governance is neutral.
It is not. It has always been shaped by those who control capital, resources, and narratives. - That freedom is a Western export.
In reality, freedom is ancient and multicultural — it belongs to civilizations long before modern America. - That progress justifies destruction.
The soil, the worker, the border, and the culture have all been treated as collateral for someone else’s profit. - Now, is Trump perfect? No. Is he ideological? Absolutely not. But he is instinctively anti-imperial in a world that still runs on imperial logic.
When he rejects global policing, borderless exploitation, and technocratic control, he is — knowingly or not — challenging what I call the ‘polite colonialism’ of the 21st century.
And the irony is this:
Many nations that once suffered under Western domination understand his message better than the elite circles within the West itself.
If his doctrine of sovereignty evolves beyond nationalism into dignity — dignity of land, labor, and life — then America may finally begin paying back the moral debt it accrued through decades of intervention.
If not, the world will treat this as a brief interruption rather than a turning point.”
Dzigbordi Kwaku-Dosoo Transitions to the Next Theme.

“Thank you,. Prime Minister Meloni.You’ve just articulated something that sets the stage for our next dimension — not the external performance of America, but the inner philosophy driving its direction.
Because beyond the UN speech, there is something deeper at play — a worldview expressed in a single phrase that has been both celebrated and misunderstood: ‘Making America Great Again’
Has it been reduced to a slogan? Yes — by critics and supporters alike. But has it also carried a deeper moral proposition? Undeniably yes.
So now, we turn to the question not of performance, but of philosophy:
- Is ‘greatness’ in this context about dominance — or about restoration?
- Does it signal a return to imperial habits — or a rejection of them?
- And can a national revival coexist with global dignity?
To open this chapter, I want us to explore the ideals behind the movement — especially its claim to unity, humanity, and the rejection of barbarism.
Prime Minister Melonii, Ms. Assumpta — let us now consider not just what Trump said, but what his vision may imply for the world that must live with America’s choices.”

Ms. Assumpta Gahutu on the Philosophy of MAGA
“Thank you, Dzigbordi. When we shift from performance to philosophy, we enter the realm of intent and moral architecture. ‘Making America Great Again’ is often reduced to a campaign slogan, but at its core, it carries a vision — and one that has implications far beyond U.S. borders.
First, it is a vision rooted in humanity and unity. Unlike many ideologies that define greatness through domination or financial power, this philosophy emphasizes the welfare of people: the dignity of work, the security of communities, and the restoration of cultural and economic sovereignty.
Second, it is anti-barbarism in principle. By this, I mean it rejects the idea that power should justify harm — whether environmental, social, or geopolitical. It reframes progress not as extraction and exploitation, but as responsible stewardship of labor, land, and life.
Third, it carries a global resonance. European nations, African nations, and even smaller states often recognize the value in a leadership that prioritizes internal responsibility before external imposition. In this sense, MAGA is not only about America; it is a proposition for the ethics of governance in the 21st century.
However, a critical caution remains: philosophy alone does not change outcomes. The application of principles — through policy, labor, energy, and diplomacy — determines whether this vision remains aspirational or becomes transformative.
In short: MAGA, when interpreted through its deeper philosophy, is less a nationalist chant and more a call to restore dignity, humanity, and moral accountability — values that the world desperately needs if it is to survive the consequences of unchecked globalization.”
Dzigbordi Kwaku-Dosoo (Host)

“Thank you, Prime Minister Meloni, and thank you, Ms. Assumpta Gahutu, for such a profound and candid conversation.
Today, we have navigated the tension between power and responsibility, between sovereignty and cooperation, and between national ambition and global morality. We’ve explored the paradoxes of American freedom, the hidden costs of progress, and the philosophical underpinnings of ‘Making America Great Again.’
A few key lessons emerge from this dialogue:
- Sovereignty without conscience is empty. A nation must protect its people, land, and labor, but this responsibility carries moral weight.
- Freedom is a tool, not a trophy. America’s historical independence created opportunity — but also consequences. Leadership today is measured by how freedom is wielded for life, not power.
- Greatness is universal, not parochial. The principles behind MAGA, when understood philosophically, call for unity, service, and the rejection of barbarism — ideals that resonate far beyond any border.
- Vision requires action. Philosophy must inform policy. Ethics must guide economy, labor, energy, and diplomacy. Only then can rhetoric become reality.
As we close, let us remember: the world watches closely when a superpower reflects on its past and imagines a different future. It is in these moments that leadership is tested — not only by what is said at the podium, but by the courage to act, to repair, and to restore dignity wherever it has been lost.
To our global audience, we invite you to carry this reflection into your communities, workplaces, and nations. The dialogue does not end here; it begins anew in every choice, every policy, and every act of responsible leadership.
Thank you for joining us on this special edition of La Bussola Newsletter Magazine — The Torch of Freedom in a Changing World.
Closing Reflection
As we conclude this dialogue, it is fitting to reflect on the wisdom of Nichiren Daishonin, whose teachings remind us of the human capacity to transform adversity into courage and action. In his Gosho, “The Object of Devotion for Observing the Mind”, Daishonin writes:
“Each of us has the potential to illuminate the world; we must first ignite the light within ourselves.”
Similarly, SGI President Daisaku Ikeda has repeatedly emphasized that peace is built on the dignity of the individual and the responsibility of every citizen to create a better world:
“True peace is not merely the absence of conflict, but the presence of justice, the protection of human rights, and the cultivation of wisdom and courage to confront inequality.”
In the context of our dialogue today, these teachings echo the essential lesson: that sovereignty, freedom, and leadership are not ends in themselves. They are instruments for the protection of life, the restoration of dignity, and the promotion of harmony across nations.
May the reflections of Prime Minister Meloni, Ms. Assumpta Gahutu, and the philosophical underpinnings of President Trump’s vision inspire us to act with both courage and compassion — to illuminate not just our nations, but the global community we all share.
SGI-Our Shared Humanity.


https://www.instagram.com/babies_and_todds_day_care?igsh=MWs0ZHlsbjcxNXEyZg==


https://www.instagram.com/officeandcobysa?igsh=dmxucTZ2a2t1eDBn


https://www.instagram.com/laurenhautecouture?igsh=MWxzNXN1Ym5nZ3o3Mg==


https://www.instagram.com/goba_kente?igsh=d2Vwd2E2M2VtcTZq


https://www.instagram.com/goba_kente?igsh=d2Vwd2E2M2VtcTZq

https://www.instagram.com/oh_my_hairr?igsh=MThqbDNneDZzcTF3cw==


https://www.instagram.com/delish_bakerygh?igsh=MW5ic2c0NnR5cHBwZQ==


Poorhttps://www.instagram.com/flourishheights?igsh=cTExenQ3bnptZGgx