- The Washington Times - Wednesday, September 7, 2016

President Obama took a not-so-subtle shot at Republican nominee Donald Trump in Laos Wednesday, lamenting to a foreign audience that the U.S. will be “left behind” if America turns to isolationism instead of embracing Asian cultures.

Speaking to Asian youth leaders in the mountain town of Luang Prabang, Mr. Obama didn’t mention Mr. Trump by name, but he pushed back against the Republican nominee’s proposals such a building a wall between the U.S. and Mexico, and temporarily banning Muslim immigrants.

“We have to be able to promote principles that rise above any individual religion, nationality, race,” Mr. Obama said. “And that’s what we’ve been trying to promote — not always successfully. Not everybody in America agrees with me on this, by the way. I’ll leave it at that.”

Mr. Obama reminisced fondly about growing up in Indonesia, and chided Americans for a tendency to ignore what’s going on in the world.

“If you are the United States, sometimes you can feel lazy and think, you know, ’we’re so big, we don’t really have to know anything about other people,’” Mr. Obama said. “That’s part of what I’m trying to change, because this is actually the region that’s going to grow faster than anyplace else in the world.”

He added, “If we aren’t here interacting and learning from you, and understanding the culture of the region, then we’ll be left behind.”

Mr. Obama is promoting a free-trade deal with Asia-Pacific nations, and predicted Congress will approve the agreement after the November elections. Both Mr. Trump and Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton oppose the Trans-Pacific Partnership.

The president said ethnic tensions and conflicts with new immigrants surface in the U.S. particularly “when the economy is not doing well, and so people feel stressed.

“And typically, when people feel stressed, they turn on others who don’t look like them,” Mr. Obama said. “So we have to fight against that.”

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