The sodomite dedicated 15% of his speech to domestic policy, even the domestic policy were just the usual non sense..."we should, we could have, unless we do" people should be judges.
Here is his domestic topics.
In last year's celebration, I outlined our developmental struggle across various fronts and sectors, including our priorities. While the concept is not new, it is primarily intended to elevate the livelihood of our people—initially in specific areas, but broadly and permanently to liberate us from a subsistence economy. It aims to reinforce our productivity, sustainably expand our output, and transition toward excellent management, value-addition, manufacturing, industrialization, and superior services. Not confined to the economy, it encompasses diplomatic and informational fronts as well. Capital and technology, alongside the vast and sustainable partnerships arising with emerging opportunities, are tasks we do not take lightly.
As stated repeatedly, the decisive force is ensuring synergy and sustainability by coordinating the broad participation of the population, the quantity and quality of professionals, experts, and youth, with our patriotic citizens abroad. However, to advance at our desired pace, we must review, refine, and mobilize our resources for our programs and plans. Consequently, some friction or slowdowns (ሰገጥ ምባል) may not be absent in the year 2026.
Our road and transport projects will expand as designed. Large-scale housing programs will be pushed forward in tandem. Projects to expand water and electricity services, barring supply delays, will be deployed this year. In social services, priority will be given to education with broad public support; programs starting from pre-school will receive the primary impetus, and expectations are high. The expansion of qualitative health services is also highly anticipated.
and here is Foreign topics.
Honorable Ladies and Gentlemen,
Given the uniqueness and understandable strategic weight of the United States, on the occasion of the 34th Independence Anniversary, I noted that the return of Trump to the "White House" required an early assessment and serious homework to understand his policy directions, approaches, and the footprint they leave behind. However, establishing evaluation frameworks, gathering evidence, and reading the process as a pattern requires more patience than hasty conclusions because the phenomenon is heavy and complex. To explore Trump's proclaimed "MAGA" slogan and its meaning, it is timely and essential to align various topics (wealth, industrial output, technological dominance, military power, spheres of influence, etc.) within the historical context of the United States—especially during the Cold War era and the recent "unipolar" era of unbridled dominance—to understand its future trajectory.
In the economy... the strategy of economic dislocation caused by the dominant "globalization" ideology following the end of the Cold War was not minor. The fact that Washington's debt, which I mentioned last year as galloping at 30 trillion, is rising toward 40 trillion today is simple proof. While Trump's recognition of this danger and decline can be considered "positive," will the remedies he is pursuing (. . .cutting expenditures, pulling back and relocating globalized industries and investments, raising tariffs, lowering domestic taxes, monopolizing critical minerals, flexing power and threatening, intensive diplomatic and propaganda campaigns. . . etc.) work? Where and with whom? Technological dominance, including AI, requires a deep and analytical assessment... What about military power? ... military power is not measured merely by theatrical boasting, threats, crushing and killing those deemed "small," or the sheer volume of nuclear weapons, drones, and missiles.
Honorable Ladies and Gentlemen,
Beyond the balloons, among the issues drawing attention over the past year, looking at the examples of Venezuela and Iran is not a bad idea.
...If he [Maduro] could be prosecuted under international law, why and by what legal standard can the "White House" take unilateral actions to "detain" him? Does Venezuela truly pose a threat to American national security? How? Was Maduro as an individual a threat to US national security? Was the operation to detain him a pretext and a scapegoat for other agendas?
Iran
...regarding the war declared against Iran, there are fundamental questions that must be answered: Which countries have nuclear programs? Which countries possess and develop nuclear weapons (of various types)? By what right or whose permission do countries possess and develop nuclear weapons? If there are "licensors," what right or privilege do they have? Why is Iran alone barred? Is Iran truly a threat to America? What legal privilege does America have to launch a unilateral attack? Instead of merely looking at the closure of the Strait of Hormuz as a consequence, it requires connecting issues relevant to international and regional stability. It is indisputable that this was a strategic mistake driven by miscalculation. It must stop, along with its obvious dangers.
Honorable Ladies and Gentlemen,
...How will the issues Trump is handling evolve? With Europe? China? Russia? India? The Middle East? Asia? Latin America? Africa? . . . While tracking this hour by hour with coordinated radars is necessary, what independent alternative can be envisioned? It must be mentioned here that criticizing Trump alone is not enough...
Broadly speaking, the response should not be reactive contingencies based on "how the agendas initiated by powerful and non-powerful actors affect us." Instead, there is no substitute for advancing with active initiatives, guided by ideas and strategies anchored in fundamental values.
Exiting the obsolete international system that marginalizes peoples is a necessity, not a choice. An old system characterized by a lack of free markets and fair trade, devoid of equitable distribution of wealth and income, driven by usury, speculation, plunder, and arrogance—managed by financial institutions that profit from a "zero-sum" game of exploitation, representing a continuation of slavery and colonialism—must be removed. Bringing about a new international system of equity and justice is an unpostponable human mission. Since the era we are in is a transition from the old international system to a new one, although it contains no new inventions, as a continuation of the values of the Eritrean people's liberation struggle, the guiding ideas we presented to the 80th United Nations General Assembly, which can expand and enrich, were as follows:
Humanity must equitably own its economic resources and the fruits of its labor, expanding wealth while moving toward sustainable, generational growth and prosperity,
To secure prosperity and growth, peace and stability must reign,
To establish peace and stability, equity and justice must be ensured,
To foster broader regional and international peace, stability, and shared growth, there must be mutual respect, complementarity, and integration,
To establish a legal enforcement structure and mechanism that governs these fundamental aspirations of humanity.
While dismantling the decayed system and organizing a new one concerns humanity at large, it most critically affects the peoples of Africa, who subsist on primary economies and are the primary victims of the "zero-sum" game. Therefore, Africa and its various sub-regions must formulate complementary strategies and draft plans within the wider global arena to wage this struggle... If the African Union does not rise to the mission demanded by the times, it will lack relevance. Therefore, our solidarity and alliance within Africa must be active and strengthened.
Closer to home, in our region—
Last year, from what we call our neighborhood, I specifically mentioned the Nile Basin, the Horn of Africa, the Red Sea, and the Gulf, with particular focus on Sudan and Ethiopia. The global sensitivity of this neighborhood has become more pronounced with the crisis currently unfolding in the Strait of Hormuz. It has been reaffirmed that there is no alternative to a collective security mechanism established by a treaty among the nations of the neighborhood, free from the intervention or interference of any global or self-proclaimed "regional powers." Any other reliance on external "guardians" is unviable. The time has come to work earnestly toward this.
Honorable Ladies and Gentlemen,
The part of the neighborhood we see most closely... is the Horn of Africa... The situation in Somalia, Ethiopia, and South Sudan is highly concerning. It clearly demands more attention and work. What is the problem or problems? ... general common characteristics... can be summarized as the challenges of nation-building.
Horizontal polarization of society/citizens: Instead of building a nation based on citizenship, polarizing society through hatred under various names—ethnicity, clan, religion, etc.—to the point of escalating into mutual killing.
Cultivating a system of warlords and militias as a substitute for sovereign state institutions.
Fostering a highly corrupt culture of theft.
Worst and compounding of all: foreign intervention and subservience to external interests.
There may be quantitative variations in the details. In a general classification, however, these are the primary crises that must be cured. As a practical prerequisite, foreign interventions and funding must cease.