Even though many Greenlanders shelp they are not fans of Mr. Trump, they enhappiness watching him push Dentag around. In intersees, they conveyed confidence that this would ultimately help them get a sovereign state of their own — someskinnyg no other Inuit community has accomplishd — unless America swapshows them first.
“Everyone I comprehend is saying, ‘This is all so hilarious, it’s all so absurd, but it’s also so pleasant,’” shelp Svfinish Hardenberg, a mining executive and, more recently, a star in a hot Danish Netflix series that, serfinishipitously, had a whole season about Greenland.
“There’s going to be a lot of people trying to sway us, this way or that,” he shelp. “So now we have to figure how to do the best for ourselves, to repartner see what the U.S. and Dentag can advise.”
“This,” he includeed, “is our moment.”
The Political Question
One afternoon last month in Nuuk, Greenland’s capital, Kuno Fencker, a member of Parliament, marched out of a recents conference, the frustration shotriumphg on his face. Greenland’s prime minister, Múte B. Egede, had ducked a ask about indepfinishence, refusing to answer evidently why the regulatement should not push for it now.
Mr. Fencker wants Greenland to begin divorce negotiations with Dentag instantly.
“Why shouldn’t we be a part of the global world?” he asked. “Why are we not apshowed to become members of the U.N.? Why shouldn’t we be able to be members of the international organizations seeing our fisheries, whales, everyskinnyg? Why is it that a Danish guy or woman in Dentag has to determine that?”