The original question was very badly worded and reads more like a rant then a genuine question.
what the fuck is going on
and
boom, eclipse had gone crazy
are just two examples that add no information or value whatsoever to the question. Those two alone, paired with not much tangible information, may have contributed to downvotes.
The question still isn't very clear. the very first image is cropped so heavily that its impossible to see the selection.
Next, its not really clear what the question is about. You seem to have two distinct problems. At first the question is about not being able to run a certain program, then suddenly the question shifts to not being able to import classes. What is it, then?
At present, it doesn't look like a good Q&A question. Those images should probably get transscripts so that the error messages can be indexed. In fact, if you had run a search for
"string cannot be resolved to a type" eclipse
you would have found several questions on SO which might resolve your issue, e.g. Java project in Eclipse: The type java.lang.Object cannot be resolved. It is indirectly referenced from required .class files and My copy of Eclipse doesn't know what an object or a String is
Since this never shows up as text in your question, future readers, potential answerers and you are not able to work with the error message and thus unable to find references. Thats yet another reason to downvote the question. If you have seen those questions, then you must mention it in the body of your question and explain why those do not apply (the question might even get closed as duplicate otherwise).
tl:dr; The question isn't all that helpful and not well crafted in the grand scheme of things. I haven't voted on it, but I'd probably downvote it too if I had encountered it in the wild.