|
Written by Brian Farmer
|
|
Friday, 03 April 2009 15:15 |
|
The Commentary magazine website has posted an interesting article from its March issue authored by John Bolton, who served as the United States Representative to the United Nations during 2005-2006. The article reviews a report published in September 2008 entitled, A Plan for Action, which carries the subtitle, “A New Era of International Cooperation for a Changed World: 2009, 2010, and Beyond.” The thesis of the report can be pretty much summed up by a sentence from its Executive Summary: “International cooperation today must be built on the principle of responsible sovereignty, or the notion that sovereignty entails obligations and duties toward other states as well as to one’s own citizens.” It is interesting to note that A Plan for Action appeared not long after a May 2008 paper published by the Council on Foreign Relations, which dealt with many of the same issues. Coincidentally, one of the three authors of A Plan for Action, Carlos Pascual, is a CFR member.
As Mr. Bolton points out in his critique, “There is no question, however, that the ideas advanced in A Plan for Action have become mainstays in the liberal vision of the future of American foreign policy. That is what makes A Plan for Action especially interesting, and especially worrisome.” It is worrisome, because its authors view the European Union as a model worth emulating. And a statement from the official communiqué at the conclusion of the recent G20 summit in London reinforces that concern: "We believe that the only sure foundation for sustainable globalization and rising prosperity for all is an open world economy based on market principles, effective regulation, and strong global institutions."
The global power elites view national sovereignty as some quaint, old-fashioned notion that has been overtaken by the complexity of our modern world. They view the political and economic ideas relating to free markets, private property, and limited government as being adequate for the relatively simple conditions of the 19th century, but not for a more advanced global civilization. It is important to understand and debunk this fallacy that we need “effective regulation, and strong global institutions,” because it leads directly to socialistic planning and a collectivist world government.
Imagine the simplest situation, which would be a society populated by two individuals. Could anyone honestly think that Person A would be competent enough to determine what Person B should do with his time, how he should act, etc.? Now imagine a society populated by a hundred people. Would Person A be competent enough to control all of their creative actions? Now imagine a society populated by hundreds of millions of individuals, such as the United States. If one were to suggest that one person, or even a committee of so-called “experts,” would be competent enough to manage their lives and their billions of associations and exchanges, any rational observer would consider that suggestion to be absurd.
Hence, it is obvious that the more complex a society, the more certain it is that governmental control will retard productive effort. And it logically follows that, the more complex a society, the more we should rely on the self-adapting processes of individuals acting freely, liberated from the coercive influence of government. In the end, it should be intuitively obvious that “global institutions” cannot accurately anticipate, let alone intelligently control, every aspect of human activity everywhere on the planet. And yet, that is precisely what the global power elites expect us to believe. That collectivist mindset must be resisted, if we are to retain what rights and freedoms we still possess.
|
|
Last Updated on Friday, 03 April 2009 15:52 |
|
|
Written by John F. McManus
|
|
Tuesday, 07 April 2009 01:07 |
|
The North Atlantic Treaty Organization celebrated its 60th anniversary last weekend. Part of the festivities, with President Obama amongst the celebrants, included welcoming Croatia and Albania into membership, bringing the total of the alliance’s participants to 27 nations.
Though hardly anyone refers to its full name any more, NATO stands for North Atlantic Treaty Organization. NATO's most active current operation has tens of thousands of U.S. forces and a sprinkling of troops from other nations fighting the Taliban in Afghanistan. To put it mildly, Afghanistan is quite a distance from the North Atlantic. But that doesn’t bother our leaders even a little bit.
In a recent op-ed column appearing in the Los Angeles Times, Professor Andrew Bacevich, a frequent commentator about military matters, urged that the U.S. quit NATO. He concludes that calling the pact “a successful alliance today is the equivalent of calling General Motors a successful car company.” In other words according to the professor, NATO has outlived its usefulness.
But there’s more to the story. When NATO was being considered in 1949, internationalist-minded Secretary of State Dean Acheson, the pact’s chief promoter, stated very clearly that the alliance derived its legitimacy from Article 51 of the United Nations Charter and that “it is an essential measure for strengthening the United Nations.” It has lived up to that description for the past 60 years.
Only 13 senators voted against U.S. entry into NATO. They pointed out that the pact requires an attack upon any one of 12 original nations to be considered an attack on all requiring appropriate military response from every participant. (As of this past weekend, an attack on any of the 27 nations would require the U.S. to respond militarily.) Ohio Senator Robert Taft claimed in 1949 that membership in NATO would likely “involve us in disputes where our liberty is not in fact concerned.” A little over a year later, what concerned him became reality.
In June 1950, North Korea invaded South Korea. The United Nations responded with a Security Council resolution calling on all nations to aid South Korea. President Truman sent U.S. forces into the fray, but Taft and others objected insisting that, without a constitutionally required declaration of war, the president’s action was illegal. Truman responded by asserting that, if he could send troops to NATO, he could send them into Korea. And he got away with it. Taft insisted, “If this incident is permitted to go by without protest, at least from this body [the Senate], we would have finally terminated for all time the right of Congress to declare war, which is granted to Congress alone by the Constitution of the United States.” He even worried that in the absence of a war declaration, the President’s usurped authority could be used to send troops anywhere, “into “Malaya or Indonesia, or Iran or South America.” Sad to say, he was correct.
There has been no congressional declaration of war since December 8, 1941 when Congress responded appropriately to Japan’s attack on Pearl Harbor. None preceded U.S. action in Vietnam, Panama, Somalia, Bosnia, Haiti, Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere. In each case, a Security Council resolution was cited as “authorization” for the use of U.S. forces. Once the blinders have been removed, anyone should be able to see how NATO has indeed helped to strengthen the United Nations. There is, therefore, excellent reason for the United States to withdraw from the alliance in order to maintain the independence of our nation.
NATO’s partisans claim that the pact saved Western Europe from further Soviet advance westward. But all during the years that the USSR posed a threat to the West, the Moscow regime was kept alive through massive aid sent from the chief NATO member, the United States. In the meantime, NATO, along with its stepchild SEATO (the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization – now defunct) and the UN itself, dictated how our nation could use its military arm. The war in Korea has never been settled and 45,000 U.S. troops continue on station in the Korean peninsula more than 50 years after the shooting stopped. The Vietnam War ended in defeat after our forces were stymied in how they fought all during its years. American forces are now involved in UN Security Council and NATO-authorized actions in Iraq and Afghanistan where they are tasked to combat, not an enemy nation, but a military tactic – terrorism. Is it any wonder that the struggle continues? No army in history has ever succeeded in fighting a tactic.
Withdrawing from NATO is certainly called for. But so, too, should the U.S. withdraw from the United Nations. America’s military should never be sent into battle except to protect the lives, liberty and property of the American people. And it should never be used in any war without a formal declaration of war issued by the U.S. Congress. Did entry into NATO initiate the current misuse of U.S. military? Yes, but without entry into the UN, there would be no U.S. involvement in NATO. Exiting both is long overdue. |
|
Written by Donald Hank
|
|
Monday, 06 April 2009 01:19 |
|
A speech by British ex-naval officer Brian Gerrish shows that the organization, Common Purpose, was formed for the purpose of ramming the European Union down the throat of the UK. Their ultimate goal is a world government that would supersede national governments, just as the EU has largely superseded European nations, bypassing the people’s will.
Common Purpose is part of the International Leftist elite that wants to micromanage your country, whatever that country may be. Their bullying tactics are typical and can be traced to the earliest communist manipulators of the masses, particularly Antonio Gramsci, who proposed putting each individual in a "psychic iron cage," making it almost impossible for people to speak their minds when their ideas are at loggerheads with the left's agenda.
The psychic iron cage is now a reality thanks to the international manipulators who have cleverly created “victim” groups – minorities, women, homosexuals, Muslims, atheists, immigrants (even illegal ones), etc – and a million and one reasons why they must be protected at the expense of your personal liberty. A good example is the way Muslims and homosexuals are "protected" from frank and honest speech, with homosexuals being “protected” even from legitimate health warnings. In Sweden, a pastor was arrested and charged with a hate crime for preaching from parts of the Bible that oppose that behavior. Yet no one in Sweden appears offended at Imams who teach, based on the Koran, just how a man should properly beat his wife or that homosexuals should be hanged.
A powerful group within the UN is now clamoring for laws that would ban criticism of Islam, which in turn would thwart most anti-terror efforts. In America terms like "illegal immigrant" and “War on Terror” have been banned within government agencies and are censored in the media.
In other words, the psychic iron cage is essentially what we call political correctness. “Sustainability” and the “green” agenda are also a part of the accompanying newspeak, something also pointed out by Gerrish in his discussion of Common Purpose.
For instance, Obama’s most loyal ally, Gordon Brown, used the following red-flag terms in his speech, which you can listen to here:
- green
- collective
- New World Order
- globalization
- together manage
- sustainable
Similarly, when Obama talked about a "common sense of purpose" in a speech made during the G-20 Summit, it was clear that he has borrowed from the vocabulary promoted by the Common Purpose group and is pushing for world government.
At the G20, Obama said: "And although it will take time, I am confident that we will rebuild global prosperity if we act with a common sense of purpose, persistence and the optimism that the moment demands."
I don't make predictions, but let me just say that America – and the world – will be lucky if, by the end of the Obama administration, the United States has not joined a central UN-led government that will be telling us – and your country – what laws it must pass to "harmonize" our legislation with UN mandates.
Beware of your country's leaders who speak of a common sense of purpose or a common purpose.
The most worthy purpose right now is to keep each of our countries intact amidst the flurry of efforts to mix us in a giant blender of world governance that will destroy national identities and human individualism. Indeed I will go so far as to say that, ironically, this purpose of defeating the international elite does in fact give free people everywhere a true common purpose, and that is a purpose that will eventually defeat this elite, including politicians and bankers who have been manipulating us like puppets for many years.
Let us stand together for once, not as a global collective under a common UN aegis, but under the banner of freedom.
Donald Hank is a former language teacher, currently operating a technical translation agency in Wrightsville, PA. He holds an undergraduate degree in French and German from Millersville State University (PA), a Master’s degree in Russian language and literature from Kutztown State College (also in PA), has studied Chinese for 3 years in Taiwan at the Mandarin Training Center, and is self-taught in other languages, having logged a total of 8 years abroad in total immersion situations. He is also the founder of Lancaster-York Non-Custodial Parents, a volunteer organization that provides Christian counseling for non-custodial parents.
|
|
Written by Michael Telzrow
|
|
Wednesday, 08 April 2009 01:59 |
|
G20 representatives have hailed their recent summit as a major step in the battle against the global recession. Gordon Brown, UK prime minister and architect of the global give-away, praised the actions that he said would usher in a “new progressive era of international cooperation,” and the beginning of a “new world order.”
Brown, host of the summit, managed to convince representatives from the 20 industrialized nations to pump $1 trillion into the International Monetary Fund. All of this money, in the form of no-strings-attached low interest rate loans, will then go to “emerging” countries from Eastern Europe, and Africa and Asia. Brown assured the attendees that the plan will set all countries on the road to full recovery. United States president Barack Obama, commenting without the aid of a teleprompter, added “We have a sick patient – I think we applied the right medicine. I think the patient is stabilized.” The implication of course is that the “patient” will need further care in the near future.
Lost in the reverie was the realization that low-interest, no-strings-attached loans are precisely what plunged the US into the present credit crisis that fueled the supercharged recession. Not content with simply throwing money at the IMF, the G20 reps also took action to crackdown on nations which provide tax havens. Offending countries will face a trade blacklist.
Energized by their success, the European-style socialists and their newest recruit, President Obama, also agreed to develop new rules and regulations that would prevent the odious “fat cats,” (formerly known as businessmen), from pocketing ill-gotten bonuses. Commenting on the new regulatory measures, anti-capitalist French prime minister, Nicolas Sarkozy, said that the clampdown on tax havens indicated that “a page has been turned” on the story of “Anglo-Saxon” capitalism. Presumably, he was referring to the last page.
G20 representatives further agreed to restructure the IMF balance of power by 2011. New reforms call for heads of international organizations to be selected based on merit, rather than nationality. A pledge was also made to resist protectionism. Americans can rest assured that cheap, toxic Chinese products will continue to enjoy the beneficial regulatory measures that have made China our trade master.
Especially noteworthy is the expansion of the Financial Stability Forum into the Financial Stability Board. The new FSB will provide governance and monitor the world economy, along with the IMF's much larger redefined role. Under the expanded FSB, financial regulators and central bankers from G20 nations will determine standards and regulations internationally, including American financial institutions. This is an actual loss of sovereignty in that American elected oficials will no longer govern or set laws for American financial institutions; cross-border policy and financial sector management are the order of the day. While this is not a wholesale surrender to a supranational financial system, it's a gigantic step in that direction.
In the end, the G20 summit used the pretext of a global recession to consolidate more power in the hands of a few while continuing the inexorable march to what Gordon Brown openly referred to as a “new world order.”
Michael E. Telzrow is Executive Director of the National Railroad Museum and a Contributor to The New American magazine.
|
|
Written by Olavo de Carvalho
|
|
Friday, 03 April 2009 01:54 |
|
There are some elementary historical data about the communist movement which are ignored by most people and less known or well forgotten by the leading cultivated minorities, but without which it is literally impossible to understand anything whatsoever about recent world history. If you try to inform yourself and to take these data into account, you’ll realize how many obscure issues become automatically transparent, with little interpretative effort.
- Communism has been, throughout human history, the only – I repeat: the only – globally organized political movement, with ramifications and agents in the most remote places of the Earth, all disciplined and prepared to immediately, coordinately and simultaneously spring into action upon the first call issued from their command centers.
- Although it has at its disposal a huge number of organizations and mass parties, Communism is substantially a clandestine movement, whose command and action plans must remain invisible to the masses, even in such periods of lawfulness when many communist organizations can move publicly without being persecuted. The primacy of the clandestine elite over the visible leadership has been, at least since Lenin’s time, a keystone clause of the communist strategy. It is impossible to understand this strategy and the tactics that implement it by taking into account only the undisguised role of the most visible communist leaders in each country, and without having access to the internal discussions and the international connections of each organization.
- Communism has been, throughout the world and throughout the ages, the only political movement that has at its disposal unlimited financial resources, far superior to the West’s biggest known fortunes and to the combined budgets of many governments. Its potentials of action must be measured according to the level of its resources.
- Only a tiny part of the communist activity consists of directly or indirectly recognizable doctrinarian propaganda. The main and most significant part consists of infiltrating and blending into all sorts of organizations – political parties (liberals and conservatives alike), media, unions, government and private enterprises, cultural, educational and charitable institutions, the armed forces, Freemasonry and so on – it is an endless list – in order to turn them into useful tools for the communist strategy, through which it is possible to control the entire society, making the Party an “omniscient and invisible power” (the phrasing comes from Antonio Gramsci, but the idea itself existed much earlier). It is infantile to believe that, once implanted in those entities, the Communists will then turn to indoctrination or proselytism, as if they were protestant shepherds preaching the Gospel among infidels. Co-opting all forces that may serve the communist strategy is an extremely subtle and complex mechanism, which requires massive doses of camouflage and deceptiveness, with many contradictory moments on its way.
- It is foolish to imagine communism as a “doctrine” or an “ideal”, particularly when it purports overtly preaching the abolition of private property. The communist movement has never had nor needed any doctrinal unity, and has proved one thousand times its capacity to tactically adapt to the most disparate ideological formulas, either sequentially or simultaneously, thus leaving the uninformed observer (including politicians in general and the near entirety of liberal and conservative intellectuals) completely bewildered. The most aggressive atheistic campaigns, for instance, coexist pacifically, in the midst of the communist movement, with the practice of taking advantage of the religious discourse to reach the heart of the masses. Mutatis mutandis, exploring radical nationalistic feelings goes side by side with the effort to dilute national sovereignties into bigger, regional or world unities, so that, behind the scenes, the communist movement benefits from the patriotic resistance as well as from the ascendant global power. The unity of the communist movement is strategic and organizational, not ideological. Communism is not a set of theses: it is a power scheme, the most flexible, vast, integrated and efficient one that ever existed. Even Islamic radicalism, which is so quickly expanding nowadays, would be powerless without the support of the world network of communist organizations.
- An even more egregious form of foolishness is to believe that the logical-formal opposition between the abstract concepts of capitalism and communism can be translated, in the field, into a mortal conflict between capitalists and communists. To the multiple local and temporal situations corresponds a countless number of shades and transitions, which leaves much room for the apparently strangest arrangements and complicities (but only apparently so). No one will understand anything whatsoever about the historical world we live in without taking into consideration the enduring collaboration between the communist movement and some of the West’s greatest fortunes, Rothschild’s and Rockefellers’s for instance. The classic books on this matter are those from the English economist Anthony Sutton, but already in 1956 the US House of Representative’s Reece Committee gathered substantial proof that some billionaire foundations were using their huge resources “to destroy or discredit the same free market system that gave rise to them.” Today these foundations rank among the most solid pillars supporting the socialist government of Barack Obama.
Ignoring or misunderstanding these facts lies at the root of liberals’ and conservatives’ incapacity to resist the triumphant march of communists in Latin America. Many still believe, for example, that democracy will win a big victory by forcing the FARC to abandon the armed struggle and to constitute a legal party. They can’t understand that to create a recognized political force is the final purpose of any armed struggle – in Colombia or anywhere else. Guerrillas don’t win wars: all they want is a politically advantageous defeat. That’s the reason why they open fire on the government forces, in the jungle and in the city, and, at the same time, place their agents in key posts of the legal leftist parties, where they protest the blood shed and appeal dramatically for a return to lawfulness. They did it in Brazil, and they are doing it now in Colombia.
While liberals and conservatives can’t attain a clear vision of the whole and complex phenomenon of communism, while they insist on fighting the most immediate and repugnant aspects of this movement, if not only communist doctrines in abstract, they are doomed to defeat even as they claim victory.
The fact that no international anti-communist movement has emerged makes it difficult for many people to put together this whole picture, which communists themselves so easily get. But the absence of social support cannot work as a pretext for intellectual laziness. There will always be some individual minds capable of thinking above group prospects, when they exist, or without them, when they don’t exist. Nothing justifies that these minds be kept aside from the public discussions, while the ignorant hold the monopoly of the microphones. In this as in all other human affairs, those who have studied nothing are full of simplistic certainties and proclaim them with a huge sense of superiority, totally unaware of their ridiculous role. Those who have studied the issues may look deranged or eccentric, but after all, why do we study if not to learn something that most do not know?
Olavo de Carvalho is a Brazilian writer and philosopher presently living in the United States as a correspondent for Brazilian newspapers. He taught Political Philosophy at the Catholic University of Parana (South of Brazil) from 2001 to 2005 and is the author of a dozen successful books, besides being a lecturer and media columnist with a large audience in his native country and a growing one in the United States. Website: www.olavodecarvalho.org.
|
|
|