Saturday, 12 November 2011

THE CHOICE IS MORE THAN ONE BETWEEN O


THE CHOICE IS MORE THAN ONE BETWEEN OBAMA AND HIS REPUBLICAN CHALLENGER, IT IS MORE THAN THE ECONOMY.

THE CHOICE IS BETWEEN AMERICA AND TRANSNATIONALISM, BETWEEN U.S. EXCEPTIONALISM and the UNITED NATIONS TELLING US WHAT TO DO UNDER THE GUISE OF “WORLD CONCENSUS AND OPINION.”

THE OVERWHELMING MAJORITY OF THE UNITED NATIONS MEMBERS, DO NOT BELIEVE NOR FOLLOW JUDEO-CHRISTIAN VALUES AND SEEK TO REPRESS AND ELIMINATE THEM. REMEMBER, THE UN LONG AGO LOST THE IDEALISM THAT CAUSED THE U.S. AND THE WEST TO SUPPORT IT. IT IS DOMINATED BY DESPOTISMS, DICTATORSHIPS, AND THEIR CAMP FOLLOWERS.

THAT IS THE ISSUE THAT WILL DETERMINE IF WE, THE UNITED STATES, REMAIN A WORLD LEADER, OR SINK TO THIRD WORLD STATUS, FOLLOWING THE DICTATES OF SUCH NATIONS AS IRAN, CUBA, NORTH KOREA, VENEZUELA, AND THE “NEW” TUNISIA, EGYPT, AND LIBYA.

PLEASE FORWARD TO ALL –

THE 2012 ELECTION IS THE MOST CRUCIAL IN U.S. HISTORY!!


Dr. Steven Carol

Prof. of History (retired)

Official Historian and

Associate Producer of

Middle East Radio Forum

www.middleeastradioforum.org

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Brave New Transnational Progressive World


By Clifford D. May


It's coming --- if only Americans will submit to "global authorities" who will produce "global governance" with "global justice" under "global rule of law."

The attacks of 9/11/01 awoke Americans — by no means all — to the threat posed by totalitarian interpretations of Islam. John Fonte, a scholar at the Hudson Institute, has long been concerned about another ideology that is perhaps no less dangerous to free peoples.

It goes by names that sound either vaguely utopian, like "global governance," or too wonky to worry about, like "transnational progressivism."

But in a new book, Sovereignty or Submission, Fonte makes clear how this ideology — widely embraced in Europe and, increasingly, among elites in the U.S. as well — is stealthily undermining liberal democracy, self-government, constitutionalism, individual freedom and even traditional internationalism, the relations among sovereign nation-states. To put it bluntly: While the jihadists call for "Death to the West!" the transnational progressives are quietly promoting civilizational suicide. (Buy the book at a 35% discount by clicking here or in Kindle Edition at a 45%discount by clicking here).

That may not be what they intend. In theory, they are only recognizing "global interdependence" and arguing that "global problems require global solutions." In practice, however, their project is to shift political and economic power from the citizens of nation-states and their elected representatives to the UN, unelected bureaucrats, judges, lawyers and NGOs. These individuals and institutions are to wield not only transnational authority — power "beyond" nations-but also "supranational authority" — power "over" nations.

Transnationals are not so much anti-democratic as post-democratic. They believe that in the 21stcentury, democracy should be updated to imply the enforcement of "universal principles of human rights" that they, of course, will enumerate and define. They talk not of surrendering sovereignty but of "sharing" it "collectively." The result, they assert, will be a new age of "global authority" that will produce "global justice" under "global rule of law."

Indeed, since the end of the Cold War transnational progressives have been establishing international laws -- really supranational laws -- that no voters can repeal or even amend. One way they accomplish this: A treaty is drafted. International pressure is applied to get the U.S. president's signature and the U.S. Senate's ratification. Judges — often from undemocratic countries — in transnational courts then interpret the treaty to mean whatever they want it to mean. There are no courts of appeal.

And if the U.S. rejects the treaty or agrees to only parts of it by issuing "reservations," the transnationals declare that that the U.S. is bound nonetheless — under what they call "customary international law" to which, they further insist, even the U.S. Constitution is "subordinate."

It is on this basis that the argument is made that the U.S. is violating the Geneva Accords by declining to classify al-Qaeda terrorists as Prisoners of War — despite the fact that the U.S. has never agreed that unlawful combatants are entitled to such honorable status.

Curiously and ominously, transnationals have been working hand-in-glove with Islamists to achieve such goals as a global prohibition of "Islamophobia" — which would represent an historic abridgement of free speech.

Fonte devotes an entire chapter to Israel on which the Islamists and the transnationals also find common ground. Israel, he writes, has become "the major target of transnational progressives who seek to expand global authority in determining the laws of war. If international law precedents could be established against Israeli security policies, these precedents could be used later to subordinate U.S. defense policies to global law as defined by the transnationalists."

Factions of the movement, including such major philanthropies as the Ford Foundation, such leading NGOs as Human Rights Watch, and sectors of the European Union are "complicit in the worldwide Islamist campaign to delegitimize Israel as an apartheid state through the 'boycotts, divestment and sanctions' strategy." Fonte observes that Israel "is the most vulnerable of the world's independent democracies, often targeted by the global governancers as a surrogate for the United States or for the independent democratic state generally."

The dream of transnational progressives, Fonte concludes, is for Americans to embrace "the brave new world of global governance," to voluntarily agree to "share" sovereignty with others and to demonstrate "leadership" by submitting to a "supranational global legal regime. In effect, the American caterpillar is transformed into a global butterfly."

Do any of the candidates running for office in 2012 understand this? Do any have the skills required to make it an issue — to ask voters whether they want to preserve what Alexis de Tocqueville admiringly called America's distinctive "sovereignty of the people" or whether they would prefer to share sovereignty with others around the world, including dictators and Islamists?

My guess is that most Americans — by no means all -- do not want to submit, do not want the 21stcentury to be a post-democratic and post-American era. But with an election year coming up, now would be a good time to begin the debate and find out.