Stiff Right Jab: Bush's 'America First' Foreign Policy
Steve Montgomery & Steve Farrell
Friday, Sept. 7, 2001
There´s good news, and not so good news. First the good news. When it comes to foreign policy, unlike his predecessor, William Jefferson
Clinton, President George W. Bush stands up like a man and declares America first. That is good news and amen. For speaking like a man on that issue,
and for that matter an American man, Mr. Bush has deservedly received hallelujah praise from the conservative right, and hellfire and damnation from the malevolent
left.
Now for the bad news. Bush´s definition of America first does not translate from Third Way middle-speak into plain old American English as a
daring defense of the U.S. Constitution and U.S. sovereignty. It is more like a lordly, bossy reminder of whose interests must always come first when it comes to the
world – those of America´s global/socialist elites.
Does Bush care about American sovereignty under the U.S. Constitution? We think not. A quick, revealing look.
First, a quick background. Karl Marx proclaimed that his much ballyhooed, one-world socialist government would be achieved by selling the world on the idea
of Internationalism. (1) Lenin expanded on this theme by declaring that "the aim of socialism is ... to abolish the present division of mankind into small
states and end all national isolation; not only to bring the nations closer together, but to merge them. ..." (2) Joseph Stalin continued this theme of
internationalism by arguing that national loyalties won't easily be swayed by a frontal global governmental assault, and he proffered a solution – accompany
global efforts with a regional approach.
In his 1912 essay, "Marxism and the National Question," Stalin wrote that "regional autonomy [was to be] an essential element in the solution of the
national problem." (3)
The 1936 official program of the Communist International was on the same page when it announced:
"The world dictatorship can be established only when the victory of socialism has been achieved in certain countries or groups of countries,
when the newly established proletarian republics enter into a federative union with the already existing proletarian republics ... [and] when these federations of
republics have finally grown into a World [Socialist] Union ... uniting the whole of mankind under the hegemony of the international proletariat organized as a state."
(4)
What is so great about the regional approach? Simply, when conservatives put the heat on the United Nations as appearing to be every
bit as pro-socialist as its pro-Communist founders were, a "conservative" president can take the dialectical approach: Criticize the U.N. and thus gain conservative
support, even while he strengthens regional alliances – alliances designed, for surface appeal, to protect national interests. But in fact, any permanent entangling
alliance, especially an economic one, creates a precedent, step by step, of surrendering national constitutions, loyalties, legal and moral concepts, economic and
military independence to the whole – in this wild world, a whole dominated by thugs and moral idiots.
The first successful implementation of the regional approach is the now 50-year-old plot to unite Europe under one socialist head. It began under the Marshall
Plan, which orchestrated a simple beginning to interdependence and "free" trade in Europe, and which, a half-century later, blossomed into a situation where we have
one currency, one central bank, one trade plan, one interdependent military force (NATO) – that is, one government with an entranced preference for hard-to-the-left socialism. When Khrushchev said "we will never have to fire a shot," he meant it. Like overripe fruit, Europe has fallen into the socialist lap. Russian complaints
about the spread of NATO, therefore, make good, closed door, dialectical humor.
The second regional plan of significance was the 1994 three-nation permanent "trade" alliance of NAFTA, replete with international governmental
organizations, NGO lawmaking powers, and thousands of regulations and enforcement mechanisms affecting American sovereignty. Passed at the same time
was the far more pretentious GATT Treaty, which created the WTO and its tens of thousands of pages of international regulations. You may thank, more than
anyone else, Republican icon and CFR (Council of Foreign Relations) member Newt Gingrich for these sovereignty grabs. Clinton was grateful. Buchanan, a true
America-first patriot, was not.
The EU, NATO, NAFTA and WTO are all regional alliances that swear allegiance in their preambles to "the principles and purposes of the
United Nations."
So, then, how does Bush´s America First plan fit into this? Bush fiercely loves the regional approach and is working furiously to take
regionalism to the next level.
Bush led the way at the Summit of the Americas in Quebec last April to expand NAFTA´s "free" trade zone to include all of North
and South America. That is, in real terms, to move forward toward an American version of the European Union, as a subsidiary organization of the United Nations,
subject to its principles and purposes – and the goal is to do it by 2005. (5)
The ploy is free trade. The broader agenda – as revealed by Bush´s left-swinging secretary of state, Colin Powell – includes such open-ended goals as
"set[ting] a common agenda of how our democracies can safeguard human rights ... to promote good governance on all levels ... [to] make life better and our
neighborhood safer ... [to promote] skills and education ... [to] improv[e] the environment, [fight] drugs and [stop] disease." (6)
Or – if you are not catching on – to create an international government of the Americas, which will permit leaders, jealous and
antagonistic to the Constitution and peoples of the United States, to use an undemocratic, unelected government to take us down the path to a one-world socialist order.
Yes, that´s the bad news: Bush´s White House policy of America First is really the Pratt House´s policy of Americas First.
An afterthought. The Bush administration has identified fast-track authority as the key to implementing this stealthy step toward a government of the Americas.
(7) Texas Rep. Ron Paul's HR 1146 American Sovereignty Restoration Act of 2001 is our best bet to derail Bush. Write your congressman and invite him or her to become a co-sponsor.
History You May Have Missed
Shifting gears, but maybe not, we revisit Washington Irving's "George Washington: A Biography" with this insight from Gen. Washington as to the
purposes of the revolution and the Constitution which followed. He stated the goal as "national independence and sovereignty." (8) Lest we forget!
Constitutional Corner
Today´s constitutional debate, that is, the one that occurred on July 26, 1787, attends to the topic at hand.
1. Doctor Franklin reminds us: "In free governments the rulers are the servants, and the people are their superiors and sovereigns." Therefore, he reminded,
government must be through representatives elected by and accountable to the people. (9)
2. Brought to floor was a resolution that reminds us that those who hold office in the "Executive, the Judiciary, and ... both branches of the Legislature of the
United States" must hold "citizenship in the United States." (10)
3. And finally, Congress should have control over foreign commerce. (11)
Bush´s budding government of the Americas will be, just as it is at the U.N. and with NAFTA, a governmental body run by unelected
bureaucrats, many not citizens of the United States, who will possess authority usurping the role of that body of men and women closest to the people – Congress – and all of this in defiance of the principles of representation our Founders passed down to us.
Thank you, Mr. Bush.
Contact Steve & Steve at StiffRightJab@aol.com.
If you haven´t already, read Part 6 of Steve Farrell´s
Democrats in Drag and Part 9 of Missing the Mark With
Religion or access his NewsMax archives.
Footnotes
1. Marx, Karl, as interpreted by Stang, Allen. It's Very Simple: The True Story of Civil
Rights. Belmont, Massachusetts: Western Islands, 1965, p. 2. Return
2. Lenin, V. I. The Right of Nations to Self-Determination. New York: International Publishers, 1951, p. 76. Return
3. Jasper, William F. The United Nations Exposed. Appleton, Wisconsin: The John Birch Society, 2001, p. 192. Return
4. Ibid., p. 193. Return
5. NewsMax.com wires. Bush Arrives in Quebec for Trade Summit. April
21, 2001. Return
6. NewsMax.com wires. U.S. Goals for Summit: Trade, Education. April 20, 2001.
Return
7. NewsMax.com wires. Bush Arrives in Quebec for Trade Summit. April
21, 2001. Return
8. Irving, Washington. George Washington: A Biography, abridged and edited version of the 1856-1859 edition. New York: Da Capo Press, 1994, p. 615. Return
9. Madison, James. Journal of the Federal Convention, Vol. 2, p. 436. Return
10. Ibid., pp. 448-449. Return
11. Ibid., pp. 445-446. Return