..............................................................

>From the New Paradigms Project [Not Necessarily Endorsed]:
Conspiracy Shopping Cart: http://a-albionic.com/shopping.html

From: Starship Trooper <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: My China Policy, by L. Neil Smith
Date: Saturday, March 25, 2000 1:59 AM

http://www.lns2000.org/lns20000324.html

My China Policy

By L. Neil Smith
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

See it soon in The Libertarian Enterprise
http://www.webleyweb.com/tle/

Every other day, all the online news services I read are full
of China rattling its ideologically rusty ken at America,
usually over control of the island nation of Taiwan.

Recently, having failed to intimidate Taiwanese voters out
of choosing a candidate -- from a new party, the first time
since the little nation's birth in 1949 -- sworn to declare
full independence from the mainland, they've begun mustering
huge numbers of troops on the coast and making threatening
100-fighter flyovers.

China claims Taiwan as a lost province, sort of the way
Ethiopia "belonged" to Italy. Leaders and people of Taiwan
are those -- or the descendants of those -- who escaped Mao's
butchery back in the 1940s. Taiwan's repressive government
is nothing worth defending (the new electee promises changes),
but for a long time the US government backed it to the hilt.
My earliest political memories are of China railing at
America over Taiwan.

Well, practically my earliest memories. I also recall a
Korean War in which China (and Russia, to a degree unrealized
by most people) found a way to get someone else, the poor
dumb North Koreans, to fight their battles for them. That war
has never ended officially.

Not surprisingly China represents new hope for western Cold
Warriors, lonely and afraid in a world that got remade despite
their best -- or worst -- efforts to the contrary. Here they
were, never having to stand down from the power, prestige,
and plenty of World War II, playing with thousands of
trillions of bucks, running roughshod over the unalienable
individual, civil, Constitutional, and human rights of
everybody on the planet -- when the damned Russians had the
bad manners to wimp out!

Now they'll tell you they won the Cold War, citing this or
that policy or program, trying to make heroes of themselves.
But the Soviet Empire was doomed -- as I said in my novel The
Nagasaki Vector almost a decade before it happened -- to
collapse of its own weight. If the Cold Warriors had really
had their way, that collapse would never have happened. After
all, they subsidized and supported the poor lame Soviets for
seven decades. Who wants to lose a cushy job?

Now, having only their phony War on Drugs, right wing militias
that look statesmanlike compared to the current administration,
and the cardboard specter of international terrorism to fall
back on, the Cold Warriors, desperate to retain their hold
on this culture, are trying to pump life back into their
second string foe. Why else did Clinton hand nuclear secrets
and guided missile technology to them?

Campaign contributions are the insignificant tip of the
iceberg. Rush Limbaugh won't tell you that, any more than
Dan Rather would. They're both part of the dirtiest racket
in history. Washington needs a credible enemy to keep from
forking over the Peace Dividend it's owed us for 10
years.

Let there be no misunderstanding: the Chinese government is
evil and violent. Almost as evil and violent as a government
that confined, tortured, poison-gassed, machinegunned, and
incinerated 82 helpless, innocent individuals -- 22 of them
harmless beautiful little children -- in their own church in
broad daylight, on national TV, put its pitiable handful of
surviving victims on trial for having defended themselves,
and once they were duly acquitted of any wrongdoing, threw
them in prison anyway for 40 years.

Nor is it just Clinton. Bush 1.0 barely spanked the hands of
China's leaders over Tien Anmen Square because that's how all
leaders of the modern Management State wish to govern: Zero
Tolerance for individual liberty. It's the treatment we can
expect whether Algore or Bush 2.0 is elected in November --
policywise, they're identical peas in a New World Order pod.

But certain inconvenient facts get in the way of turning
China into the next boogeyman to scare taxpayers with. Even
Algore and 2.0 want to sell things to a billion customers --
hard to do if you're reliving the Cold War. For their part,
China's aging leaders want the fruits of economic freedom and
the progress it engenders -- but without allowing people
anything resembling political liberty. They should get along
well with the current crop of Republicans; they want exactly
the same thing. The basic model for both is Franco's Spain.

Another inconvenient fact is that (with rare exceptions like
Tibet) for many centuries, China -- even Red China -- has not
been particularly expansionistic. They've always had peculiar
ideas about other countries, none of which have ever seemed
quite real to them, center of the universe that they see
themselves to be. An emperor once sent a huge fleet around
the world, not to intimidate and conquer, but to give
presents away and tell everybody what a swell guy he was.

Somebody told me a story that illustrates the Chinese
ambivalence toward conquest. Annam -- the place we call
Vietnam -- was always a pain for China. Emperors fervently
believed they owned the place, but their tax collectors (and
their armies) kept coming back in bodybags. Finally, one
general returned to the imperial capital to report that he
had conquered Annam. The emperor promptly had him beheaded.
History showed it was impossible to conquer Annam, so he
must be a liar. And if he wasn't, he was too dangerous to
have around.

China today lies in the unsteady grip of frightened old men
in the unenviable position of having outlived the ideas that
guided them all their lives and justified every atrocity they
ever visited upon their fellow beings. What they desperately
fear -- besides losing power -- is communication: between
their people and the West; between their people and each
other.

They fear the shortwave, the modem, and the fax the way
Schumer and Feinstein fear high capacity semiautomatics in
the hands of their constituents. For them, the sight of a
replica of the Statue of Liberty -- a direct product of the
communication they fear -- being carried through the heart
of their domain must have sent waves of terror through their
ancient, arthritic bones.

Those who think they own us have yet to figure out what's
more beneficial -- to them: trade or war. That "war is the
health of the state" is a fact well known to leaders on both
sides. At present, China's empty threats are meant more to
impress their own than us -- that the worst enemies of
China's government are China's people is another well known
fact -- but it's worrisome to deal with a handful of
geriatric bastards who know they won't have to live with the
consequences of plunging their nation into total war.

What's more worrisome is that US leaders are as frightened
and desperate. Having been impeached, the President (whose
murderous foreign policy is now understood as a way to cover
up his domestic behavior) is about to be disbarred. There's
talk of criminal charges once he's out of office. Waco is in
the news again. The Vice President stands exposed as corrupt.
The GOP front runner has abandoned his traditional
constituency to fulfill his obligation to the Brotherhood of
the Bell, advancing the agenda of corporate statism.

Meanwhile, grassroots resistance against the police state
America has become gets more effective every day. Dozens of
vile plots have been destroyed by shining the harsh light of
the internet on them. To obsolete leaders frantic to hang
onto the lives and property of others at any cost, the
prospect of war -- of the dictatorial excesses it permits --
is bound to be increasingly attractive.

On the other hand, ethical leaders of an ethical nation --
the kind of nation ours was supposed to be -- dedicated to
self-defense not foreign adventure, require no outside threat
to retain power. Unafraid of a rising tide of individualism
in the world, they'd have no trouble taking advantage of it,
to deal effectively with China.

China's leaders may not be expansionistic, but they might
slag Taiwan, which they believe belongs to them, to make a
point. My plan is meant to prevent that. Next time China
threatens to rain nuclear missiles on our west coast cities
-- as they've been doing every day now for months -- I'd
offer to shower them with presents, just like their imperial
treasure fleet did long ago.

My China policy would operate at multiple deterrent levels.
First, just the news that what I'm about to describe is being
given serious consideration at the uppermost levels of
government should be enough to make Chinese leaders hesitate.

If that doesn't work, the next step is to let contracts out
and actually manufacture the "weapons" (patience, now),
sending samples to the leaders of China for them to evaluate.
No fear, here, of giving secrets away. The technology is
already well understood by everybody, and has been, practically
since the turn of the last century. The next step is to refit
B52 strategic bombers to deliver the "weapons".

>From vastly higher than antiaircraft rockets reach, the next
step is to drop the "weapons": hundreds of millions of tiny
flesh-colored plastic radios, made to fit the human ear, in
plastic packages that let them flutter safely to the ground.
The radios themselves will be light, and sturdy. No need for
a tuner, a crystal will suffice; the audience will only be
listening to one station. The radios will run for a year on
a hearing-aid battery, forever on a photocell, receiving
broadcasts 24 hours a day, seven days a week, from satellites.
I'm told it's harder to jam signals coming down from space
than those broadcast from the surface of the planet.

And what broadcasts they'll be! Thomas Paine and Thomas
Jefferson -- in Mandarin and another half-dozen "major"
Chinese languages -- Leonard Reed, Peter McWilliams, Thomas
Szasz, dramatized works of Ayn Rand and Robert Heinlein,
informing the listener over and over that his life and all
the products of his life are his property and no one else's.
Maybe there'll even be room for a Suprynowicz or Smith.

The plan will be bankrolled by selling commercial time (a
billion listeners are attractive to any sponsor) but only to
companies that, unlike Smith and Wesson, haven't betrayed
the Bill of Rights (and the customers who've kept them in
business for more than a century), but instead have sworn to
uphold and defend it. The Chinese government, of course, will
make it capital offense to be caught with such a radio. We'll
retaliate by threatening to escalate from the enlightened
self-interest of Rand to the ruthless egoism of Stirner.

It was socialist Arthur Clarke who showed us the way, in a
short story that predicted communications satellites (and
entitled him, he believes absurdly, to part of the profits).
At appropriate times there'll be programs for children, at
others, programs for adults, apolitical entertainment meant
to keep the radio listeners listening: Winnie the Pooh, Story
of O, real freedom of the airwaves.

Sooner or later, China's leaders will have to back off, and
we can begin negotiating them out of everything they think
they own. Either that or they may face an uprising fomented
by our sudden refusal to broadcast the last chapter of an
Agatha Christie novel. All's fair, as they say, especially
against a government that twisted our elections to impose
William Jefferson Blythe Clinton on us.

Don't look for him to undertake this program. It's clear by
now he's a traitor who belongs heart and soul (as little of
those as he possesses) to the Chinese Communists (the only
masters he could run to after the Soviets folded). What
remains is to examine the rest of this country's leaders in
Congress, the Senate, and elsewhere, to see if they don't
serve the same masters.

Meanwhile, if my China policy works, we may have to think
about dropping millions of tiny little radios on America.

Or maybe tiny little color TVs.

Order my books at: http://www.webleyweb.com/lneil/lnsbooks.html

Any attempt to pass or enforce an unconstitutional law --
especially any law that violates the first ten amendments to
the Constitution, commonly known as the Bill of Rights -- is
a crime punishable by ten years in prison and a ten thousand
dollar fine for each offense (Title 18 U.S.C, Sections 241
and 242). If you'd like to see that law enforced, go to
http://www.lns2000.org and make your wishes known.
--
- Mike Blessing / Starship Trooper / Albuquerque, New Mexico
____________________________________________________________
Libertarian Party           -> http://www.lpnm.org
L. Neil Smith for President -> http://www.lns2000.org
Clean Slate Action Program  -> http://www.cleanslate2000.org
JPFO                        -> http://www.jpfo.org
Bill of Rights Enforcement
  --> http://www.webleyweb.com/lneil/bor_enforcement.html
The Covenant of Unanimous Consent
  --> http://www.webleyweb.com/lneil/new-cov.htm
Shop for Cars On-Line:  http://a-albionic.com/ads/srch.html

Forwarded for info and discussion from the New Paradigms Discussion List,
not necessarily endorsed by:
***********************************
Lloyd Miller, Research Director for A-albionic Research (POB 20273,
Ferndale, MI 48220), a ruling class/conspiracy research resource for the
entire political-ideological spectrum.  Quarterly journal, book sales,
rare/out-of-print searches, New Paradigms Discussion List, Weekly Up-date
Lists & E-text Archive of research, intelligence, catalogs, & resources.
 To Discuss Ideas:
  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]      http://msen.com/~lloyd/
  For Ordering Info & Free Catalog:
   mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]    http://a-albionic.com/formaddress.html
  For Discussion List:
   mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
   text in body:  subscribe prj <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
 **FREE RARE BOOK SEARCH: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> **
   Explore Our Archive:  <http://a-albionic.com/a-albionic.html>
Every Diet Has Failed!  What Can I do?
Click Below to "Ask Dr. Kathleen"!
http://www.radiantdiet.com/cgi-bin/slim/deliver.cgi?ask-1364
***********************************

<A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">www.ctrl.org</A>
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance�not soap-boxing�please!  These are sordid
matters
and 'conspiracy theory'�with its many half-truths, misdirections and outright
frauds�is used politically by different groups with major and minor effects
spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRL
gives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers;
be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credence to Holocaust denial and
nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://home.ease.lsoft.com/archives/CTRL.html
<A HREF="http://home.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html">Archives of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
 <A HREF="http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/">ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to