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What�s
              Wrong With the New World Order?
by
              Steven Yates
"Pay
              no attention to that man behind the curtain!"
~
              the Wizard, to Dorothy
The
              Wizard of Oz
These
              days I get quite a bit of email, some of it from readers of my columns
here on LewRockwell.com. Judging from the vast majority of
              the responses, it is gratifying to know that however politically
              correct the dominant culture gets, there is intelligent life
              on the Internet. I try to answer whatever is sent my way personally.
              I don�t always succeed. A few of my articles have elicited as many
              as 60 emails in less than 24 hours, and for one or two, the number
              went well over a hundred. When this happens, demands on my time
              don�t permit me to reply to everyone; I�m a "one man operation"
              here, and nothing else would get done. I sincerely regret this,
              but I do read everything sent to me. Eventually.
One
              of those unanswered waifs concerned an
              article I wrote a few months back on Carroll Quigley�s detailed
              documentation of the rise of what some of us have been calling the
              New World Order: a diabolical triad of global government, global
              economics (masquerading under such labels as "free trade"), and
              global, ecumenical religion (which would be resolutely hostile to
              Christianity). This article was one that received a flood of email.
              I answered what I could, but at some point had to give up. Received
              long after this point was a brief missive with two questions: "What�s
              wrong with the New World Order?" And then: "Don�t you think it will
              make the world a better place for the majority of people on the
              planet?"
On
              the one hand, these questions are refreshingly direct. On the other,
              they are scary. After the past ten years researching political 
correctness
              and turning up abundant evidence of increasing control of global
              politics, financial resources and information by a superelite with
              no loyalty to anything except money and power, I receive a well-meaning
              query from someone who not only senses no danger but wonders if
              such control might not be a good thing. There are no doubt
              others who believe that if we could just set aside all the differences 
represented by such things as national boundaries and regional loyalties,
              it really would issue in global peace and prosperity.
I
              left the email to sit in a subdirectory. Where, after all, do I
              begin? But the questions ring with fundamental concerns of those
              sort that don�t often get raised, and are almost never raised in
              the dominant media today. Asked in good faith, the questions are
              worth taking up and answering, if only because few others will do
              it. I do so here.
Perhaps
              the best place to begin is by reviewing the nature of government.
              Is government a "good thing," a "bad thing,"
              or somewhere in between? To answer this question, many writers refer
              to the oft-quoted statement by George Washington, our first President:
              "Government is not reason; it is not eloquence; it is force!
              Like fire, it is a dangerous servant and a fearful master."

George
              Washington, of course, was an entirely different breed from the
              kind of opportunist that tends to inhabit the land of politics today.
              He had a healthy sense that government was indeed a danger to freedom.
              And why not? After all, he�d just played a central role in the war
              of secession from the British Empire, which at the time was 
out-of-control
              centralized government at its greatest height. Government has been
              properly characterized by libertarian writers as having a legal
              monopoly on the use of force to achieve its ends. The Framers of our 
Constitutional republic realized this, and took steps to limit
              government�s growth. This was what the U.S. Constitution was all
              about. It had its critics who favored a still more limited,
              weaker central government: history has mislabeled them the 
"anti-federalists."

It
              goes without saying that this is not the vision of government presented
              in today�s "public schools." As products of government,
              they are places where students are brainwashed into near-worship
              of government. Students "learn" that government is fundamentally
              benevolent, if only the "right people" can get elected
              (the "right people," of course, are always purveyors of
              centralization ready to loot the wallets of productive, independent
              citizens).
Nor
              is George Washington�s the vision of government presented in today�s 
dominant media, populated with graduates of those "public schools"
              and today�s J-schools. The leading editorialists and other writers
              at the New York Times and the Washington Post � including
              many so-called conservatives � debate the best ways the government
              ought to spend the money it has looted from taxpayers, and what
              agendas it ought to pursue. They do not debate whether it should
              loot the taxpayers� hard-earned money at all, or pursue any agendas
              not specifically authorized by the Constitution (and there are very,
              very few!).
Moreover,
              atrocities such as what happened at Waco are systematically whitewashed,
              including by some so-called conservatives. Evidence of the worst 
criminal atrocities by our so-called leaders is carefully buried,
              with the full cooperation of the media (example: Vince Foster, whom
              I have never believed committed suicide). The American public isn�t
              even aware of much of this. After eight years of watching Bill Clinton�s
              very public adventures in criminality, however, very little shocks
              us anymore. Hardly anyone in the political mainstream blinked when
              the Clinton Regime cooperated closely with a communist dictator
              to send a little boy back to a life of socialist deprogramming.
              After this, the only two contenders for the presidency to have had
              any chance at being elected did not discuss the relationship between
              the federal government and the Constitution. They did not debate
              whether our government should join other governments, internationally,
              to bomb little countries that never threatened our legitimate interests
              back into the Stone Age. What they debated was prescription drugs
              for senior citizens and other trivialities.
Finally,
              the government-serving schools and media serve up a steady stream
              of distractions in the form of mindless entertainment and sports
              events. One can hardly turn around without encountering a reference
              to Survivor or Temptation Island, the two worst television
              shows of our time. The economy is micromanaged in such a way as
              to serve up mostly meaningless "busywork." One of the
              dirty little secrets of the so-called economic boom of the 1990s
              was the number of low-paying cubicle-dweller jobs created here at
              home versus the number of good paying manufacturing jobs
              that went to Mexico or overseas following NAFTA and GATT � this is
              global economics, which has little to do with genuine free markets
              and everything to do with enabling the superelites to line their
              pockets at ordinary Americans� expense. Between the steady stream
              of entertainment and the new-economy "busywork" jobs,
              many who are not too distracted to think about anything important
              are mentally too exhausted.
And
              of course. Were all this to come under sustained public scrutiny,
              it might dawn on a sufficient number of members of the public that
              our government is not fundamentally different from any other empire
              that has ever existed. The government and, increasingly, huge 
corporations,
              have a vested interest in keeping the sheeple in line, and the dominant
              media is more than willing to cooperate. If anyone notices what
              the elites are up to, they are answered in the way Dorothy was in
              that charming classic The Wizard of Oz. Only, our "man behind the 
curtain" is considerably more powerful and dangerous
              than the kindly old Wizard.
Now
              � imagine every bit of this moved up a scale, from the national
              to the international level. Imagine national sovereignty having
              been not so much destroyed in name but in fact, rendered meaningless
              by a web of regulations, treaties, etc., worked out by global elites
              in international conferences barely reported by the media, e.g.,
              the proposed International Criminal Court. If government is force
              and deception, then international government will be force and deception
              on an international scale � and with the capacity for surveillance and 
control provided by today�s
              technological developments it will have a level of power that
              is unprecedented in human history.
This
              agenda, as I explained in my essay,
              is hardly new. It has been in motion for decades. Arguably the first
              stirrings on behalf of world government date back to near the end
              of the 19th century, when Cecil Rhodes, the diamond tycoon, willed
              a portion of his fortune to the creation of a secret society motivated
              both by the idea that world government would be the key to world
              peace and that it could only be accomplished incrementally, in stealth
              moves, by well-financed elites operating behind the scenes. The
              Rhodes Scholarship program grew out of this effort, as did the rise
              of powerful, secretive groups in the U.S. like the Council on Foreign
              Relations.
What
              is scary is that so many Americans seem to have no more grasp of
              the danger this represents than they have of the true nature of
              our own government. Our national elites in both government and gigantic
              corporations are cooperating with the United Nations to help create
              "global governance," and even Jesse Helms� once resolute
              opposition has begun to weaken. Those who really believe we can
              trust huge corporations or those running them should take note of
              the millions that Ted Turner, the Atlanta-based media mogul, has donated 
to the UN.
Today,
              with the World Wide Web, it will hardly do to call this a conspiracy.
              It�s only a conspiracy if it is hidden, and this one isn�t. All
              one has to do is navigate around on the UN�s own Millennium Assembly
              website for abundant information on where the global-government agenda 
presently stands.
              Of course, the UN tends to overwhelm the casual web-surfer with
              information that is presented in a sugar-coated fashion. There is
              much there that can make the idea of world government look attractive
              to those who do not know any better, such as the talk of universal
              "human rights," likely to be used to justify massive transfers of
              wealth from the United States (i.e., from working taxpayers) to
              the Third World. As I argued in a
              different essay recently, highly-paid philosophy professors
              in influential, Ivy League universities have already produced 
pseudo-ethical
              defenses of just this.
World
              government is just not a workable proposition. It can lead down
              no other road besides tyranny. To those who understand economics,
              the reasons are not hard to follow. One of the primary laws of economics
              is that wealth does not simply fall out of the sky; it has to be
              produced by someone. The argument should be familiar: if those who
              produce are allowed (by governments) to keep the fruits of their
              labors and trade freely with others, they will produce more, and
              genuine prosperity will ensue. If the fruits of their labors are
              looted and put in the service of agendas they don�t support, incentives
              to produce will diminish, along with prosperity. The government,
              being supported by the fruits of legal looting, may proceed with
              a sequence of economic quick-fixes, such as avoiding gold-backed
              currency with a fixed value like the plague in favor of expanded, fluid, 
easy credit to maintain an illusion of prosperity. But eventually
              the piper will have to be paid. Just as in physics, you cannot get
              something from nothing. In economics, though, you can pretend. For
              a time. The pretense is enhanced if draped in pseudo-moral language
              about our "obligations to the poor" (for example).
World
              government, again, takes the pretense to a global stage. It promises
              that global cooperation (between governments, of course, and 
megacorporations such as Wal-Mart) will create prosperity in third world countries � 
mostly socialist tyrannies. Transfers of wealth will not bene
fit the impoverished
              masses of those countries; it will prop up the tyrannies and enable
              them to further enslave their masses. The tyrants may, of course,
              may have formed close relationships with the megacorporations as
              co-beneficiaries, propagating an illusion of "free markets"
              or global "free trade." It is an illusion because it will be technically 
illegal for anyone to compete without the explicit
              approval of the tyrants, which is unlikely to be given under the
              circumstances. (Given the government paperwork, fees, etc., imposed
              on those beginning a small business in the U.S., we are further
              down that road right here most people think.)
None
              of this, I submit, will leave us with a planet that is a "better
              place for the majority of people" on it. If anything, it is
              a recipe for what would be the most brutal dictatorship ever. And
              the sudden, grinding poverty of a worldwide depression, if the economic
              bubble the international financial superelite will have created
              bursts.
Finally,
              just ask what happens to the people who want nothing to do with
              the brave new world being proffered here. Would they be allowed
              to go their own way and be left alone? Of course not, because dictators
              cannot tolerate those who would be independent; the result would
              be a mass exodus to whatever parts of the country or world are still
              free! The dictators would not take the risk. Given the chance, they
              will extend their reach as far as possible. Whether those who want
              to be independent in America would find themselves actually hunted down 
and murdered is still an open question. It is just as likely
              that before it came to that, they would find themselves unable to
              earn their livings legally in the "global economy," and
              would eventually run afoul the law when they were forced to go 
underground.
              With surveillance technology, they would find very few places to
              go. Many independent minded folks with families will undoubtedly
              give up and cave in, if they do not want their children to starve!
              (But of course, if they have already caved in to the "gun control"
              crowd, they will have asked for this!)
I
              trust this answers the questions, for anyone with remaining doubts,
              of what is wrong with the New World Order. It would not be good
              "for the majority of people on the planet." It would be
              a system run by and for a cadre of superelites: that minority of
              the world population that finds itself obsessed with power and is
              compelled to build empires. The rest of us would be little better
              than livestock, no matter our economic status. Do any of us have
              the resources to stop this juggernaut? I don�t think we have any
              choice but to try. And as encouragement while we are trying, it
              might be helpful to remember the fate of all previous efforts to
              build the Tower of Babel, including the original.
March
              3, 2000 Steven
              Yates has a Ph.D. in Philosophy and is the author of

 Civil
              Wrongs: What Went Wrong With Affirmative Action (ICS Press,
              1994). He is presently compiling selected essays into a single volume
              tentatively entitled View From the Gallery and a work on a second
              book, The Paradox of Liberty. He also writes for the Edgefield
              Journal, and is available for lectures. He lives in Columbia,
              South Carolina.
Copyright
              © 2001 LewRockwell.com

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The only real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking
new landscapes but in having new eyes. -Marcel Proust
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The libertarian therefore considers one of his prime educational
tasks is to spread the demystification and desanctification of the
State among its hapless subjects.  His task is to demonstrate
repeatedly and in depth that not only the emperor but even the
"democratic" State has no clothes; that all governments subsist
by exploitive rule over the public; and that such rule is the reverse
of objective necessity.  He strives to show that the existence of
taxation and the State necessarily sets up a class division between
the exploiting rulers and the exploited ruled.  He seeks to show that
the task of the court intellectuals who have always supported the State
has ever been to weave mystification in order to induce the public to
accept State rule and that these intellectuals obtain, in return, a
share in the power and pelf extracted by the rulers from their deluded
subjects.
[[For a New Liberty:  The Libertarian Manifesto, Murray N. Rothbard,
Fox & Wilkes, 1973, 1978, p. 25]]

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