-Caveat Lector-
From: "Steve" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> That was certainly the general consenus. He is for breaking the ABM
treaty, breaking the ban on underground nuclear tests, and against the Kyoto
protocol, all actions which our allies strongly oppose. {snip} No, I do not
think much of Bush, even if we are going to war. Why should I like him and
support his treachery? Why do you?
Don here...just checking in from Right Wing Nationalist Central.
Sorry to burst your bubble here...but just what "treachery" are you
referring to? Documentation please? Or is that too much to ask of you?
Now, let's turn from the vague generalities to the specifics of your post.
For one thing, let's take a closer look at the Kyoto Protocol, of which you
apparently approve...
When George W. Bush made his first trip to Europe as President in June, the
anti-Bush U.S. media, the anti-U.S. European socialists, and the anti-growth
green parties were all lying in wait to grab headlines at his expense. They
zeroed in on Bush's withdrawal from further negotiations on the Kyoto
Protocol, also known as the Global Warming Treaty.
President Bush deserves an "A" from Americans for his five-nation European
tour because he stood firm on his Kyoto decision despite daily hammering
from big media in the United States to try to get him to change his mind.
Let's have a reality check about Kyoto.
The worldwide push for this fraudulent treaty got off the ground at the 1992
UN Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro, which produced several international
agreements including the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate
Change. This called on countries to take "voluntary actions" to reduce
greenhouse gas emissions (principally carbon dioxide, CO2) to their 1990
levels. This agreement was, unfortunately, signed by President George Bush I
and ratified by the Senate in 1992.
The first lesson we should learn from this is the folly of signing UN
treaties that are called voluntary. Any treaty called voluntary will surely
morph into Other Countries' Great Expectations, which in turn will morph
into demands by foreigners abroad and globalists at home that we meet our
alleged "obligations."
Buried in the treaty's verbiage was this sentence: "The developed country
parties should take the lead in combating climate change and the adverse
effects thereof." Now the UN propagandists are asserting that this alleged
"international law" binds the United States not only to actually do what was
called "voluntary" (dramatically reduce our CO2 emissions), but to do it
immediately regardless of when, if ever, other countries do anything to
conform to the treaty's goals.
UN bureaucrats and Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs) have been working
for years to turn this voluntary Rio agreement into a legally binding
agreement called the Global Warming Treaty. The new treaty was agreed to by
Vice President Al Gore in Kyoto, Japan in 1997 and signed in New York in
1998. Ever since, it's been called the Kyoto Protocol. Fortunately, treaties
do not bind the United States unless ratified by two-thirds of the Senate.
The Kyoto Protocol would require the United States to reduce our greenhouse
gas emissions to 7% below our 1990 levels, a tremendous reduction in our
energy consumption (our use of electricity, gas, oil, and gasoline) and
therefore in our standard of living. However, Kyoto would impose no
limitations on 130 developing nations, including China (the world's second
largest emitter of greenhouse gases), India, Mexico and Brazil, and would
allow Europeans to evade reductions by averaging among the European Union
(EU) countries.
Kyoto is so manifestly unfair to the United States that the U.S. Senate went
on record against it in 1997 by passing the Byrd-Hagel Resolution 95-0 to
warn our President that the treaty would not be ratified. President Bush is
obviously reflecting American views when he withdrew from negotiations.
Who is behind Kyoto?
Kyoto is an issue that brings together many different anti-American
interests, all of which enjoy wide access to the media.
The anti-growth socialists, particularly the European countries that have
moved left in recent years. The socialist mindset opposes economic growth
and instead welcomes a scarcity of resources so that big government can
apportion or ration the scarce resources. The private enterprise system, on
the other hand, produces abundance so that a rising tide lifts all boats. It
is clear that the Kyoto restrictions would restrict economic growth.
The foreign dictators in the United Nations who look upon the UN as a forum
where they can demand that the United States redistribute our wealth to
them. Our foreign aid never gets to the poor people who need it; it is
gobbled up by the ruling tyrants.
The cult of radical environmentalists who believe we should subordinate our
standard of living to the supremacy of global ecology or, as Al Gore said in
the title of his book, force us to put "Earth in the Balance." These groups
have great sums of money available through the UN NGOs and tax-exempt
foundations. But there's nothing balanced about the ideology or the treaty.
The ideology is the new religion of worshipping Mother Earth.
The leftist radicals who formerly demonstrated for the Communists but are
now using their street skills for the radical environmentalists. Alongside
of carrying Bush in effigy and shouting "Toxic Texan, Go Home," the Swedish
demonstrators carried pictures of has-been Communists Mao Zedong and Che
Guevara plus typical Communist slogans such as "For a World Without
Imperialism."
The Democrats who use any available issue to attack George W. Bush. This
issue is so attractive because big media chatter about it all the time.
Furthermore, the Kyoto goals demand more federal regulations and higher
taxes, both favorite Democratic Party goals.
The Hague Conference.
In December 2000, the Kyoto promoters met in the Hague to fill in the fine
print of the Kyoto Protocol with rules and penalties. In order to facilitate
the redistribution of U.S. wealth to Third World dictatorships, the Hague
conferees proposed a plan to allow rich nations to "buy" emissions credits
from poor nations (the same small countries that usually vote against us in
the UN).
The biggest poor country is Russia, whose economy is so devastated that it
can't afford industrial production to produce emissions anyway. The collapse
of the Russian economy has produced a windfall of possible pollution
"credits" that Russia can sell to countries unwilling to reduce emissions.
That means U.S. taxpayers would pay tribute to Russia in order to be allowed
to maintain our current standard of living.
Alternatively, if U.S. industries are forbidden to burn fossil fuels to keep
their plants open, they will move them to China or Mexico where there are no
such restrictions. The bottom line is, Kyoto would require U.S. industries
either to give away massive amounts of U.S. cash by buying emission credits
from foreign countries or to move their jobs abroad.
The Kyoto Protocol is based on the assumption that all countries have a
community of interest in cutting CO2 emissions in order to reduce global
warming. Any successful agreement for a global commission to regulate
personal and industrial use of energy would have to be based on the common
interests of the signers.
The Hague conference displayed the hopelessness of this venture and the
passionate demands of countries with diametrically opposed interests. In
some nations the climate is too hot and they don't want it any hotter, while
other nations hope global warming will make their crops more abundant.
Regulations are opposed by countries that are completely dependent on coal
or oil and would be devastated by the new regulations. Regulations are
favored by low-lying countries that worry about the rising of the seas that
is predicted if the earth warms and polar ice melts.
Some countries have already subjected their industries to heavy socialistic
regulations and taxes and want to impose the same on the rest of the world.
Other countries value their freedom from regulations.
The United States could actually go half way toward meeting Kyoto's
emission-reduction goals because our large forests function as a "sink" to
naturally absorb the main greenhouse gas, which is CO2 coming from our
tailpipes and smokestacks. Our vast forests absorb up to 300 million tons a
year of carbon dioxide. But other countries reject this as a "free ride" for
the America they envy.
The poor nations are demanding that the U.S. build projects in their
countries for climate protection, pollution cutting, "clean coal," and
forest protection, but are even unwilling to allow us any "credits" for
these handouts in meeting our emissions goals. As an envious Nigerian
declaimed, "They have caused the problems, they have made the whole world
unsafe."
Nuclear power, which produces energy without greenhouse emissions, is
another sticking point. The environmentalists have prevented the
construction of modern nuclear plants in the United States, but other
countries have no such restrictions and France relies heavily on nuclear
plants for its electricity.
It's a fiction that the United States alone is blocking the Kyoto Protocol;
it hasn't been ratified by any industrialized country. Australia just
announced that it is withdrawing from Kyoto negotiations because it would
mean transferring Australian industries and jobs to undeveloped countries in
Asia. Germany just announced that it is phasing out its nuclear power plants
(which provide a third of its electricity), which must mean that Germany
will use energy sources that produce greenhouse gas emissions.
Science has become political.
My college major was Political Science, described as the science of
politics. The Kyoto Protocol has taught us a new definition of Political
Science: the politics of science. Science has been politicized by scientists
who distort science for political purposes.
The rationale for the Kyoto Protocol is the fear of a monster called global
warming: the earth is getting warmer, the ice will melt, the oceans will
rise and flood our cities. Kyoto advocates use the new June report of the
National Academy of Sciences (NAS) to sell this thesis and clobber George W.
Bush.
But the Kyoto propagandists have maliciously misrepresented this report. The
full report makes clear that there is no scientific consensus about
long-term climate trends or what causes them.
Yes, climate is constantly changing and the earth is warmer than it used to
be; we are grateful we don't live in the Ice Age. But scientists do not
agree that past climate change was caused by CO2 and they cannot forecast
what the climate will be in the future. They don't agree on how much change
can be attributed to greenhouse gases and how much to water vapor, clouds
and storms.
The NAS report absolutely does not prove the need for the Kyoto Protocol. It
documents the lack of consensus on the whole issue. (See "Scientists' Report
Doesn't Support the Kyoto Treaty" by Richard S. Lindzen [MIT professor who
served on the National Academy of Sciences panel], Wall Street Journal, June
11, 2001. See also "The Kyoto Delusion" by Robert J. Samuelson, Washington
Post, 6-20-01.)
More than 17,000 American scientists (two-thirds with advanced degrees) have
signed a Petition that reads as follows:
"We urge the United States government to reject the global warming agreement
that was written in Kyoto, Japan in December 1997, and any other similar
proposals. The proposed limits on greenhouse gases would harm the
environment, hinder the advance of science and technology, and damage the
health and welfare of mankind.
"There is no convincing scientific evidence that human release of carbon
dioxide, methane, or other greenhouse gases is causing or will, in the
foreseeable future, cause catastrophic heating of the earth's atmosphere and
disruption of the earth's climate. More over, there is substantial
scientific evidence that increases in atmospheric carbon dioxide produce
many beneficial effects upon the natural plant and animal environments of
the earth." (The names of the signatories are posted at
www.oism.org/pproject.)
Kyoto is part of a web of UN treaties that attack American sovereignty.
Each of the pending and proposed UN treaties sets up an international
commission for monitoring and enforcement, on which the United States
typically has just one vote (the same as Haiti and Cuba). Other countries
form coalitions to oppose the United States.
Most of the other representatives on these UN commissions come from
countries where they don't have single-family homes that are heated in the
winter and cooled in the summer. They gang up on us and want to lock in the
global authority to set the thermostats on our homes in order to reduce our
standard of living to theirs.
A strong European Union (EU) is not in our U.S. national interest. The EU
believes in free trade among the countries admitted to the EU, but is highly
protectionist when it comes to dealing with the United States, and the EU
has 15 votes to our one in the World Trade Organization.
The current EU president, Swedish Prime Minister Goran Persson, is blunt
about this: he openly says that a strong Europe is needed to balance U.S.
world domination. EU's antitrust authorities are already using their power
to protect EU industries against competition from U.S. companies.
A strong EU is supported in the United States by ideologues who see it as a
stepping stone to world government and by the multinational corporations
that see it as a stepping stone to global free trade with totally open
borders. For example, former Deputy Secretary of State Strobe Talbott said,
"A politically united Europe will be a stronger partner to advance our
common goals." But his stated goal is to terminate national sovereignty and
"nationhood as we know it," and replace it with "a single, global
authority." (Time, 7-20-92)
In Europe, the globalists have been peddling the idea that history is moving
in an irreversible process toward unifying Europe. They draw the analogy
that, as America grew and prospered by evolving from 13 colonies through the
clumsy Confederation to a mighty United States, Europe will progress through
the common market, the European Union (EU), the single currency called the
euro, the Treaty of Nice to fill in the details of consolidation, and
finally to a United States of Europe.
The trouble is that this process is fundamentally undemocratic. The plan was
to have all these decisions made by officials in the European governments,
most of which have moved very left in the last few years. Consulting
European voters was never part of the plan.
But a funny thing happened on the way to European unity. Somehow, Denmark
managed to hold a referendum on the euro, and Ireland managed to hold a
referendum on the Treaty of Nice. And the voters shouted No!
Warning from Denmark.
Denmark's referendum on September 28, 2000 was the first time that the
people in any country were given the chance to vote on abandoning their own
country's money for the euro, and they rejected it with a 53% majority.
Denmark's referendum, with an 88% voter turnout, was a record repudiation of
their leaders. All the political, business and press leaders in Denmark
campaigned passionately in favor of the euro, the Prime Minister even
joining street singers to compose campaign jingles urging a yes vote.
The Danes were keen enough to recognize the euro as the stalking horse for a
European superstate that would submerge national identity and sovereignty
over each nation's borders, defenses, and even domestic laws. A global or
even a regional currency enables major political and economic decisions to
be made outside of national elections, which clearly erodes democratic
self-government.
The Danes realized that the sovereignty of their country was at stake, and
they were unwilling to relinquish control to unaccountable foreign
bureaucrats. As an anti-euro Danish leader said, "If we give up the krone,
we won't be masters in our own house any more."
Nothing could be more anti-democratic than the global bureaucracies that pur
port to manage international monetary issues, such as the World Bank,
International Monetary Fund (IMF), and the World Trade Organization (WTO).
The top salary at the IMF is a tax-free $364,000, more than twice the U.S.
President's after-tax salary. Unlike elected officials, these global
bureaucrats do not answer to the public no matter how disastrous their
policies.
A global or even a regional currency, controlled by unaccountable
bureaucrats in a foreign country, severely diminishes democratic
self-government. It disfranchises voters from control not only over their
currency but also over all related economic policies so that important
decisions can be made outside of national elections.
It may be debatable whether the American economy is helped or hurt under the
rule of NAFTA, GATT, WTO and PNTR (Permanent Normal Trade Relations with
China), but it is undebatable that there are some winners and some losers
and that American democracy is diminished.
After Denmark's vote, the gulf between the euro advocates and the
euroskeptics was called the "democratic deficit." Half a year later, this
deficit escalated to what is called the "democracy predicament."
Warning from Ireland.
One little EU country, Ireland, has a provision in its Constitution that
required a referendum on whether or not to ratify the Treaty of Nice.
(That's Nice, as in the French Riviera, and bears no relation to being nice
to the voters.) On June 8, 2001, the Irish voters shocked Europe by
unexpectedly rejecting the Treaty of Nice by 54% to 46%.
This surprise plunged the EU bureaucrats into sudden disarray. The
politicians who prattle incessantly about democracy are not willing to
accept the voters' democratic decisions. The current president of the EU,
Sweden's Prime Minister Goran Persson, immediately telephoned Irish Prime
Minister Bertie Ahern to suggest that he arrange a second vote on the
Treaty.
The Treaty of Nice is designed to lock in the 15 members of the EU and
restructure its governing authority to redistribute power more to the larger
countries and less to the smaller ones. The treaty will then pave the way
for the addition of 12 new members, mostly former Communist countries from
Eastern Europe, thus doubling the size of what we call Europe.
The plan was always to have it railroaded to acceptance by the political
establishment in each of the current EU countries, where unanimous passage
was essential but was always considered a certainty. When one EU official
casually suggested last year that Germany might want to consult its voters
on acceptance of the Nice Treaty, German government officials were horrified
at the thought of losing control over the process and vehemently denounced
the idea. It's not known what punishment was meted out to the tactless guy
who dared to broach such a politically incorrect idea.
The entire Irish government and all three major political parties supported
the Nice Treaty. So how could Irish voters not do as the establishment told
them to vote? Ordinary voters have figured out what their leaders have been
concealing, namely, that a common market leads inevitably to a common
government to enforce it, and the means of achieving it are anti-democratic.
Ratifying the Treaty of Nice means surrendering the right of self-government
to foreigners with different and often antagonistic cultures, language,
religion, values, forms of government, national security interests, and
economic goals.
The Treaty of Nice would force Ireland's participation in the EU Rapid
Reaction Force. That means surrendering the right to decide when to go to
war and when to stay out of other nation's quarrels.
The Treaty of Nice would force Ireland to surrender control over its borders
and admit a free flow of impoverished immigrants from former Communist
countries. There is no way those immigrants can be culturally or
economically assimilated.
The Treaty of Nice would force Ireland to conform its laws and customs to
decisions of the EU courts. Ireland would lose its power, for example, to
set its own abortion and liquor laws.
A common market among the several states of the United States has been a
major factor in American growth and prosperity. But our own common market
depends on the states relinquishing state sovereignty to Congress's Article
I power "to regulate commerce with foreign nations and among the several
states."
Americans are glad to do that, firm in the knowledge that all Congress's
regulations must be subject to the U.S. Constitution. Ireland and Denmark
have given us a wake-up lesson that, whatever material benefits may result
from a common market (a.k.a. the global economy), they are not worth
surrendering national sovereignty to foreign bureaucrats, foreign military,
or foreign judges.
Peace Through Superior Firepower,
DC
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