
Last
Stand for American Sovereignty
By Cliff Kincaid
May 21, 2007
NewsWithViews.com
CNN’s Lou Dobbs asked
me, during a discussion of the North American Union, why our media show
no interest in the issue of sovereignty. I said it wasn’t considered
sexy enough. Perhaps if “sovereignty” had big breasts and shapely
legs, like Anna Nicole Smith, we might stand a chance of getting some
more coverage. Tragically, American sovereignty seems to be meeting the
same fate as Miss Smith.
The U.N. Convention on
the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), now being pushed by the Bush Administration
for a quick vote, is already starting to get rave reviews from the
press, with the Sacramento Bee saying that protecting the oceans of the
world could be Bush’s “legacy.” The message to Bush is that he
should go out as a liberal and he may salvage some of his reputation.
But he will lose what is left of his conservative base.
As President Reagan
understood, UNCLOS creates another dangerous U.N. bureaucracy, with a
seabed “authority” to run ocean affairs, as well as a court system
and a global tax. It is a mechanism created by the World Federalists as
a major stepping stone on the road to world government. It is also
designed to make it easier for the “international community” to
thwart the exercise of
U.S.
military power in foreign
affairs. One of the main authors, Elizabeth Mann Borgese, was a
socialist who admired Karl Marx. But don’t expect our media to report
these facts to the American people.
U.S. Navy officials,
acting clueless and completely in the dark about the nature of U.N.
bureaucracies, are actually lobbying on Capitol Hill for Senate
ratification of the pact. It is an example of how weak the
U.S.
has become that our
military officials have been reduced to functioning as a lobbying arm of
the
Washington
office of the U.N. Of
course, they are only doing what the President tells them to do, and
Bush says he wants immediate ratification of UNCLOS. Strangely, two
years ago, even when his administration was officially endorsing the
pact, Bush told conservatives he wasn’t sure why his administration
was supporting it.
However, then-Senate
Majority Leader Bill Frist, pondering a presidential run, was studying
the treaty to death and refusing to bring it up for a vote.
Conservatives applauded his courage. But a Democratic takeover of the
Senate has now provided the “opportunity” for Bush to promote the
treaty that President Reagan rejected. Reagan’s U.N. ambassador, the
late Jeane Kirkpatrick, was still rejecting it in 2004, supposedly after
the treaty had been “fixed.”
Recognizing the
importance of words and what they mean, a top State Department official
recently told a group of conservatives that he doesn’t like to refer
to UNCLOS as a U.N. treaty. He wants to avoid any mention of the U.N.
connection because he understands that the world body is so corrupt that
any mention of it alongside the treaty can only hurt its chances of
ratification.
Make no mistake: a vote
for UNCLOS is a vote for increasing the power of the U.N. You can
register your opinion on the treaty by calling the Capitol at
1-800-828-0498 and asking to be connected to the offices of your
senators.
On another front, White
House spokesman Tony Snow calls the North American Union (NAU) a
“myth,” despite the abundant evidence of White House involvement in
the development of a North American identification card and security
strategy. This is how the subject of national sovereignty gets
marginalized and dismissed. In this case, our “adversary press”
meekly accepts the White House line. Echoing Snow, Philip Dine of the
St. Louis Post-Dispatch has
written an article
saying the NAU is based on an Internet “rumor” with a “few grains
of truth” that has led people to “an unsubstantiated conclusion.”
It is apparent that he didn’t attend the “North American Law”
conference which I covered, featuring wide-ranging discussions on how
the North American Free Trade Agreement is leading to the integration of
the economic, legal and political systems of the U.S,
Canada
and
Mexico
.
This week, Robert
Pastor’s Center for North American Studies at
American
University
is co-sponsoring the
“Model North American Parliament” for students from the three
countries. Pastor, a former Carter official and
Clinton
adviser who persuaded Texas Republican Senator John Cornyn
to introduce a
Mexico
financial bailout bill, is
not the type who whistles
Dixie
. Wearing a lapel pin
featuring the flags of the
U.S.
,
Mexico
and
Canada
, he is an ardent advocate
of what he calls the “North American Community.”
Those concerned about our
national sovereignty had better figure out a way to get some media
attention on this subject rather quickly because we are losing our
sovereignty on many fronts. From the North American Union to the Law of
the Sea Treaty to the illegal alien amnesty bill,
America
as we know it is fading
fast. The sad irony is that all of this is happening under the auspices
of a supposed conservative Republican President who earned a reputation
during the early years of his administration of pursuing a
“unilateral” foreign policy by snubbing the United Nations on
matters like adopting the global warming treaty and the International
Criminal Court and withdrawing from the ABM treaty so the U.S. could
pursue a missile defense.
How things change. The
Bush White House, Democrats and the media currently work in concert to
promote amnesty for illegal aliens as “comprehensive immigration
reform.” House Republicans like Reps. Edward Royce, Tom Tancredo and
Duncan Hunter see through it. And illegal aliens, of course, don’t
even exist in the world of politically correct journalism. All of this
can be explained by the fact that our elite journalists are in the same
class as those politicians who employ illegal aliens as gardeners,
landscapers, housekeepers and nannies. While exploiting cheap labor
themselves, they tell us the illegal aliens are simply “undocumented
workers” supposedly doing the jobs Americans won’t do.
On all of these issues,
it seems that Bush works better with liberal Democrats than conservative
Republicans. This might lead the cynical to think that he wanted
Republicans to lose power in Congress so he could finally leave a
“legacy,” in addition to the “No Child Left Behind” federal
education bureaucracy and the monumentally expensive federal
prescription drug program. But it’s impossible to believe that Bush
intended for the war in
Iraq
to go this badly just so he
could work with Democrats for his last two years. And that is mainly why
the Republicans lost Congress and risk losing the White House in 2008.
Bush could leave office as the President who failed to protect the
borders of the
United States
and
Iraq
. The only question is which
failure will prove more costly to our nation in the long run. On top of
that, he now wants the Senate to ratify the most comprehensive treaty
ever devised by the globalists. He is implementing the New World Order
talked about by his father.
These political dynamics
have put the sovereignty of our nation increasingly at risk. If we have
any hope of getting mainstream journalists to critically cover these
major issues of public importance, we have to make the concept of
American sovereignty and national identity into something that is
interesting to write and talk about. Of course, this approach assumes
that we have a media still capable of honest reporting.
Ultimately, political
pressure from the grassroots to force both political parties to deal
with the survival of the nation may be the only way to get the attention
of the press. We are beginning to see that groundswell developing on the
subject of illegal immigration, as millions of Americans register their
outrage at Republicans and Democrats who fail to take serious action to
protect
U.S.
borders. The same outrage,
if channeled into opposition to UNCLOS, could also make an impression on
the
Washington
establishment and media. It
will take 34 votes to sink UNCLOS but Republican sources on Capitol Hill
say they can count less than 10 currently against it. Time is running
out on the independent, free and strong
America
that so many sacrificed
their lives for.
©
2007 Cliff Kincaid - All Rights Reserved
Cliff Kincaid, a
veteran journalist and media critic, Cliff concentrated in journalism
and communications at the University of Toledo, where he graduated with
a Bachelor of Arts degree.
Cliff has written or
co-authored nine books on media and cultural affairs and foreign policy
issues.
Cliff has appeared on
Hannity & Colmes, The O’Reilly Factor, Crossfire and has been
published in the Washington Post, Washington Times, Chronicles, Human
Events and Insight.
Web Site: www.AIM.org
E-Mail: cliff.kincaid@aim.org
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