Jim
Kouri, CPP
November 5, 2006
NewsWithViews.com
As the November elections approach, the
overwhelming majority of Americans are totally unaware that their
homeland as they know is being dramatically changed -- and not for the
better. Both major political parties have leaders who believe in
internationalism. And Americans are selling out their votes and their
legacy for the price of a new social program.
In today's world, Internationalism is
most commonly expressed as an appreciation for the diverse cultures in
the world, and a desire for world peace. People who express this view
take pride in not only being a citizen of their respective countries,
but of being a "citizen of the world."
Internationalists feel obliged to
assist the world through leadership and charity. Internationalists
advocate the presence of a United Nations-style organization, and
often support a stronger version of a world government.
Contributors to this vision of
Internationalism believe in a world government, and express contempt
for the US. For instance, Albert Einstein, a supporter of One World
Government, warned of what he called "the follies of
patriotism" being "an infantile sickness."
In a speech recently delivered at the
Tenth Annual National Conference on Property Rights of the Property
Rights Foundation of America, international trade and regulatory law
expert Lawrence Kogan discussed how misguided American
internationalists are actually helping foreign governments and
environmental and health extremists to weaken the US Constitution and
the exclusive private property rights guaranteed by the US
Constitution's Bill of Rights.
These US politicians are promoting the
adoption of strict regulatory laws and flexible compulsory licensing
mechanisms used in other countries within Europe and Latin America
that are "known for their socialist solutions to 'deemed' market
failures, populist wealth redistribution policies, significantly
higher regulatory burdens, ideological aversion to scientific and
economic protocols and the deployment of novel technologies, and
slower economic growth rates."
According to Mr. Kogan, these
mechanisms are being used to "indirectly take [away] private
property for... public use which also benefits new private owners.
They constitute a new genre of 'takings' based on the 'public trust
doctrine' that are specially designed to dispense with the need to pay
'just compensation,' and thus, to circumvent the Fifth Amendment to
the US Constitution's Bill of Rights ... And, such rules are being
systematically imported into and/or reactivated within the US under
our very noses."
"Perhaps the simplest way to
appreciate the enormity of the problem before us," says Kogan,
"is to conceive of the new genre of private property 'takings'
theories now being promoted both here and abroad using the letter 'C'
... The 7 'C's stand for convergence of regulatory systems,
centralized and state planned economies, communal property, control by
government, circumvention of the Fifth Amendment of the Bill of
Rights, compulsory licensing of intellectual property which is the
eminent domain of real property, and competition, as in the need for
disguised protectionism to level the global economic playing
field."
© 2006 Jim Kouri- All Rights
Reserved
Jim Kouri, CPP is currently fifth vice-president
of the National Association of Chiefs of Police. He's former chief at
a New York City housing project in Washington Heights nicknamed
"Crack City" by reporters covering the drug war in the
1980s. He's also served on the National Drug Task Force and trained
police and security officers throughout the country.
He writes for many police and crime magazines
including Chief of Police, Police Times, The Narc Officer, Campus Law
Enforcement Journal, and others. He's appeared as on-air commentator
for over 100 TV and radio news and talk shows including Oprah,
McLaughlin Report, CNN Headline News, MTV, Fox News, etc. His book
Assume The Position is available at Amazon.Com, Booksamillion.com, and
can be ordered at local bookstores.
E-Mail: COPmagazine@aol.com