Congressman Ron Paul, MD, April 17, 2002
http://www.lewrockwell.com/paul/paul28.html

Last week I appeared on a national television news show to discuss recent 
events in the Middle East. During the show I merely suggested that there are 
two sides to the dispute, and that the focus of American foreign policy should 
be the best interests of America — not Palestine or Israel. I argued that 
American interests are best served by not taking either side in this ancient 
and deadly conflict, as Washington and Jefferson counseled when they warned 
against entangling alliances. I argued against our crazy policy of giving 
hundred of billions of dollars in unconstitutional foreign aid and military 
weapons to both sides, which only intensifies the conflict and never buys 
peace. My point was simple: we should follow the Constitution and stay out of 
foreign wars.
 
I was immediately attacked for offering such heresy. We've reached the point 
where virtually everyone in Congress, the administration, and the media blindly 
accepts that America must become involved (financially and militarily) in every 
conflict around the globe. To even suggest otherwise in today's political 
climate is to be accused of "aiding terrorists." It's particularly ironic that 
so many conservatives in America, who normally adopt an "America first" 
position, cannot see the obvious harm that results from our being dragged time 
and time again into an intractable and endless Middle East war. The empty 
justification is always that America is the global superpower, and thus has no 
choice but to police the world.
 
The Founding Fathers saw it otherwise. Jefferson summed up the 
noninterventionist foreign policy position perfectly in his 1801 inaugural 
address: "Peace, commerce, and honest friendship with all nations — entangling 
alliances with none." How many times have we all heard these wise words without 
taking them to heart? How many champion Jefferson and the Constitution, but 
conveniently ignore both when it comes to American foreign policy? Washington 
similarly urged that the US must "Act for ourselves and not for others," by 
forming an "American character wholly free of foreign attachments." 
Since so many on Capitol Hill apparently now believe Washington was wrong, they 
should at least have the intellectual honesty to admit it next time his name is 
being celebrated.
 
In fact, when I mentioned Washington the other guest on the show quickly 
repeated the tired cliche that "We don't live in George Washington's times." 
Yet if we accept this argument, what other principles from that era should we 
discard? Should we give up the First amendment because times have changed? How 
about the rest of the Bill of Rights? It's hypocritical and childish to dismiss 
certain founding principles simply because a convenient rationale is needed to 
justify foolishpolicies today. The principles enshrined in the Constitution do 
not change. If anything, today's more complex world cries out for the moral 
clarity provided by a noninterventionist foreign policy.
 
It's easy to dismiss the noninterventionist view as the quaint aspiration of 
men who lived in a less complicated world, but it's not so easy to demonstrate 
how our current policies serve any national interest at all. Perhaps an honest 
examination of the history of American interventionism in the 20th century, 
from Korea to Vietnam to Kosovo to the Middle East, would reveal that the 
Founding Fathers foresaw more than we think. 
 
- - - - - - - - 


"It's not the people who vote that count. It's the people who count the votes." 
Josef Stalin 
  
"A gang is a group of men under the command of a leader, bound by a compact of 
association, in which the plunder is divided according to an agreed convention. 
If this villainy wins so many recruits from the ranks of the demoralized that 
it acquires territory, establishes a base, captures cities and subdues peoples, 
it then openly arrogates to itself the title of `kingdom,’ which is conferred 
on it in the eyes of the world, not by the renouncing of aggression but by the 
attainment of impunity."
St. Augustine in The City of God 

  
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Mrs. Richard "Peggy" Martin (1935 - 2012) 
  
http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/dfw/obituary.aspx?n=margaret-irene-martin-peggy&pid=159081400&fhid=12241#fbLoggedOut
 
  
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