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Bush and world government

Posted: July 3, 2002

1:00 a.m. Eastern

By Patrick J. Buchanan

© 2002 Creators Syndicate, Inc.   

When the U.N. Security Council rejected America's demand for immunity 
for U.S. soldiers in the Bosnian peace force from arrest and prosecution 
by the International Criminal Court, the United States vetoed an 
extension of the force. Either our troops get immunity, or our troops 
get out. 

Good for President Bush. 

Once again, when the demands of globalism clashed with the call of 
patriotism, he put America first. Because he, not Al Gore, is in the 
Oval Office, America has rejected both the ICC and the Kyoto Protocol on 
global warming. Even on steel tariffs, where he put his free-trade 
ideology on the shelf to protect America's steel industry from foreign 
dumping, Bush exhibited a Reaganite patriotism. And the muted protests 
suggest that liberals recognize that the patriot card is still the ace 
of trumps in American politics. 

While these presidential decisions produced howls from abroad of 
"unilateralism" and "isolationism," they are signs of U.S. resolve in 
the struggle between God-and-country people and the globalists who await 
the messiah of World Government. 

And just as the decision of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals to 
declare the Pledge of Allegiance unconstitutional tipped the hand of 
judicial activists, this U.N. attempt to force U.S. troops under the ICC 
is welcome. For now, we no longer see as through a glass darkly who the 
true enemies of American independence are. Their dream is to limit U.S. 
sovereignty and transfer control of U.S. wealth and power to a global 
elite that intends to rule the world in the interests not of nations, 
but of mankind. The institutions of that global regime are already up 
and operating. 

The Security Council is its Senate; the General Assembly its lower 
house. The Supreme Court is to consist of the World Trade Organization 
for trade, the ICC for war crimes and the World Court for disputes 
between nations. The foreign aid dispensers are the African, Asian and 
Latin American Development banks, and the World Bank. The IMF is its 
Federal Reserve – and the model is the European Union. 

In the last decade, World Government made mammoth strides, with "Third 
Way" socialists giving up their national currencies in Europe, the 
creation of the WTO with the backing of Newt Gingrich and Bob Dole, GOP 
support of new bailout billions for the IMF and Clinton's signing of 
America on to the ICC. 

But globalist demands have now begun to clash with U.S. vital interests 
in ways even Republicans can understand. For the Senate to ratify Kyoto 
would mean a rollback of U.S. fossil-fuel emissions to the level of 1990 
– i.e., a depression. And even Democrats realize that the ICC's 
prosecution of U.S. soldiers for war crimes means the end of the career 
of any politician who lets that happen. 

With immigration, sovereignty is becoming the most explosive issue in 
Europe, and it is propelling populist parties toward power. So fearful 
has the European left become that it now seems hesitant to expand and 
deepen the EU into an all-powerful regime. 

Baroness Margaret Thatcher now concedes that Enoch Powell, whose career 
was destroyed by his "rivers of blood" speech decrying Third World 
immigration, was right to have opposed Britain's entry into the EU. She 
seeks a British withdrawal. 

The vehicle the globalists hope to ride is free trade. As the European 
Coal and Steel Community led to the European Economic Community to the 
European Community to the European Union today and Euroland tomorrow, 
they hope NAFTA will lead to a hemispheric free-trade zone, then a 
global zone with a single currency. Out of this will arise a regime that 
will slowly expand its power until national sovereignty is ancient 
history. 

The issue may be decided this decade, and we Americans will make the 
decision. If the price of global trade is a WTO that can impose its 
will, if the price of the global economy is another round of IMF 
bailouts, if the price of being a world citizen is the surrender of 
sovereignty and authority to the U.N., will Americans pay it? 

What exactly is the price of liberty? 

The globalists have a vision of the future, and they will pursue it 
instinctively and incessantly. The question is: Will patriots not only 
block this drive to world government, but will they roll it back? Are 
they willing to recognize, as Baroness Thatcher has, that we are far 
down the road to the loss of national independence? 

In this struggle, it is an advantage for true conservatives and 
populists that George W. Bush is not only Andover, Yale, Skull & Bones, 
Harvard Business and Kennebunkport, he is also Midland-Odessa.

Patrick J. Buchanan was twice a candidate for the Republican 
presidential nomination and the Reform Party's candidate in 2000. Now a 
commentator and columnist, he served three presidents in the White 
House, was a founding panelist of three national television shows, and 
is the author of seven books.   

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