July 10, 2003
HON.
RON PAUL OF TEXAS
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
2003 Ron Paul 73:1
The modern-day limited-government movement has been co-opted.
The conservatives have failed in their effort to shrink the size
of
government. There has not been, nor will there soon be, a conservative
revolution in Washington. Party control of the federal government has
changed,
but the inexorable growth in the size and scope of government has
continued
unabated. The liberal arguments for limited government in personal
affairs and
foreign military adventurism were never seriously considered as part of
this
revolution.
2003 Ron Paul 73:2
Since the change of the political party in charge has not made a difference, who’s really in charge? If the particular party in power
makes
little difference, whose policy is it that permits expanded government
programs,
increased spending, huge deficits, nation building and the pervasive
invasion of
our privacy, with fewer Fourth Amendment protections than ever before?
2003 Ron Paul 73:3
Someone is responsible, and it’s important that those of us who
love
liberty, and resent big-brother government, identify the philosophic
supporters
who have the most to say about the direction our country is going. If
they’re
wrong—and I believe they are—we need to show it, alert the American
people,
and offer a more positive approach to government.
However, this depends on whether the American people desire to
live in a
free society and reject the dangerous notion that we need a strong
central
government to take care of us from the cradle to the grave. Do the
American
people really believe it’s the government’s responsibility to make us
morally better and economically equal? Do we have a responsibility to
police the
world, while imposing our vision of good government on everyone else in
the
world with some form of utopian nation building? If not, and the
contemporary
enemies of liberty are exposed and rejected, then it behooves us to
present an
alternative philosophy that is morally superior and economically sound
and
provides a guide to world affairs to enhance peace and commerce.
2003 Ron Paul 73:4
One thing is certain: conservatives who worked and voted for
less
government in the Reagan years and welcomed the takeover of the U.S.
Congress
and the presidency in the 1990s and early 2000s were deceived. Soon
they will
realize that the goal of limited government has been dashed and that
their views
no longer matter.
2003 Ron Paul 73:5
The so-called conservative revolution of the past two decades
has given
us massive growth in government size, spending and regulations.
Deficits are
exploding and the national debt is now rising at greater than a
half-trillion
dollars per year. Taxes do not go down—even if we vote to lower them.
They
can’t, as long as spending is increased, since all spending must be
paid for
one way or another. Both Presidents Reagan and the elder George Bush
raised
taxes directly. With this administration, so far, direct taxes have
been
reduced—and they certainly should have been—but it means little if
spending
increases and deficits rise.
2003 Ron Paul 73:6
When taxes are not raised to accommodate higher spending, the
bills must
be paid by either borrowing or “printing” new money. This is one reason
why
we conveniently have a generous Federal Reserve chairman who is willing
to
accommodate the Congress. With borrowing and inflating, the “tax” is
delayed
and distributed in a way that makes it difficult for those paying the
tax to
identify it. Like future generations and those on fixed incomes who
suffer from
rising prices, and those who lose jobs they certainly feel the
consequences of
economic dislocation that this process causes. Government spending is
always a
“tax” burden on the American people and is never equally or fairly
distributed. The poor and low-middle income workers always suffer the
most from
the deceitful tax of inflation and borrowing.
2003 Ron Paul 73:7
Many present-day conservatives, who generally argue for less
government
and supported the Reagan/Gingrich/Bush takeover of the federal
government, are
now justifiably disillusioned. Although not a monolithic group, they
wanted to
shrink the size of government.
2003 Ron Paul 73:8
Early in our history, the advocates of limited, constitutional
government
recognized two important principles: the rule of law was crucial, and a
constitutional government must derive “just powers from the consent of
the
governed.” It was understood that an explicit transfer of power to
government
could only occur with power rightfully and naturally endowed to each
individual
as a God-given right. Therefore, the powers that could be transferred
would be
limited to the purpose of protecting liberty. Unfortunately, in the
last 100
years, the defense of liberty has been fragmented and shared by various
groups,
with some protecting civil liberties, others economic freedom, and a
small
diverse group arguing for a foreign policy of nonintervention.
2003 Ron Paul 73:9
The philosophy of freedom has had a tough go of it, and it was
hoped that
the renewed interest in limited government of the past two decades
would revive
an interest in reconstituting the freedom philosophy into something
more
consistent. Those who worked for the goal of limited government power
believed
the rhetoric of politicians who promised smaller government. Sometimes
it was
just plain sloppy thinking on their part, but at other times, they fell
victim
to a deliberate distortion of a concise limited-government philosophy
by
politicians who misled many into believing that we would see a rollback
on
government intrusiveness.
2003 Ron Paul 73:10
Yes, there was always a remnant who longed for truly limited
government
and maintained a belief in the rule of law, combined with a deep
conviction that
free people and a government bound by a Constitution were the most
advantageous
form of government. They recognized it as the only practical way for
prosperity
to be spread to the maximum number of people while promoting peace and
security.
2003 Ron Paul 73:11
That remnant—imperfect as it may have been—was heard from in the
elections of 1980 and 1994 and then achieved major victories in 2000
and 2002
when professed limited-government proponents took over the White House,
the
Senate and the House. However, the true believers in limited government
are now
shunned and laughed at. At the very least, they are ignored—except when
they
are used by the new leaders of the right, the new conservatives now in
charge of
the U.S. government.
2003 Ron Paul 73:12
The remnant’s instincts were correct, and the politicians
placated them
with talk of free markets, limited government, and a humble,
non-nation-building
foreign policy. However, little concern for civil liberties was
expressed in
this recent quest for less government. Yet, for an ultimate victory of
achieving
freedom, this must change. Interest in personal privacy and choices has
generally remained outside the concern of many conservatives—especially
with
the great harm done by their support of the drug war. Even though some
confusion
has emerged over our foreign policy since the breakdown of the Soviet
empire,
it’s been a net benefit in getting some conservatives back on track
with a
less militaristic, interventionist foreign policy. Unfortunately, after
9-ll,
the cause of liberty suffered a setback. As a result, millions of
Americans
voted for the less-than-perfect conservative revolution because they
believed in
the promises of the politicians.
2003 Ron Paul 73:13
Now there’s mounting evidence to indicate exactly what happened
to the
revolution. Government is bigger than ever, and future commitments are
overwhelming. Millions will soon become disenchanted with the new
status quo
delivered to the American people by the advocates of limited government
and will
find it to be just more of the old status quo. Victories for limited
government
have turned out to be hollow indeed.
2003 Ron Paul 73:14
Since the national debt is increasing at a rate greater than a
half-trillion dollars per year, the debt limit was recently increased
by an
astounding $984 billion dollars. Total U.S. government obligations are
$43
trillion, while the total net worth of U.S. households is about $40.6
trillion.
The country is broke, but no one in Washington seems to notice or care.
The
philosophic and political commitment for both guns and butter—and
especially
the expanding American empire—must be challenged. This is crucial for
our
survival.
2003 Ron Paul 73:15
In spite of the floundering economy, Congress and the
Administration
continue to take on new commitments in foreign aid, education, farming,
medicine, multiple efforts at nation building, and preemptive wars
around the
world. Already we’re entrenched in Iraq and Afghanistan, with plans to
soon
add new trophies to our conquest. War talk abounds as to when Syria,
Iran and
North Korea will be attacked.
2003 Ron Paul 73:16
How did all this transpire? Why did the government do it? Why
haven’t
the people objected? How long will it go on before something is done?
Does
anyone care?
2003 Ron Paul 73:17
Will the euphoria of grand military victories—against
non-enemies—ever be mellowed? Someday, we as a legislative body must
face the
reality of the dire situation in which we have allowed ourselves to
become
enmeshed. Hopefully, it will be soon!
2003 Ron Paul 73:18
We got here because ideas do have consequences. Bad ideas have
bad
consequences, and even the best of intentions have unintended
consequences. We
need to know exactly what the philosophic ideas were that drove us to
this
point; then, hopefully, reject them and decide on another set of
intellectual
parameters.
2003 Ron Paul 73:19
There is abundant evidence exposing those who drive our foreign
policy
justifying preemptive war. Those who scheme are proud of the
achievements in
usurping control over foreign policy. These are the neoconservatives of
recent
fame. Granted, they are talented and achieved a political victory that
all
policymakers must admire. But can freedom and the republic survive this
takeover? That question should concern us.
2003 Ron Paul 73:20
Neoconservatives are obviously in positions of influence and are
well-placed throughout our government and the media. An apathetic
Congress put
up little resistance and abdicated its responsibilities over foreign
affairs.
The electorate was easily influenced to join in the patriotic fervor
supporting
the military adventurism advocated by the neoconservatives.
2003 Ron Paul 73:21
The numbers of those who still hope for truly limited government
diminished and had their concerns ignored these past 22 months, during
the
aftermath of 9-11. Members of Congress were easily influenced to
publicly
support any domestic policy or foreign military adventure that was
supposed to
help reduce the threat of a terrorist attack. Believers in limited
government
were harder to find. Political money, as usual, played a role in
pressing
Congress into supporting almost any proposal suggested by the neocons.
This
process—where campaign dollars and lobbying efforts affect policy—is
hardly
the domain of any single political party, and unfortunately, is the way
of life
in Washington.
2003 Ron Paul 73:22
There are many reasons why government continues to grow. It
would be naïve
for anyone to expect otherwise. Since 9-11, protection of privacy,
whether
medical, personal or financial, has vanished. Free speech and the
Fourth
Amendment have been under constant attack. Higher welfare expenditures
are
endorsed by the leadership of both parties. Policing the world and
nation-building issues are popular campaign targets, yet they are now
standard
operating procedures. There’s no sign that these programs will be
slowed or
reversed until either we are stopped by force overseas (which won’t be
soon)
or we go broke and can no longer afford these grandiose plans for a
world empire
(which will probably come sooner than later.)
2003 Ron Paul 73:23
None of this happened by accident or coincidence. Precise
philosophic
ideas prompted certain individuals to gain influence to implement these
plans.
The neoconservatives—a name they gave themselves—diligently worked
their way
into positions of power and influence. They documented their goals,
strategy and
moral justification for all they hoped to accomplish. Above all else,
they were
not and are not conservatives dedicated to limited, constitutional
government.
2003 Ron Paul 73:24
Neo-conservatism has been around for decades and, strangely, has
connections to past generations as far back as Machiavelli. Modern-day
neo-conservatism was introduced to us in the 1960s. It entails both a
detailed
strategy as well as a philosophy of government. The ideas of Teddy
Roosevelt,
and certainly Woodrow Wilson, were quite similar to many of the views
of
present-day neocons. Neocon spokesman Max Boot brags that what he
advocates is
“hard Wilsonianism.” In many ways, there’s nothing “neo” about their
views, and certainly nothing conservative. Yet they have been able to
co-opt the
conservative movement by advertising themselves as a new or modern form
of
conservatism.
2003 Ron Paul 73:25
More recently, the modern-day neocons have come from the far
left, a
group historically identified as former Trotskyites. Liberal,
Christopher
Hitchens, has recently officially joined the neocons, and it has been
reported
that he has already been to the White House as an ad hoc consultant.
Many
neocons now in positions of influence in Washington can trace their
status back
to Professor Leo Strauss of the University of Chicago. One of Strauss’
books
was
Thoughts on Machiavelli
. This book was not a condemnation
of
Machiavelli’s philosophy. Paul Wolfowitz actually got his PhD under
Strauss.
Others closely associated with these views are Richard Perle, Eliot
Abrams,
Robert Kagan, and William Kristol. All are key players in designing our
new
strategy of preemptive war. Others include: Michael Ledeen of the
American
Enterprise Institute; former CIA Director James Woolsey; Bill Bennett
of
Book
of Virtues
fame; Frank Gaffney; Dick Cheney; and Donald Rumsfeld.
There are
just too many to mention who are philosophically or politically
connected to the
neocon philosophy in some varying degree.
2003 Ron Paul 73:26
The godfather of modern-day neo-conservatism is considered to be
Irving
Kristol, father of Bill Kristol, who set the stage in 1983 with his
publication
Reflections
of a Neoconservative.
In this book, Kristol also defends the
traditional
liberal position on welfare.
2003 Ron Paul 73:27
More important than the names of people affiliated with
neo-conservatism
are the views they adhere to. Here is a brief summary of the general
understanding of what neocons believe:
2003 Ron Paul 73:28
They agree with Trotsky on permanent
revolution, violent as well as intellectual.
2003 Ron Paul 73:29
They are for redrawing the map of the
Middle East and are willing to use force to do so.
2003 Ron Paul 73:33
They are not bashful about an
American empire; instead they strongly endorse it.
2003 Ron Paul 73:34
They believe lying is necessary for
the state to survive.
2003 Ron Paul 73:35
They believe a powerful federal
government is a benefit.
2003 Ron Paul 73:36
They believe pertinent facts about
how a society should be run should be held by the elite and withheld
from those who do not have the courage to deal with it.
2003 Ron Paul 73:37
They
believe neutrality in foreign affairs is ill advised.
2003 Ron Paul 73:39
They believe imperialism, if
progressive in nature, is appropriate.
2003 Ron Paul 73:40
Using American might to force
American ideals on others is acceptable. Force
should not be limited to the defense of our country.
2003 Ron Paul 73:41
9-11 resulted from the lack of
foreign entanglements, not from too many.
2003 Ron Paul 73:42
They dislike and despise libertarians
(therefore, the same applies to all strict constitutionalists.)
2003 Ron Paul 73:43
They endorse attacks on civil
liberties, such as those found in the Patriot Act, as being necessary.
2003 Ron Paul 73:44
They unconditionally support Israel
and have a close alliance with the Likud Party.
2003 Ron Paul 73:45
Various
organizations and publications over the last 30 years have played a
significant
role in the rise to power of the neoconservatives. It took plenty of
money and
commitment to produce the intellectual arguments needed to convince the
many
participants in the movement of its respectability.
2003 Ron Paul 73:46
It is no
secret—especially after the rash of research and articles written about
the
neocons since our invasion of Iraq—how they gained influence and what
organizations were used to promote their cause. Although for decades,
they
agitated for their beliefs through publications like
The National
Review, The
Weekly Standard, The Public Interest, The Wall Street Journal
,
Commentary
,
and the
New York Post
, their views only gained momentum in the
1990s
following the first Persian Gulf War—which still has not ended even
with
removal of Saddam Hussein. They became convinced that a much more
militant
approach to resolving all the conflicts in the Middle East was an
absolute
necessity, and they were determined to implement that policy.
2003 Ron Paul 73:47
In addition to
publications, multiple think tanks and projects were created to promote
their
agenda. A product of the Bradley Foundation, the American Enterprise
Institute (AEI)
led the neocon charge, but the real push for war came from the Project
for a New
American Century (PNAC) another organization helped by the Bradley
Foundation.
This occurred in 1998 and was chaired by
Weekly Standard
editor
Bill
Kristol. They urged early on for war against Iraq, but were
disappointed with
the Clinton administration, which never followed through with its
periodic
bombings. Obviously, these bombings
were motivated more by Clinton’s personal and political problems than a
belief
in the neocon agenda.
2003 Ron Paul 73:48
The election of
2000 changed all that. The Defense
Policy Board, chaired by Richard Perle, played no small role in
coordinating the
various projects and think tanks, all determined to take us into war
against
Iraq. It wasn’t too long before the dream of empire was brought closer
to
reality by the election of 2000 with Paul Wolfowitz, Richard Cheney,
and Donald
Rumsfeld playing key roles in this accomplishment. The plan to promote
an
“American greatness” imperialistic foreign policy was now a distinct
possibility. Iraq offered a great opportunity to prove their long-held
theories.
This opportunity was a consequence of the 9-11 disaster.
2003 Ron Paul 73:49
The money and
views of Rupert Murdoch also played a key role in promoting the neocon
views, as
well as rallying support by the general population, through his News
Corporation, which owns Fox News Network, the
New York Post
,
and
Weekly
Standard.
This powerful and influential media empire did more to
galvanize
public support for the Iraqi invasion than one might imagine. This
facilitated
the Rumsfeld/Cheney policy as their plans to attack Iraq came to
fruition. It
would have been difficult for the neocons to usurp foreign policy from
the
restraints of Colin Powell’s State Department without the successful
agitation
of the Rupert Murdoch empire. Max Boot was satisfied, as he explained:
“Neoconservatives believe in using American might to promote American
ideals
abroad.” This attitude is a far cry from the advice of the Founders,
who
advocated no entangling alliances and neutrality as the proper goal of
American
foreign policy.
2003 Ron Paul 73:50
Let there be no
doubt, those in the neocon camp had been anxious to go to war against
Iraq for a
decade. They justified the use of force to accomplish their goals, even
if it
required preemptive war. If anyone doubts this assertion, they need
only to read
of their strategy in “A Clean Break: a New Strategy for Securing the
Realm.”
Although they felt morally justified in changing the government in
Iraq, they
knew that public support was important, and justification had to be
given to
pursue the war. Of course, a threat to us had to exist before the
people and the
Congress would go along with war. The majority of Americans became
convinced of
this threat, which, in actuality, never really existed. Now we have the
ongoing
debate over the location of weapons of mass destruction. Where was the
danger?
Was all this killing and spending necessary? How long will this nation
building
and dying go on? When will we become more concerned about the needs of
our own
citizens than the problems we sought in Iraq and Afghanistan? Who knows
where
we’ll go next—Iran, Syria or North Korea?
2003 Ron Paul 73:51
At the end of the
Cold War, the neoconservatives realized a rearrangement of the world
was
occurring and that our superior economic and military power offered
them a
perfect opportunity to control the process of remaking the Middle East.
2003 Ron Paul 73:52
It was recognized
that a new era was upon us, and the neocons welcomed Frances Fukuyama’s
“end
of history” declaration. To them, the debate was over. The West won;
the
Soviets lost. Old-fashioned communism was dead. Long live the new era
of
neoconservatism. The struggle may not be over, but the West won the
intellectual
fight, they reasoned. The only problem is that the neocons decided to
define the
philosophy of the victors. They have been amazingly successful in their
efforts
to control the debate over what Western values are and by what methods
they will
be spread throughout the world.
2003 Ron Paul 73:53
Communism surely
lost a lot with the breakup of the Soviet Empire, but this can hardly
be
declared a victory for American liberty, as the Founders understood it.
Neoconservatism is not the philosophy of free markets and a wise
foreign policy.
Instead, it represents big-government welfare at home and a program of
using our
military might to spread their version of American values throughout
the world.
Since neoconservatives dominate the way the U.S. government now
operates, it
behooves us all to understand their beliefs and goals. The breakup of
the Soviet
system may well have been an epic event but to say that the views of
the neocons
are the unchallenged victors and that all we need do is wait for their
implementation is a capitulation to controlling the forces of history
that many
Americans are not yet ready to concede. There is surely no need to do
so.
2003 Ron Paul 73:54
There is now a
recognized philosophic connection between modern-day neoconservatives
and Irving
Kristol, Leo Strauss, and Machiavelli. This is important in
understanding that
today’s policies and the subsequent problems will be with us for years
to come
if these policies are not reversed.
2003 Ron Paul 73:55
Not only did Leo
Strauss write favorably of Machiavelli, Michael Ledeen, a current
leader of the
neoconservative movement, did the same in 1999 in his book with the
title,
Machiavelli on Modern Leadership,
and subtitled:
Why
Machiavelli’s iron
rules are as timely and important today as five centuries ago.
Ledeen is indeed an influential neocon theorist whose views get
lots of
attention today in Washington. His book on Machiavelli, interestingly
enough,
was passed out to Members of Congress attending a political strategy
meeting
shortly after its publication and at just about the time
A Clean
Break
was
issued.
2003 Ron Paul 73:56
In Ledeen’s
most recent publication,
The War Against the Terror Masters
, he
reiterates his beliefs outlined in this 1999 Machaivelli book. He
specifically
praises: “Creative destruction…both within our own society and
abroad…(foreigners) seeing America undo traditional societies may fear
us, for
they do not wish to be undone.” Amazingly, Ledeen concludes: “They must
attack us in order to survive, just as we must
destroy them to advance our historic mission.”
2003 Ron Paul 73:57
If those words
don’t scare you, nothing will. If they are not a clear warning, I don’t
know
what could be. It sounds like both sides of each disagreement in the
world will
be following the principle of preemptive war. The world is certainly a
less safe
place for it.
2003 Ron Paul 73:58
In
Machiavelli on Modern Leadership
, Ledeen praises a business leader for
correctly
understanding Machiavelli: “There are no absolute solutions. It all
depends.
What is right and what is wrong depends on what needs to be done and
how.”
This is a clear endorsement of situational ethics and is not coming
from the
traditional left. It reminds me of: “It depends on what the definition
of the
word ‘is’ is.”
2003 Ron Paul 73:59
Ledeen quotes
Machiavelli approvingly on what makes a great leader. “A prince must
have no
other objectives or other thoughts or take anything for his craft,
except
war.” To Ledeen, this meant: “…the virtue of the warrior are those of
great leaders of any successful organization.” Yet it’s obvious that
war is
not coincidental to neocon philosophy, but an integral part. The
intellectuals
justify it, and the politicians carry it out. There’s a precise reason
to
argue for war over peace according to Ledeen, for “…peace increases our
peril by making discipline less urgent, encouraging some of our worst
instincts,
in depriving us of some of our best leaders.” Peace, he claims, is a
dream and
not even a pleasant one, for it would cause indolence and would
undermine the
power of the state. Although I concede the history of the world is a
history of
frequent war, to capitulate and give up even striving for
peace—believing
peace is not a benefit to mankind—is a frightening thought that
condemns the
world to perpetual war and justifies it as a benefit and necessity.
These are
dangerous ideas, from which no good can come.
2003 Ron Paul 73:60
The conflict of
the ages has been between the state and the individual: central power
versus
liberty. The more restrained the state and the more emphasis on
individual
liberty, the greater has been the advancement of civilization and
general
prosperity. Just as man’s condition was not locked in place by the
times and
wars of old and improved with liberty and free markets, there’s no
reason to
believe a new stage for man might not be achieved by believing and
working for
conditions of peace. The inevitability and so-called need for
preemptive war
should never be intellectually justified as being a benefit. Such an
attitude
guarantees the backsliding of civilization. Neocons, unfortunately,
claim that
war is in man’s nature and that we can’t do much about it, so let’s use
it
to our advantage by promoting our goodness around the world through
force of
arms. That view is anathema to the cause of liberty and the
preservation of the
Constitution. If it is not loudly refuted, our future will be dire
indeed.
2003 Ron Paul 73:61
Ledeen believes
man is basically evil and cannot be left to his own desires. Therefore,
he must
have proper and strong leadership, just as Machiavelli argued. Only
then can man
achieve good, as Ledeen explains: “In order to achieve the most noble
accomplishments, the leader may have to ‘enter into evil.’ This is the
chilling insight that has made Machiavelli so feared, admired and
challenging…we are rotten,” argues Ledeen. “It’s true that we can
achieve greatness if, and only if, we are properly led.” In other
words, man
is so depraved that individuals are incapable of moral, ethical and
spiritual
greatness, and achieving excellence and virtue can only come from a
powerful
authoritarian leader. What depraved ideas are these to now be
influencing our
leaders in Washington? The question
Ledeen doesn’t answer is: “Why
do the political leaders not suffer from the same shortcomings and
where do they
obtain their monopoly on wisdom?”
2003 Ron Paul 73:62
Once this trust
is placed in the hands of a powerful leader, this neocon argues that
certain
tools are permissible to use. For instance: “Lying is central to the
survival
of nations and to the success of great enterprises, because if our
enemies can
count on the reliability of everything you say, your vulnerability is
enormously
increased.” What about the effects of lying on one’s own people? Who
cares
if a leader can fool the enemy? Does calling it “strategic deception”
make
lying morally justifiable? Ledeen and Machiavelli argue that it does,
as long as
the survivability of the state is at stake. Preserving the state is
their goal,
even if the personal liberty of all individuals has to be suspended or
canceled.
2003 Ron Paul 73:63
Ledeen makes it
clear that war is necessary to establish national boundaries—because
that’s
the way it’s always been done. Who needs progress of the human race! He
explains:
2003 Ron Paul 73:64
Look
at the map of the world: national boundaries have not been drawn by
peaceful men
leading lives of spiritual contemplation. National boundaries have been
established by war, and national character has been shaped by struggle,
most
often bloody struggle.
2003 Ron Paul 73:65
Yes,
but who is to lead the charge and decide which borders we are to fight
for? What
about borders 6,000 miles away unrelated to our own contiguous borders
and our
own national security? Stating a relative truism regarding the
frequency of war
throughout history should hardly be the moral justification for
expanding the
concept of war to settle man’s disputes. How can one call this
progress?
2003 Ron Paul 73:66
Machiavelli,
Ledeen and the neocons recognized a need to generate a religious zeal
for
promoting the state. This, he claims, is especially necessary when
force is used
to promote an agenda. It’s been true throughout history and remains
true
today, each side of major conflicts invokes God’s approval. Our side
refers to
a “crusade;” theirs to a “holy Jihad.” Too often wars boil down to
their
god against our God. It seems this principle is more a cynical effort
to gain
approval from the masses, especially those most likely to be killed for
the sake
of the war promoters on both sides who have power, prestige and wealth
at stake.
2003 Ron Paul 73:67
Ledeen
explains why God must always be on the side of advocates of war:
“Without fear
of God, no state can last long, for the dread of eternal damnation
keeps men in
line, causes them to honor their promises, and inspires them to risk
their lives
for the common good.” It seems dying for the common good has gained a
higher
moral status than eternal salvation of one’s soul. Ledeen adds:
2003 Ron Paul 73:68
Without
fear of punishment, men will not obey laws that force them to act
contrary to
their passions. Without fear of arms, the state cannot enforce the
laws…to
this end, Machiavelli wants leaders to make the state spectacular.
2003 Ron Paul 73:69
It’s
of interest to note that some large Christian denominations have joined
the
neoconservatives in promoting preemptive war, while completely ignoring
the
Christian doctrine of a Just War. The neocons sought and openly
welcomed their
support.
2003 Ron Paul 73:70
I
’d
like someone to glean anything from what the Founders said or placed in
the
Constitution that agrees with this now-professed doctrine of a
“spectacular”
state promoted by those who now have so much influence on our policies
here at
home and abroad. Ledeen argues that this religious element, this fear
of God, is
needed for discipline of those who may be hesitant to sacrifice their
lives for
the good of the “spectacular state.”
2003 Ron Paul 73:71
He
explains in eerie terms: “Dying for one’s country doesn’t come
naturally.
Modern armies, raised from the populace, must be inspired, motivated,
indoctrinated. Religion is central to the military enterprise, for men
are more
likely to risk their lives if they believe they will be rewarded
forever after
for serving their country.” This is an admonition that might just as
well have
been given by Osama bin Laden, in rallying his troops to sacrifice
their lives
to kill the invading infidels, as by our intellectuals at the AEI, who
greatly
influence our foreign policy.
2003 Ron Paul 73:72
Neocons—anxious
for the U.S. to use force to realign the boundaries and change regimes
in the
Middle East—clearly understand the benefit of a galvanizing and
emotional
event to rally the people to their cause. Without a special event, they
realized
the difficulty in selling their policy of preemptive war where our own
military
personnel would be killed. Whether it was the Lusitania, Pearl Harbor,
the Gulf
of Tonkin, or the Maine, all served their purpose in promoting a war
that was
sought by our leaders.
2003 Ron Paul 73:74
…of
course, we can always get lucky. Stunning events from outside can
providentially
awaken the enterprise from its growing torpor, and demonstrate the need
for
reversal, as the devastating Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941 so
effectively aroused the U.S. from its soothing dreams of permanent
neutrality.
2003 Ron Paul 73:75
Amazingly, Ledeen
calls Pearl Harbor a “lucky” event. The
Project for a New American Century, as recently as September 2000,
likewise,
foresaw the need for “a Pearl Harbor event” that would galvanize the
American people to support their ambitious plans to ensure political
and
economic domination of the world, while strangling any potential
“rival.”
2003 Ron Paul 73:76
Recognizing
a “need” for a Pearl Harbor event, and referring to Pearl Harbor as
being
“lucky” are not identical to support and knowledge of such an event,
but
this sympathy for a galvanizing event, as 9-11 turned out to be, was
used to
promote an agenda that strict constitutionalists and devotees of the
Founders of
this nation find appalling is indeed disturbing. After 9-11, Rumsfeld
and others
argued for an immediate attack on Iraq, even though it was not
implicated in the
attacks.
2003 Ron Paul 73:77
The
fact that neo-conservatives ridicule those who firmly believe that U.S.
interests and world peace would best be served by a policy of
neutrality and
avoiding foreign entanglements should not go unchallenged. Not to do so
is to
condone their grandiose plans for American world hegemony.
2003 Ron Paul 73:78
The
current attention given neocons is usually done in the context of
foreign
policy. But there’s more to what’s going on today than just the
tremendous
influence the neocons have on our new policy of preemptive war with a
goal of
empire. Our government is now being moved by several ideas that come
together in
what I call “neoconism.” The foreign policy is being openly debated,
even if
its implications are not fully understood by many who support it.
Washington is
now driven by old views brought together in a new package.
2003 Ron Paul 73:79
We
know those who lead us—both in the administration and in Congress—show
no
appetite to challenge the tax or monetary systems that do so much
damage to our
economy. The IRS and the Federal Reserve are off limits for criticism
or reform.
There’s no resistance to spending, either domestic or foreign. Debt is
not
seen as a problem. The supply-siders won on this issue, and now many
conservatives readily endorse deficit spending.
2003 Ron Paul 73:80
There’s
no serious opposition to the expanding welfare state, with rapid growth
of the
education, agriculture and medical-care bureaucracy. Support for labor
unions
and protectionism are not uncommon. Civil liberties are easily
sacrificed in the
post 9-11 atmosphere prevailing in Washington. Privacy issues are of
little
concern, except for a few members of Congress. Foreign aid and
internationalism—in spite of some healthy criticism of the UN and
growing
concerns for our national sovereignty—are
championed on both sides of the aisle. Lip service is given to
the free
market and free trade, yet the entire economy is run by
special-interest
legislation favoring big business, big labor and, especially, big
money.
2003 Ron Paul 73:81
Instead
of the “end of history,” we are now experiencing the end of a vocal
limited-government movement in our nation’s capital. While most
conservatives
no longer defend balanced budgets and reduced spending, most liberals
have grown
lazy in defending civil liberties and now are approving wars that we
initiate.
The so-called “third way” has arrived and, sadly, it has taken the
worst of
what the conservatives and liberals have to offer. The people are less
well off
for it, while liberty languishes as a result.
2003 Ron Paul 73:82
Neocons
enthusiastically embrace the Department of Education and national
testing. Both
parties overwhelmingly support the huge commitment to a new
prescription drug
program. Their devotion to the new approach called “compassionate
conservatism” has lured many conservatives into supporting programs for
expanding the federal role in welfare and in church charities. The
faith-based
initiative is a neocon project, yet it only repackages and expands the
liberal
notion of welfare. The intellectuals who promoted these initiatives
were neocons,
but there’s nothing conservative about expanding the federal
government’s
role in welfare.
2003 Ron Paul 73:83
The
supply-siders’ policy of low-marginal tax rates has been incorporated
into
neoconism, as well as their support for easy money and generous
monetary
inflation. Neoconservatives are disinterested in the gold standard and
even
ignore the supply-siders’ argument for a phony gold standard.
2003 Ron Paul 73:84
Is
it any wonder that federal government spending is growing at a rate
faster than
in any time in the past 35 years?
2003 Ron Paul 73:85
Power,
politics and privilege prevail over the rule of law, liberty, justice
and peace.
But it does not need to be that way. Neoconism has brought together
many old
ideas about how government should rule the people. It may have
modernized its
appeal and packaging, but authoritarian rule is authoritarian rule,
regardless
of the humanitarian overtones. A solution can only come after the
current
ideology driving our government policies is replaced with a more
positive one.
In a historical context, liberty is a modern idea and must once again
regain the
high moral ground for civilization to advance. Restating the old
justifications
for war, people control and a benevolent state will not suffice. It
cannot
eliminate the shortcomings that always occur when the state assumes
authority
over others and when the will of one nation is forced on
another—whether or
not it is done with good intentions.
2003 Ron Paul 73:86
I
realize that all conservatives are not neoconservatives, and all
neocons don’t
necessarily agree on all points—which means that in spite of their
tremendous
influence, most Members of Congress and those in the administration do
not
necessarily take their marching orders from the AEI or Richard Perle.
But to use
this as a reason to ignore what neoconservative leaders believe, write
about it
and agitate for—with amazing success I might point out—would be at our
own
peril. This country still allows open discourse—though less
everyday—and we
who disagree should push the discussion and expose those who drive our
policies.
It is getting more difficult to get fair
and balanced discussion on the issues, because it has become routine
for the
hegemons to label those who object to preemptive war and domestic
surveillance
as traitors, unpatriotic and un-American. The uniformity of support for
our
current foreign policy by major and cable-news networks should concern
every
American. We should all be thankful for CSPAN and the internet.
2003 Ron Paul 73:87
Michael
Ledeen and other neoconservatives are already lobbying for war against
Iran.
Ledeen is pretty nasty to those who call for a calmer, reasoned
approach by
calling those who are not ready for war “cowards and appeasers of
tyrants.”
Because some urge a less militaristic approach to dealing with Iran, he
claims
they are betraying America’s best “traditions.” I wonder where he
learned
early American history! It’s obvious that Ledeen doesn’t consider the
Founders and the Constitution part of our best traditions. We were
hardly
encouraged by the American revolutionaries to pursue an American
empire. We
were, however, urged to keep the Republic they so painstakingly
designed.
2003 Ron Paul 73:88
If
the neoconservatives retain control of the conservative,
limited-government
movement in Washington, the ideas, once championed by conservatives, of
limiting
the size and scope of government will be a long-forgotten dream.
2003 Ron Paul 73:90
The
believers in liberty ought not deceive themselves. Who should be
satisfied?
Certainly not conservatives, for there is no conservative movement
left. How
could liberals be satisfied? They are pleased with the centralization
of
education and medical programs in Washington and support many of the
administration’s proposals. But none should be pleased with the steady
attack
on the civil liberties of all American citizens and the now-accepted
consensus
that preemptive war—for almost any reason—is an acceptable policy for
dealing with all the conflicts and problems of the world.
2003 Ron Paul 73:91
In
spite of the deteriorating conditions in Washington—with loss of
personal
liberty, a weak economy, exploding deficits, and perpetual war,
followed by
nation building—there are still quite a number of us who would relish
the
opportunity to improve things, in one way or another. Certainly, a
growing
number of frustrated Americans, from both the right and the left, are
getting
anxious to see this Congress do a better job. But first, Congress must
stop
doing a bad job.
2003 Ron Paul 73:92
We’re
at the point where we need a call to arms, both here in Washington and
across
the country. I’m not talking about firearms. Those of us who care need
to
raise both arms and face our palms out and begin waving and shouting:
Stop!
Enough is enough! It should include liberals, conservatives and
independents.
We’re all getting a bum rap from politicians who are pushed by polls
and
controlled by special-interest money.
2003 Ron Paul 73:93
One
thing is certain, no matter how morally justified the programs and
policies
seem, the ability to finance all the guns and butter being promised is
limited,
and those limits are becoming more apparent every day.
2003 Ron Paul 73:94
Spending,
borrowing and printing money cannot be the road to prosperity. It
hasn’t
worked in Japan, and it isn’t working here either. As a matter of fact,
it’s
never worked anytime throughout history. A point is always reached
where
government planning, spending and inflation run out of steam. Instead
of these
old tools reviving an economy, as they do in the early stages of
economic
interventionism, they eventually become the problem. Both sides of the
political
spectrum must one day realize that limitless government intrusion in
the
economy, in our personal lives and in the affairs of other nations
cannot serve
the best interests of America. This is not a conservative problem, nor
is it a
liberal problem—it’s a government intrusion problem that comes from
both
groups, albeit for different reasons. The problems emanate from both
camps that
champion different programs for different reasons. The solution will
come when
both groups realize that it’s not merely a single-party problem, or
just a
liberal or just a conservative problem.
2003 Ron Paul 73:95
Once
enough of us decide we’ve had enough of all these so-called good things
that
the government is always promising—or more likely, when the country is
broke
and the government is unable to fulfill its promises to the people—we
can
start a serious discussion on the proper role for government in a free
society.
Unfortunately, it will be some time before Congress gets the message
that the
people are demanding true reform. This requires that those responsible
for
today’s problems are exposed and their philosophy of pervasive
government
intrusion is rejected.
2003 Ron Paul 73:96
Let
it not be said that no one cared, that no one objected once it’s
realized that
our liberties and wealth are in jeopardy. A few have, and others will
continue
to do so, but too many—both in and out of government—close their eyes
to the
issue of personal liberty and ignore the fact that endless borrowing to
finance
endless demands cannot be sustained. True prosperity can only come from
a
healthy economy and sound money. That can only be achieved in a free
society.