HON. RON PAUL OF TEXAS
BEFORE THE U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
February 11, 2004
A Wise Consistency
2004 Ron Paul 2:1
A wise consistency is the foundation of a free society. Yet
everyone knows, or thinks they know, that consistency is the hobgoblin
of little
minds. How many times has Ralph Waldo Emerson been quoted to belittle a
consistent philosophy defending freedom?
Even
on this floor I have been rebuked by colleagues with this quote, for
pointing
out the shortcomings of Congress in not consistently and precisely
following our
oath to uphold the Constitution.
2004 Ron Paul 2:2
The need to discredit consistency is endemic. It’s
considered beneficial to be flexible and pragmatic while rejecting
consistency;
otherwise the self-criticism would be more than most Members could
take. The
comfort level of most politicians in D.C. requires an attitude that
consistency
not only is unnecessary, but detrimental. For this reason Emerson’s
views are
conveniently cited to justify pragmatism and arbitrary intervention in
all our
legislative endeavors.
2004 Ron Paul 2:3
Communism was dependent on firm, consistent, and evil
beliefs. Authoritarian rule was required to enforce these views,
however.
Allowing alternative views to exist, as they always do, guarantees
philosophic
competition. For instance, the views in Hong Kong eventually won out
over the
old communism of the Chinese mainland. But it can work in the other
direction.
If the ideas of socialism, within the context of our free society, are
permitted
to raise their ugly head, it may well replace what we have, if we do
not
consistently and forcefully defend the free market and personal liberty.
2004 Ron Paul 2:4
It’s quite a distortion of Emerson’s views to use them
as justification for the incoherent and nonsensical policies coming out
of
Washington today. But, the political benefits of not needing to be
consistent
are so overwhelming that there’s no interest in being philosophically
consistent in one’s votes.
It is
a welcome convenience to be able to support whatever seems best for the
moment,
the congressional district, or one’s political party. Therefore, it’s
quite
advantageous to cling to the notion that consistency is a hobgoblin.
For this
reason, statesmanship in D.C. has come to mean one’s willingness to
give up
one’s own personal beliefs in order to serve the greater good —
whatever that
is. But it is not possible to preserve the rule of law or individual
liberty if
our convictions are no stronger than this. Otherwise something will
replace our
republic that was so carefully designed by the Founders. That something
is not
known, but we can be certain it will be less desirable than what we
have.
2004 Ron Paul 2:5
As for Emerson, he was not even talking about consistency in defending political
views that were deemed worthy and correct. Emerson clearly explained
the
consistency he was criticizing. He was most annoyed by a foolish
consistency. He
attacked bull-headedness, believing that intellectuals should be more
open-minded and tolerant of new ideas and discoveries. His attack
targeted the
flat-earth society types in the world of ideas. New information, he
claimed,
should always lead to reassessment of previous conclusions. To Emerson,
being
unwilling to admit an error and consistently defending a mistaken idea,
regardless of facts, was indeed a foolish consistency. His reference
was to a
character trait, not sound logical thinking.
2004 Ron Paul 2:6
Since it’s proven that centralized control over education and medicine has
done nothing to improve them, and instead of reassessing these
programs, more
money is thrown into the same centralized planning, this is much closer
to
Emerson’s foolish consistency than defending liberty and private
property in a
consistent and forceful manner while strictly obeying the Constitution.
2004 Ron Paul 2:7
Emerson’s greatest concern was the consistency of
conformity.
Nonconformity and
tolerance of others obviously are much more respected in a free society
than in
a rigidly planned authoritarian society.
2004 Ron Paul 2:8
The truth is that Emerson must be misquoted in order to use him against those
who rigidly and consistently defend a free society, cherish and promote
diverse
opinions, and encourage nonconformity. A wise and consistent defense of
liberty
is more desperately needed today than any time in our history. Our
foolish and
inconsistent policies of the last 100 years have brought us to a
critical
junction, with the American way of life at stake. It is the foolish
inconsistencies that we must condemn and abandon. Let me mention a few:
2004 Ron Paul 2:9
Conservatives Who Spend:
Conservatives for years
have preached fiscal restraint and balanced budgets. Once in charge,
they have
rationalized huge spending increases and gigantic growth in the size of
government, while supporting a new- found religion that preaches
deficits
don’t matter. According to Paul O’Neill, the Vice President lectured
him
that “Reagan proved deficits don’t matter.”
Conservatives who no longer support balanced budgets and less
government
should not be called conservatives. Some now are called
neo-conservatives. The
conservative label merely deceives the many Americans who continuously
hope the
day of fiscal restraint will come. Yet if this deception is not pointed
out,
success in curtailing government growth is impossible.
Is it any wonder the national debt is $7 trillion and growing by
over
$600 billion per year?
Even today, the
only expression of concern for the deficit
seems to come from liberals. That ought to tell us something about how
far
astray we have gone.
2004 Ron Paul 2:10
Free Trade Fraud—Neo-mercantilism
: Virtually all
economists are for free trade. Even the politicians express such
support.
However, many quickly add, “Yes, but it should be fair.”
That is, free trade is fine unless it appears to hurt someone.
Then a
little protectionism is warranted, for fairness sake. Others who claim
allegiance to free trade are only too eager to devalue their own
currencies,
which harms a different group of citizens — like importers and
savers — in
competitive devaluations in hopes of gaining a competitive edge. Many
so-called
free-trade proponents are champions of international agreements that
undermine
national sovereignty and do little more than create an international
bureaucracy
to manage tariffs and sanctions. Organizations like NAFTA, WTO, and the
coming
FTAA are more likely to benefit the powerful special interests than to
enhance
true free trade. Nothing is said, however, about how a universal
commodity
monetary standard would facilitate trade, nor is it mentioned how
unilaterally
lowering tariffs can benefit a nation. Even bilateral agreements are
ignored
when our trade problems are used as an excuse to promote dangerous
internationalism.
2004 Ron Paul 2:11
Trade as an issue of personal liberty is totally ignored.
But simply put, one ought to have the right to spend one’s own money
any way
one wants. Buying cheap foreign products can have a great economic
benefit for
our citizens and serve as an incentive to improve production here at
home. It
also puts pressure on us to reassess the onerous regulations and tax
burdens
placed on our business community. Monopoly wages that force wage rates
above the
market also are challenged when true free trade is permitted. And this,
of
course, is the reason free trade is rejected. Labor likes
higher-than-market
wages, and business likes less competition. In the end, consumers — all
of
us — suffer. Ironically, the free traders in Congress were the most
outspoken
opponents of drug reimportation, with a convoluted argument claiming
that the
free-trade position should prohibit the reimportation of
pharmaceuticals. So
much for a wise consistency!
2004 Ron Paul 2:12
Following the Constitution—Arbitrarily, Of Course
:
Following the Constitution is a convenience shared by both liberals and
conservatives — at times. Everyone takes the same oath of office, and
most
Members of Congress invoke the Constitution, at one time or another, to
make
some legislative point. The fact that the Constitution is used
periodically to
embarrass one’s opponents, when convenient, requires that no one feel
embarrassed by an inconsistent voting record. Believing that any
consistency,
not just a foolish one, is a philosophic hobgoblin gives many Members
welcome
reassurance. This allows limited-government conservatives to massively
increase
the size and scope of government, while ignoring the deficit. Liberals,
who also
preach their own form of limited government in the areas of civil
liberties and
militarism, have no problem with a flexible pragmatic approach to all
government
expenditures and intrusions. The net result is that the oath of office
to abide
by all the constitutional restraints on government power is rarely
followed.
2004 Ron Paul 2:13
Paper Money, Inflation, and Economic Pain
: Paper
money and inflation have never provided long-term economic growth, nor
have they
enhanced freedom. Yet the world, led by the United States, lives with a
financial system awash with fiat currencies and historic debt as a
consequence.
No matter how serious the problems that come from central-bank monetary
inflations — the depressions and inflation, unemployment, social chaos,
and
war — the only answer has been to inflate even more. Except for the
Austrian
free-market economists, the consensus is that the Great Depression was
prolonged
and exacerbated by the lack of monetary inflation. This view is held by
Alan
Greenspan, and reflected in his January 2001 response to the stock
market slump
and a slower economy — namely a record monetary stimulus and
historically low
interest rates. The unwillingness to blame the slumps on the Federal
Reserve’s
previous errors, though the evidence is clear, guarantees that greater
problems
for the United States and the world economy lie ahead. Though there is
adequate
information to understand the real cause of the business cycle, the
truth and
proper policy are not palatable. Closing down the engine of inflation
at any
point does cause short-term problems that are politically unacceptable.
But the
alternative is worse, in the long term. It is not unlike a drug addict
demanding
and getting a fix in order to avoid the withdrawal symptoms. Not
getting rid of
the addiction is a deadly mistake.
While
resorting to continued monetary stimulus through credit creation delays
the pain
and suffering, it inevitably makes the problems much worse. Debt
continues to
build in all areas — personal, business, and government. Inflated stock
prices
are propped up, waiting for another collapse. Mal-investment and
overcapacity
fail to correct. Insolvency proliferates without liquidation. These
same errors
have been prolonging the correction in Japan for 14 years, with
billions of
dollars of non-performing loans still on the books. Failure to admit
and
recognize that fiat money, mismanaged by central banks, gives us most
of our
economic problems, along with a greater likelihood for war, means we
never learn
from our mistakes. Our consistent response is to inflate faster and
borrow more,
which each downturn requires, to keep the economy afloat. Talk about a
foolish
consistency!
It’s time for our
leaders to admit the error of their ways, consider the wise consistency
of
following the advice of our Founders, and reject paper money and
central bank
inflationary policies.
2004 Ron Paul 2:14
Alcohol Prohibition—For Our Own Protection
:
Alcohol prohibition was a foolish consistency engaged in for over a
decade, but
we finally woke up to the harm done.
In
spite of prohibition, drinking continued. The alcohol being produced in
the
underground was much more deadly, and related crime ran rampant. The
facts
stared us in the face, and with time, we had the intelligence to repeal
the
whole experiment. No matter how logical this reversal of policy was, it
did not
prevent us from moving into the area of drug prohibition, now in the
more
radical stages, for the past 30 years. No matter the amount of harm and
cost
involved, very few in public life are willing to advise a new approach
to drug
addiction. Alcoholism is viewed as a medical problem, but illicit drug
addiction
is seen as a heinous crime. Our prisons overflow, with the cost of
enforcement
now into the hundreds of billions of dollars, yet drug use is not
reduced.
Nevertheless, the politicians are consistent. They are convinced that a
tough
stand against usage with very strict laws and mandatory
sentences — sometimes
life sentences for non-violent offenses — is a popular political stand.
Facts
don’t count, and we can’t bend on consistently throwing the book at any
drug
offenders. Our prisons are flooded with non-violent drug users — 84% of
all
federals prisoners — but no serious reassessment is considered.
Sadly, the current war on drugs has done tremendous harm to many
patients’ need for legitimate prescribed pain control. Doctors are very
often
compromised in their ability to care for the seriously and terminally
ill by
overzealous law enforcement.
Throughout
most of our history, drugs were legal and at times were abused. But
during that
time, there was no history of the social and legal chaos associated
with drug
use that we suffer today. A hundred years ago, a pharmacist openly
advertised,
“Heroin clears the complexion, gives buoyancy to the mind, regulates
the
stomach and the bowels and is, in fact, a perfect guardian of health.”
Obviously this is overstated as a medical panacea, but it
describes what
it was like not to have hysterical busybodies undermine our
Constitution and
waste billions of dollars on a drug war serving no useful purpose. This
country
needs to wake up! We should have more confidence in citizens making
their own
decisions, and decide once again to repeal federal prohibition, while
permitting
regulation by the states alone.
2004 Ron Paul 2:15
FDA and Legal Drugs—For Our Own Protection
: Our
laws and attitudes regarding legal drugs are almost as harmful. The FDA
supposedly exists to protect the consumer and patients. This conclusion
is based
on an assumption that consumers are idiots and all physicians and drug
manufacturers are unethical or criminals. It also assumes that
bureaucrats and
politicians, motivated by good intentions, can efficiently bring drugs
onto the
market in a timely manner and at reasonable cost. These same naïve
dreamers are
the ones who say that in order to protect the people from themselves,
we must
prohibit them from being allowed to re-import drugs from Canada or
Mexico at
great savings. The FDA virtually guarantees that new drugs come online
slower
and cost more money. Small companies are unable to pay the legal
expenses, and
don’t get the friendly treatment that politically connected big drug
companies
receive. If a drug seems to offer promise, especially for a
life-threatening
disease, why is it not available, with full disclosure, to anyone who
wants to
try it? No, our protectors say that no one gets to use it, or make
their own
decisions, until the FDA guarantees that each drug has been proven safe
and
effective. And believe me, the FDA is quite capable of making mistakes,
even
after years of testing.
It seems
criminal when cancer patients come to our congressional offices begging
and
pleading for a waiver to try some new drug. We call this a free society!
For those who can’t get a potentially helpful drug but might
receive a
little comfort from some marijuana, raised in their own back yard
legally in
their home state, the heavy hand of the DEA comes down hard, actually
arresting
and imprisoning ill patients. Federal drug laws blatantly preempt state
laws,
adding insult to injury.
2004 Ron Paul 2:16
Few remember that the first federal laws regulating
marijuana were written as recently as 1938, which means just a few
decades ago
our country had much greater respect for individual choices and state
regulations in all health matters.
The
nanny state is relatively new, but well entrenched. Sadly, we foolishly
and
consistently follow the dictates of prohibition and government control
of new
medications, never questioning the wisdom of these laws.
The silliness regarding illegal drugs and prescription drugs was
recently
demonstrated. It was determined that a drug used to cause an abortion
can be
available over the counter. However, Ephedra — used by millions for
various
reasons and found in nature — was made illegal as a result of one death
after
being misused. Individuals no longer can make their own decisions, at
an
affordable price, to use Ephedra. Now it will probably require a
prescription
and cost many times more. It can never be known, but weight loss by
thousands
using Ephedra may well have saved many lives. But the real issue is
personal
choice and responsibility, not the medicinal effect of these drugs.
This
reflects our moral standards, not an example of individual freedom and
responsibility.
2004 Ron Paul 2:17
Foreign Policy of Interventionism—General
: Our
foreign policy of interventionism offers the best example of Emerson’s
foolish
inconsistency. No matter how unsuccessful our entanglements become, our
leaders
rarely question the wisdom of trying to police the world. Most of the
time our
failures prompt even greater intervention, rather than less. Never
yielding to
the hard cold facts of our failures, our drive to meddle and
nation-build around
the world continues. Complete denial of the recurrent blowback from our
meddling — a term our CIA invented — prompts us to spend endlessly while
jeopardizing the lives of hundreds of thousands of people. Refusing
even to
consider the failure of our own policies is outrageous. Only in the
context of
commercial benefits to the special interests and the military-
industrial
complex, molded with patriotic jingoism, can one understand why we
pursue such a
foolish policy. Some of these ulterior motives are understandable, but
the fact
that average Americans rarely question our commitment to these
dangerous and
expensive military operations is disturbing. The whipped up war
propaganda too
often overrules the logic that should prevail. Certainly the wise
consistency of
following the Constitution has little appeal. One would think the
painful
consequences of our militarism over the last hundred years would have
made us
more reluctant to assume the role of world policeman in a world that
hates us
more each day.
2004 Ron Paul 2:18
A strong case can be made that all the conflicts, starting
with the Spanish-American War up to our current conflict in the Middle
East,
could have been avoided. For instance, the foolish entrance into World
War I to
satisfy Wilson’s ego led to a disastrous peace at Versailles,
practically
guaranteeing World War II. Likewise, our ill-advised role in the
Persian Gulf
War I placed us in an ongoing guerilla war in Iraq and Afghanistan,
which may
become a worldwide conflict before it ends. Our foolish antics over the
years
have prompted our support for many thugs throughout the 20th
Century — Stalin,
Samoza, Batista, the Shah of Iran, Noriega, Osama bin Laden, Saddam
Hussein, and
many others — only to regret it once the unintended consequences became
known.
Many of those we supported turned on us, or our interference generated
a much
worse replacement — such as the Ayatollah in Iran.
If we had consistently followed the wise advice of our early
presidents,
we could have avoided the foreign policy problems we face today. And if
we had,
we literally would have prevented hundreds of thousands of needless
deaths over
the last century. The odds are slim to none that our current failure in
Afghanistan and Iraq will prompt our administration to change its
policies of
intervention. Ignoring the facts and rigidly sticking to a failed
policy — a
foolish consistency — as our leaders have repeatedly done over the past
100
years, unfortunately will prevail despite its failure and huge costs.
This
hostility toward principled consistency and common sense allows for
gross errors
in policy making. Most Americans believed, and still do, that we went
to war
against Saddam Hussein because he threatened us with weapons of mass
destruction
and his regime was connected to al Qaeda. The fact that Saddam Hussein
not only
did not have weapons of mass destruction, but essentially had no
military force
at all, seems to be of little concern to those who took us to war. It
was
argued, after our allies refused to join in our efforts, that a
unilateral
approach without the United Nations was proper under our notion of
national
sovereignty. Yet resolutions giving the President authority to go to
war cited
the United Nations 21 times, forgetting the U.S. Constitution allows
only
Congress to declare war. A correct declaration of war was rejected out
of hand.
Now with events going badly, the administration is practically begging
the UN to
take over the transition — except, of course, for the Iraqi Development
Fund that
controls the oil and all the seized financial assets. The
contradictions and
distortions surrounding the Iraqi conflict are too numerous to count.
Those who
wanted to institutionalize the doctrine of pre-emptive war were not
concerned
about the Constitution or consistency in our foreign policy. And for
this, the
American people and world peace will suffer.
2004 Ron Paul 2:19
Promoting Democracy — An Obsession Whose Time Has Passed
:
Promoting democracy is now our nation’s highest ideal. Wilson started
it with
his ill-advised drive to foolishly involve us in World War I. His
utopian dream
was to make the world safe for democracy. Instead, his naiveté
and arrogance
promoted our involvement in the back-to-back tragedies of World War I
and World
War II. It’s hard to imagine the rise of Hitler in World War II without
the
Treaty of Versailles. But this has not prevented every president since
Wilson
from promoting U.S.-style democracy to the rest of the world.
2004 Ron Paul 2:20
Since no weapons of mass destruction or al Qaeda have been
found in Iraq, the explanation given now for having gone there was to
bring
democracy to the Iraqi people. Yet we hear now that the Iraqis are
demanding
immediate free elections not controlled by the United States. But our
administration says the Iraqi people are not yet ready for free
elections. The
truth is that a national election in Iraq would bring individuals to
power that
the administration doesn’t want. Democratic elections will have to wait.
2004 Ron Paul 2:21
This makes the point that our persistence in imposing our
will on others through military force ignores sound thinking, but we
never hear
serious discussions about changing our foreign policy of meddling and
empire
building, no matter how bad the results. Regardless of the human and
financial
costs for all the wars fought over the past hundred years, few question
the
principle and legitimacy of interventionism. Bad results, while only
sowing the
seeds of our next conflict, concern few here in Congress. Jingoism, the
dream of
empire, and the interests of the military-industrial complex generate
the false
patriotism that energizes supporters of our foreign entanglements.
Direct media
coverage of the more than 500 body bags coming back from Iraq is now
prohibited
by the administration. Seeing the mangled lives and damaged health of
thousands
of other casualties of this war would help the American people put this
war in
proper perspective. Almost all war is unnecessary and rarely worth the
cost.
Seldom does a good peace result. Since World War II, we have intervened
35 times
in developing countries, according to the LA Times, without a single
successful
example of a stable democracy. Their conclusion: “American engagement
abroad
has not led to more freedom or more democracy in countries where we’ve
become
involved.” So far, the peace in Iraq — that is, the period following the
declared end of hostilities — has set the stage for a civil war in this
forlorn
Western-created artificial state. A U.S.- imposed national government
unifying
the Kurds, the Sunnis, and the Shiites will never work. Our allies
deserted us
in this misadventure. Dumping the responsibility on the UN, while
retaining
control of the spoils of war, is a policy of folly that can result only
in more
Americans being killed. This will only fuel the festering wounds of
Middle East
hatred toward all Western occupiers. The Halliburton scandals and other
military-industrial connections to the occupation of Iraq will continue
to annoy
our allies, and hopefully a growing number of American taxpayers.
2004 Ron Paul 2:22
I have a few suggestions on how to alter our consistently
foolish policy in Iraq. Instead of hiding behind Wilson’s utopianism of
making
the world safe for democracy, let’s try a new approach:
2004 Ron Paul 2:23
-The internal affairs and the need for nation building in
Iraq are none of our business.
2004 Ron Paul 2:24
-Our goal in international affairs ought to be to promote
liberty and the private-property/free-market order — through persuasion
and
example, and never by force of arms, clandestine changes, or preemptive
war.
2004 Ron Paul 2:25
-We should give up our obsession with democracy, both for
ourselves and others, since the dictatorship of the majority is just as
destructive to a minority, especially individual liberty, as a single
Saddam
Hussein-like tyrant. (Does anyone really believe the Shiite majority
can
possibly rule fairly over the Sunnis and the Kurds?)
2004 Ron Paul 2:26
-A representative republic, loosely held together with
autonomy for each state or providence, is the only hope in a situation
like
this. But since we have systematically destroyed that form of
government here in
the United States, we can’t possibly be the ones who will impose this
system
on a foreign and very different land 6,000 miles away — no matter how
many bombs
we drop or people we kill. This type of change can come only with a
change in
philosophy, and an understanding of the true nature of liberty. It must
be an
intellectual adventure, not a military crusade. If for no other reason,
Congress
must soon realize that we no longer can afford to maintain an empire
circling
the globe. It’s a Sisyphean task to rebuild the Iraq we helped to
destroy
while our financial problems mount here at home. The American people
eventually
will rebel and demand that all job and social programs start at home
before we
waste billions more in Iraq, Afghanistan, and many other forlorn lands
around
the world.
2004 Ron Paul 2:27
-The Constitution places restraints on Congress and the
executive branch, so as not to wage war casually and without proper
declaration.
It provides no authority to spend money or lives to spread our
political message
around the world. A strict adherence to the rule of law and the
Constitution
would bring an immediate halt to our ill-advised experiment in assuming
the role
of world policeman. We have been told that our effort in Iraq has been
worth the
500-plus lives lost and the thousands wounded. I disagree — with great
sadness
for the families who have lost so much, and with so little hope for a
good
peace — I can only say, I disagree and hope I’m wrong.
2004 Ron Paul 2:28
Fighting Terrorism With Big Government—A Convenience
or Necessity?
Fighting
terrorism is a top concern for most Americans. It is understandable,
knowing how
vulnerable we now are to an attack by our enemies. But striking out
against the
liberties of all Americans, with the Patriot Act, the FBI, or
Guantanamo-type
justice will hardly address the problem.
Liberty
cannot be enhanced by undermining liberty!
It is never necessary to sacrifice liberty to preserve it. It’s
tempting to sacrifice liberty for safety, and that is the argument used
all too
often by the politicians seeking more power. But even that is not true.
History
shows that a strong desire for safety over liberty usually results in
less of
both. But that does not mean we should ignore the past attacks or the
threat of
future attacks that our enemies might unleash. First, fighting
terrorism is a
cliché. Terrorism is a technique or a process, and if not
properly defined, the
solutions will be hard to find. Terrorism is more properly defined as
an attack
by a guerrilla warrior who picks the time and place of the attack
because he
cannot match the enemy with conventional weapons. With too broad a
definition of
terrorism, the temptation will be to relinquish too much liberty, being
fearful
that behind every door and in every suitcase lurks a terrorist- planted
bomb.
Narrowing the definition of terrorism and recognizing why some become
enemies is
crucial. Understanding how maximum security is achieved in a free
society is
vital. We have been told that the terrorists hate us for our wealth,
our
freedom, and our goodness. This war cannot be won if that belief
prevails.
2004 Ron Paul 2:29
When the definition of terrorism is vague and the enemy
pervasive throughout the world, the neo-conservatives — who want to
bring about
various regime changes for other reasons — conveniently latch onto these
threats
and use them as the excuse and justification for our expanding military
presence
throughout the Middle East and the Caspian Sea region. This is
something they
have been anxious to do all along. Already, plans are being laid by
neo-conservative leaders to further expand our occupations to many
other
countries, from Central America and Africa to Korea. Whether it’s
invading
Iraq, threatening North Korea, or bullying Venezuela or even Russia,
it’s now
popular to play the terrorist card. Just mention terrorism and the
American
people are expected to grovel and allow the war hawks to do whatever
they want
to do. This is a very dangerous attitude. One would think that, with
the
shortcomings of the Iraqi occupation becoming more obvious every day,
more
Americans would question our flagrant and aggressive policy of empire
building.
The American people were frightened into supporting this war
because they
were told that Iraq had: “25,000 liters of anthrax; 38,000 liters of
botulinum
toxin; 500 tons of sarin, mustard, and VX nerve gas; significant
quantities of
refined uranium; and special aluminum tubes used in developing nuclear
weapons.”
The fact that none of
this huge amount of material was found, and the fact that David Kay
resigned
from heading up the inspection team saying none will be found, doesn’t
pacify
the instigators of this policy of folly. They merely look forward to
the next
regime change as they eye their list of potential targets. And they
argue with
conviction that the 500-plus lives lost were worth it.
Attacking a perceived enemy who had few weapons, who did not
aggress
against us, and who never posed a threat to us does nothing to help
eliminate
the threat of terrorist attacks. If anything, deposing an Arab Muslim
leader — even a bad one — incites more hatred toward us, certainly not
less. This
is made worse if our justification for the invasion was in error. It is
safe to
say that in time we’ll come to realize that our invasion has made us
less
safe, and has served as a grand recruiting tool for the many militant
Muslim
groups that want us out of their countries — including the majority of
those
Muslims in Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, Afghanistan, and the entire Middle
East.
Because of the nature of the war in which we find ourselves, catching
Saddam
Hussein, or even killing Osama bin Laden, are almost irrelevant. They
may well
simply become martyrs to their cause and incite even greater hatred
toward us.
2004 Ron Paul 2:30
There are a few things we must understand if we ever expect
this war to end.
2004 Ron Paul 2:31
First: The large majority, especially all the militant
Muslims, see us as invaders, occupiers, and crusaders. We have gone a
long way
from home and killed a lot of people, and none of them believe it’s to
spread
our goodness. Whether or not some supporters of this policy of
intervention are
sincere in bringing democracy and justice to this region, it just
doesn’t
matter — few over there believe us.
2004 Ron Paul 2:32
Second: This war started a long time before 9-11. That
attack was just the most dramatic event of the war so far. The Arabs
have fought
Western crusaders for centuries, and they have not yet forgotten the
European
Crusades centuries ago. Our involvement has been going on, to some
degree, since
World War II, but was dramatically accelerated in 1991 with the first
Persian
Gulf invasion along with the collapse of the Soviet system. Placing
U.S. troops
on what is considered Muslim holy land in Saudi Arabia was pouring salt
in the
wounds of this already existing hatred. We belatedly realized this and
have
removed these troops.
2004 Ron Paul 2:33
Third: If these facts are ignored, there’s no chance that
the United States-led Western occupation of the oil-rich Middle East
can succeed
(70% of the world’s oil is in the Persian Gulf and Caspian Sea
regions).
Without a better understanding of the history of this region, it’s not
even
possible to define the enemy, know why they fight, or understand the
difference
between guerilla warrior attacks and vague sinister forces of
terrorism. The
pain of recognizing that the ongoing war is an example of what the CIA
calls
blowback and an unintended consequence of our foreign policy is a great
roadblock to ever ending the war.
2004 Ron Paul 2:34
Judicial Review
: Respect for the original intent of
the Constitution is low in Washington. It’s so low, it’s virtually
non-existent. This causes many foolish inconsistencies in our federal
courts.
The Constitution, we have been told, is a living, evolving document and
it’s
no longer necessary to change it in the proper fashion. That method is
too slow
and cumbersome, it is claimed. While we amended it to institute alcohol
prohibition, the federal drug prohibition is accomplished by majority
vote of
the U.S. Congress. Wars are not declared by Congress, but pursued by
Executive
Order to enforce UN Resolutions. The debate of the pros and cons of the
war come
afterward — usually following the war’s failure — in the political arena,
rather
than before with the proper debate on a declaration of war resolution.
Laws are routinely written by un-elected bureaucrats, with
themselves
becoming the judicial and enforcement authority. Little desire is
expressed in
Congress to alter this monster that creates thousands of pages each
year in the
Federal Register. Even the nearly 100,000 bureaucrats who now carry
guns stir
little controversy. For decades, Executive Orders have been arrogantly
used to
write laws to circumvent a plodding or disagreeable Congress. This
attitude was
best described by a Clinton presidential aide who bragged:
“…stroke of the pen, law of the land, kinda cool!”
This is quite a testimonial to the rule of law and
constitutional
restraint on government power.
The
courts are no better than the executive or legislative branches in
limiting the
unconstitutional expansion of the federal monolith. Members of
Congress,
including committee chairmen, downplay my concern that proposed
legislation is
unconstitutional by insisting that the courts are the ones to make such
weighty
decisions, not mere Members of Congress. This was an informal argument
made by
House leadership on the floor during the debate on campaign finance
reform. In
essence, they said “We know it’s bad, but we’ll let the courts clean it
up.” And look what happened!
The
courts did not save us from ourselves.
2004 Ron Paul 2:35
Something must be done, however, if we expect to rein in
our ever growing and intrusive government. Instead of depending on the
courts to
rule favorably, when Congress and the executive branch go astray, we
must
curtail the courts when they overstep their authority by writing laws,
rubber
stamping bad legislation, or overruling state laws. Hopefully in the
future we
will have a Congress more cognizant of its responsibility to legislate
within
the confines of the Constitution.
There
is something Congress, by majority vote, can do to empower the states
to deal
with their First Amendment issues. It’s clear that Congress has been
instructed to write no laws regarding freedom of speech, religion, or
assembly.
This obviously means that federal courts have no authority to do so
either.
Therefore, the remaining option is for Congress to specifically remove
jurisdiction of all First Amendment controversies from all federal
courts,
including the Supreme Court.
Issues
dealing with prayer, the Ten Commandments, religious symbols or
clothing, and
songs, even the issue of abortion, are properly left as a prerogative
of the
states. A giant step in this direction could be achieved with the
passage my
proposed legislation, the We the People Act.
2004 Ron Paul 2:36
Conclusion:
Emerson’s real attack was on intellectual conformity without a willingness to entertain new ideas based on newly acquired
facts. This
is what he referred to as the foolish consistency. The greatest
open-minded idea
I’m aware of is to know that one does not know what is best for others,
whether it’s in economic, social, or moral policy, or in the affairs of
other
nations. Believing one knows what is best for others represents the
greatest
example of a closed mind.
Friedrich
Hayek referred to this as a pretense of knowledge. Governments are no
more
capable of running an economy made fair for everyone than they are of
telling
the individual what is best for their spiritual salvation. There are a
thousand
things in between that the busybody politicians, bureaucrats, and
judges believe
they know and yet do not. Sadly our citizens have become dependent on
government
for nearly everything from cradle to grave, and look to government for
all
guidance and security.
2004 Ron Paul 2:37
Continuously ignoring Emerson’s advice on self-reliance
is indeed a foolish consistency which most of the politicians now in
charge of
the militant nanny state follow. And it’s an armed state, domestic as
well as
foreign. Our armies tell the Arab world what’s best for them, while the
armed
bureaucrats at home harass our own people into submission and obedience
to every
law and regulation, most of which are incomprehensible to the average
citizen.
Ask three IRS agents for an interpretation of the tax code and
you will
get three different answers. Ask three experts in the Justice
Department to
interpret the anti-trust laws, and you will get three different
answers. First
they’ll tell you it’s illegal to sell too low, then they’ll tell you
it’s illegal to sell too high, and it’s certainly illegal if everybody
sold
products at the same price. All three positions can get you into plenty
of
trouble and blamed for first, undermining competition, second, for
having too
much control and gouging the public, and third, for engaging in
collusion. The
people can’t win.
2004 Ron Paul 2:38
Real knowledge is to know what one does not know. The only
society that recognizes this fact and understands how productive
enterprise is
generated is a free society, unencumbered with false notions of
grandeur. It is
this society that generates true tolerance and respect for others.
Self-reliance
and creativity blossom in a free society. This does not mean anarchy,
chaos, or
libertine behavior. Truly, only a moral society can adapt to personal
liberty.
Some basic rules must be followed and can be enforced by
government — most
suitably by local and small government entities. Honoring all voluntary
contractual arrangements, social and economic, protection of all life,
and
established standards for private property ownership are the three
principles
required for a free society to remain civilized. Depending on the
culture, the
government could be the family, the tribe, or some regional or state
entity.
2004 Ron Paul 2:39
The freedom philosophy is based on the humility that we are
not omnipotent, but also the confidence that true liberty generates the
most
practical solution to all our problems, whether they are economic,
domestic
security, or national defense.
Short
of this, any other system generates authoritarianism that grows with
each policy
failure and eventually leads to a national bankruptcy. It was this end,
not our
military budget, which brought the Soviets to their knees.
2004 Ron Paul 2:40
A system of liberty allows for the individual to be
creative, productive, or spiritual on one’s own terms, and encourages
excellence and virtue. All forms of authoritarianism only exist at the
expense
of liberty. Yet the humanitarian do-gooders claim to strive for these
very same
goals. To understand the difference is crucial to the survival of a
free
society.