I rarely write commentary from anger, preferring a properly
objective, psuedo-dispassionate approach to a subject deserving
my attention. But news of the details, nature and scope of
pending legislation in the U.S. Senate has caused me to make
an exception to that rule.
As though Americans were not already burdened with:
• Extortionate and confiscatory taxes wherever they turn
on virtually everything they earn, purchase, or do, from the
local level on up to the federal level;
• Myriad regulations, controls and arbitrary rules that
hamper or obstruct their productivity and their lives;
• Footing the endless bills of earmarked pork barrel projects
at home in the amount of billions;
• Footing the bill in the amount of the billions for bottomless
altruist and "humanitarian" pork barrel projects abroad;
• Footing the bill for an ever-expanding and ever more
costly welfare state to subsidize the ill, the retired, the
aged, the young, etc.
• Being held hostage by, say, Saudi Arabia, Venezuela,
and other hostile "oil-producing" countries, because our government
has decided that snail darters, sea cows, and caribou have
a greater right to live than have human beings;
• Paying more for food because mandated ethanol, which
reports prove costs more in oil to produce than it "saves," in
the gas they buy is taking more crop acreage out of production;
Congress is proposing, in Barack Obama's Global Poverty Act
(S.2433,
based on H.R.
1302, passed by the House September 25, 2007), that Americans
be delivered into a state of indentured servitude as laborers
for the United Nations. Perhaps "indentured servitude" is too
kind a term, for as horrendous a condition as it is, there
is usually a time limit to such servitude. Slavery would
be the more accurate term in this instance, for what Congress
is considering is servitude by Americans in perpetuity,
in exchange for nothing but the privilege of laboring to "save" the
world without thanks or reward, of filling the alleged needs of
others, of performing unlimited "community service" for the
offense of merely existing.
The not-so-peculiar and odd thing about H.R. 1302 was that
it passed the House by voice vote. This is a stratagem adopted
by legislators who fear that a bill is so outrageous that it
is better that no record be kept of those who endorsed it.
S.2433 was passed from the Senate Foreign Relations Committee
in the same manner - by voice vote, without public hearings,
to protect the identities of the guilty. It will probably be
introduced to the Senate for a similar, anonymous voice vote --
by Harry Reid.
There is a double irony in this behavior. First, S.2433 is
a bipartisan-sponsored bill. This underscores the fact that
there is no fundamental difference between the Democratic and
Republican Parties. Second, it is a piece of legislation which,
given the altruist, collectivist premises behind it, one would
have thought its creators should have trumpeted boastfully.
But it is being handled by corrupt, guilty, fearful sneaks
who haven't the courage of their own malice.
It reminds one of the scene in Atlas Shrugged, when
James Taggart pulls down a window blind to obliterate the sight
of the Washington Monument, just as he and government officials
decide to decree a moratorium on brains. The proper American
response to this evil and to its sponsors and supporters, in
Congress and in the U.N., should be Dagny Taggart's when she
learns of it: "I won't work as a slave or as a slave-driver." The
bill's co-sponsor is Republican Senator Richard Lugar of Indiana,
who sits on the Foreign Relations Committee. Its other co-sponsors
are Senators Joseph Biden, Maria Cantwell, Chris Dodd, Dick
Durbin, Russ Feingold, Dianne Feinstein, Charles Hagel, and
Robert Mendez, all Democrats.
The bill was the subject of a strong editorial in Investor's
Business Daily of February 28, 2008, "Obama's
0.7% Solution For Poverty Gets Pass from Senate Republicans." According
to IBD, the bipartisan bill would require the president "to
develop and implement a comprehensive strategy to further the
U.S. foreign policy objective of promoting the reduction of
global poverty, the elimination of extreme global poverty and
the achievement of the Millennium Development Goal of reducing
by one-half the proportion of people worldwide between 1990
and 2015, who live on less than $1 per day."
The "Millennium
Development Goal" refers to a United Nations declaration
adopted by the U.N. Millennium Assembly and Summit in 2000
that calls for "the eradication of poverty" by "redistribution
(of) wealth and land," cancellation of "the debts of developing
countries" and "a fair distribution of the earth's resources." The IBD reports
that "The Millennium project is monitored by Jeffrey D.
Sachs, a Columbia University economist. In 2005 he presented
then-U.N. secretary general Kofi Annan with a 3,000-page
report based on the research of 265 so-called poverty specialists. "Sachs'
document criticized the U.S. for giving only $16.5 billion
a year in global anti-poverty aid. He argued that we should
spend an additional $30 billion a year in order to reach
the 0.7% target that the U.N. set for the U.S. in 2000....Sachs
said that the only way to force the U.S. to commit that much
money is by a global tax, such as a tax on fossil fuels [oil,
coal, natural gas]." The tax would be imposed not only on their
production, but on their use, as well. Among other consequences,
Americans would be impoverished for the purpose of reducing
poverty abroad by 0.7 percent of the U.S.'s gross domestic
product.
The Millennium declaration, reports IBD, also calls
for a "currency transfer tax," a "tax on the rental value of
land and natural resources," a "royalty on worldwide fossil
energy production - oil, natural gas, coal," "fees for the
commercial use of the oceans, fees for airplane use of the
skies, fees for use of the electromagnetic spectrum, fees on
foreign exchange transactions, and a tax on the carbon content
of fuels."
The U.N. has assumed that it governs the earth, and wishes
to penalize the most productive country on it for, well, being
the most productive. If you never quite understood the nature
and purpose of the "unification" and "global amity" plans
described by Rand in Atlas Shrugged, this plan is
its real world counterpart. In practical terms, the Millennium
declaration is a prescription for not only perpetuating the "global
poverty" it purports to eradicate, but also for impoverishing
everyone, and for perpetuating that condition, as well.
But the Obama bill does more than allow the U.N. to tax American
citizens. It is more than a matter of legality or illegality.
For all practical purposes, it surrenders U.S. political sovereignty
and independence to the U.N., an organization most of whose
members are actively hostile to the U.S. Has the U.S. ever
approved a tax on its citizens imposed by the U.N.? If it has,
by what authority? Note that the wording of the Obama bill
would require "the president to develop and implement a comprehensive
strategy" -- which assumes that the office of president is
just another mode of tyranny or arbitrary power, no different
from the "presidency" of any random tin pot dictatorship or
regime.
There is some logic to their premise. After all, the U.S. has
withheld moral judgment of every one of those countries. Long,
long ago, the U.S. should have won World War II, but not participated
in the formation of an organization that admitted dictatorships
and other tyrannical regimes for the purpose of "peace." Long
ago, the U.S. should have withdrawn from that organization,
and evicted its headquarters from this country's soil.
But it maintains its sanction of that organization, and has
paid the price for it every since. Article
III, Section 3 of the Constitution states: "Treason against
the United States shall consist only in levying War against
them, or in adhering to their Enemies, giving them Aid and
Comfort."
It would be interesting to see if this definition could be
applied to the actions of Senators Obama, Lugar, Reid and the
rest of the supporters of S. 2433 (and also the sponsors and
supporters of H.R. 1302). Given that the U.N. has never disguised
its hostility for the U.S., and that the enemies of the U.S.
are legion in the U.N.'s membership, would passage of this
bill by Congress constitute giving "aid and comfort" to our
enemies, and "adhering" to their purposes and ends? For that
is what the bill amounts to: giving our enemies the right to
conquer, loot, and subjugate this country and its citizens.
Are we not already burdened by our own lords and masters of "social
policy" and "redistribution" in Washington and in every state
capital, without inviting the depredations of a clique of international
thugs and looters? I urge those reading this to call or email
his senator and urge that Barack Obama's S. 2433 be roundly
defeated by a recorded roll call. If possible, communicate
your outrage with the same moral indignation as Dagny Taggart's.
Edward Cline is a novelist who has written on the revolutionary
war period. He is author of the Sparrowhawk series
of novels set in England and Virginia in the Revolutionary period,
the detective novel First Prize, the suspense novel
Whisper the Guns, and of numerous published articles, book reviews
and essays.