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Hunkered Between Santorum and Paul Lies Peace Through Total War
Pajamas Media ^ | 31 Jan 2012 | Walter Hudson

Posted on 01/31/2012 5:49:52 AM PST by Notary Sojac

Imagine discovering that your police force, funded through local taxes, has begun diverting patrols to a neighboring town instead of protecting your own. Most people would be up in arms, and rightfully so.

A similar impulse informs Ron Paul’s foreign policy. He claims our military is off adventuring outside its jurisdiction. It is a message which appeals to a loyal base of supporters who believe that America’s military ought to respond to direct threats against American lives, rather than police the rest of the world.

There is a legitimate argument for refocusing our military, but not as Ron Paul and many of his supporters articulate it. Paul imagines a world where there are no credible threats, and thus nothing worth responding to. He imagines that the Constitution of the United States is binding over the lot of man, regardless of whether they are citizens or foreign enemy combatants. Worst of all, he imagines no cultural distinction motivating the behavior of regimes like Iran’s:

I don’t know of anybody who can militarily threaten [Israel]. They have 300 nuclear weapons. Nobody’s gonna touch them…

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and a multitude of imams and Islamist fanatics disagree. They don’t value life as Western civilization does. Indeed, they embrace death as a path to salvation. In their hands, a single nuclear weapon is a far greater threat to human life than the 300 held by a nation like Israel, which hopes never to use them.

Paul’s inability to make such an essential distinction has kept his support from rising above a particular ceiling. Yet, what support he has remains impressively stable, indicating that he speaks to some chord within many voters.

Opposite Paul stands Rick Santorum, a candidate who has struck an entirely different chord. Santorum is a proud neoconservative interventionist who believes America has a unique place in the world which endows it with an esoteric duty to spread democracy and freedom. The Hill reports,

Listening to Rick Santorum, one imagines he would lead America to more war, very quickly. Santorum speaks loudly, carries a big stick and speaks with a trigger-happy enthusiasm common to neoconservatives. The winds of war blow from Santorum’s lips with an almost casual air of breathless excitement that virtually guarantees more war if Santorum is elected president.

Listening to Ron Paul, by contrast, there is an isolationism that worries almost all leading national-security strategists, from conventional liberals to conventional conservatives. While Santorum gives the impression he would jump to war quickly, Paul gives the impression he would never wage war under any circumstance.

Both of these candidates miss the mark for the same reason. Both maintain flawed concepts of sovereignty.

Santorum is a theocratic collectivist who subordinates the individual to an undefined “common good.” In this way, he is fundamentally anti-liberty:

"Particularly in the area of sexual freedom and personal issues, this is the mantra of the left. Which is, “I have a right to do what I want to do.” And that is not the kind of freedom that our Founders envisioned, and it is not the kind of freedom that makes up a society that is devoted…to the common good. …The definition of liberty as our Founders understood it, was freedom with responsibility. Responsibility to who? To themselves? No. It was a responsibility to others. It was responsibility to your family, but not just your family. It was a responsibility to your neighbors and to your country."

This alleged responsibility to others is the root of all political evil, the same irrational claim which motivates prescriptions like welfare, progressive taxation, and government-run healthcare. Indeed, Santorum’s record reflects a brand of “big government conservatism” which is distinguished from the Left only by its definition of the common good. Santorum does not object to social engineering as such, only that which conflicts with his vision for society.

This translates to a foreign policy which is a “calling” or “duty” to spread democracy and freedom around the globe. In Santorum’s view, we are not responsible for our own defense for our own sake, but to others for some subjective common good. We are thus obligated to sacrifice blood and treasure in perpetuity, an inappropriate use of our resources applied to an impossible goal. Men must assert their freedom. It cannot be handed to them by American troops.

Ron Paul has a relatively good grasp of individual sovereignty, but overlooks how it manifests as national sovereignty. The vast majority of Americans celebrated when special forces struck a safe house in Pakistan last year to eliminate Osama bin Laden. Ron Paul criticized the operation citing Pakistan’s national sovereignty. What he failed to recognize was that a nation-state may only command respect if it upholds the rights of its citizens and does not encroach upon its neighbors. Pakistani sovereignty was negated by harboring the mastermind of attacks upon the United States. If a nation can claim sovereignty without regard to its actions, we could never rightfully respond to a threat. Anyone with borders would be free to do as they pleased — an absurd notion.

"The definition of liberty as our Founders understood it, was freedom with responsibility. Responsibility to who? ... to others."

There is a correct foundation upon which foreign policy should be built. It is not so much a middle-ground between Santorum and Paul as an entirely different perspective from either.

The sole purpose of government is the protection of individual rights. We constitute the state in order to protect us from harm, coercion, and fraud. In a just world, that is all government would do. Such a government’s foreign policy would secure free trade and eliminate threats. It would not take on responsibility for the peoples of the world. Other nations can constitute their own governments to secure their own freedom. If they do not, the consequences are theirs to bear, not ours.

This is neither isolationist, as Paul is often accused of being, nor non-interventionist, as he claims to be. Implementing this style of foreign policy would not cut us off from the rest of the world or prevent us from responding to threats. On the contrary, it would open us to profit from trade with non-threatening nations, and free us to fully engage those who would do us harm.

As it has been thus far executed, the War on Terror cannot be won. Its social and political objectives are beyond our control. We cannot bring civility to the uncivilized, dispense freedom as if it were ours to give, or hasten in tribal hearts and mystic minds the principles and values discovered over centuries of Western Enlightenment. It is neither our duty nor our place. Our duty is protect ourselves, and that means eliminating threats.

Elimination is not education. It does not rebuild. It does not tip-toe around civilians or yield to human shields. It is total war. It is utter destruction. It is the kind of war which hasn’t been fought by the West since World War II, and which the United Nations was crafted to prevent.

Nevertheless, it is the only effective way to deal with genuine threats. When we provide our enemies a list of things we will not do, the best we can hope for is perpetual stalemate, an ongoing containment, counter-insurgency, and fruitless negotiation. Yaron Brook and Alex Epstein wrote in The Objective Standard:

"The right to self-defense rests on the idea that individuals have a moral prerogative to act on their own judgment for their own sake… that a nation against which force is initiated has a right to kill whomever and to destroy whatever in the aggressor nation [that] is necessary to achieve victory. The neoconservatives… reject all-out war in favor of self-sacrificial means of combat that inhibit, or even render impossible, the defeat of our enemies. They advocate crippling rules of engagement that place the lives of civilians in enemy territory above the lives of American soldiers—and, by rendering victory impossible, above the lives of all Americans."

We all know Hiroshima and Nagasaki would never have been bombed by today’s politicians. The neoconservative foreign policy of Rick Santorum would have fed Americans into a grinder in pursuit of “winning hearts and minds.” The naive non-interventionism of Ron Paul would have blamed America for provoking Pearl Harbor. Only an objective, rational, and muscular foreign policy which proceeds from the individual rights of American citizens would justify destroying “whomever and … whatever… to achieve victory,” eliminating current threats and effectively deterring future ones. If the people of the world are to learn the value of freedom, let their first lesson be the price of threatening ours.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: peace; ronpaul; war; wot
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Nails it.

Nails it, nails it, nails it!

1 posted on 01/31/2012 5:49:59 AM PST by Notary Sojac
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To: Notary Sojac

We did provoke Pearl Harbor.


2 posted on 01/31/2012 5:54:58 AM PST by CPO retired
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To: CPO retired

War with Japan would have some to us one way or another no matter what we did because Japan’s “Co-Prosperity Sphere” would have no limits. Limits had to be imposed.


3 posted on 01/31/2012 6:02:42 AM PST by piasa (Attitude adjustments offered here free of charge)
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To: Notary Sojac

Yes!


4 posted on 01/31/2012 6:12:13 AM PST by Ragnar54 (Obama replaced Osama as America's worst enemy)
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To: Notary Sojac
"Paul imagines a world where there are no credible threats"

Set up a false premise and attack it, yawn, boring.

5 posted on 01/31/2012 6:20:42 AM PST by jpsb
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To: piasa

“Co-Prosperity Sphere” would have no limits. Limits had to be imposed.


kinda like the domino theory of viet nam ?


6 posted on 01/31/2012 6:22:58 AM PST by maine yankee (I got my Governor at 'Marden's')
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To: Notary Sojac
It is a message which appeals to a loyal base of supporters who believe that America’s military ought to respond to direct threats against American lives, rather than police the rest of the world. There is a legitimate argument for refocusing our military, but not as Ron Paul and many of his supporters articulate it. Paul imagines a world where there are no credible threats, and thus nothing worth responding to.

Nails what? The two above statements are contradictory.

And I'll believe that the others are serious when they control our Southern Border again. Not much sense in just fighting elsewhere for "security" when the door is wide open 24/7/365.

7 posted on 01/31/2012 6:33:50 AM PST by Smokin' Joe (How often God must weep at humans' folly. Stand fast. God knows what He is doing)
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To: Notary Sojac
This translates to a foreign policy which is a “calling” or “duty” to spread democracy and freedom around the globe. In Santorum’s view, we are not responsible for our own defense for our own sake, but to others for some subjective common good. We are thus obligated to sacrifice blood and treasure in perpetuity, an inappropriate use of our resources applied to an impossible goal.

We brought democracy to Egypt, Libya, etc. The result was that they installed the Muslim Brotherhood.

Democracy results in whatever the popular culture asserts as being the ideal state. It only works when the underlying culture is healthy.

8 posted on 01/31/2012 6:54:25 AM PST by PapaBear3625 (I'd agree with you, but then we would both be wrong.)
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To: Notary Sojac

Thank you! This is one of the best articles/analyses I’ve read here lately!!!


9 posted on 01/31/2012 7:00:09 AM PST by Ozymandias Ghost
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To: maine yankee

Which turned out to be true...


10 posted on 01/31/2012 7:04:03 AM PST by moonhawk (Romney tucks his tail and licks the hand that beats him. Newt rips it off at the shoulder.)
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To: Ozymandias Ghost

I’m a strong supporter of Dr. Paul, and I wholeheartedly agree with this article.

I wish Dr. Paul would read this and start to come around on America’s threats.

This writer did nail it. I can’t think of a better American foreign philosophy.


11 posted on 01/31/2012 7:13:46 AM PST by SpringtoLiberty (Liberty is on the march!)
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To: jpsb
Non-interventionism does not equal isolationism.

"The great rule of conduct for us, in regard to foreign nations, is in extending our commercial relations, to have with them as little political connection as possible. Europe has a set of primary interests, which to us have none, or a very remote relation. Hence she must be engaged in frequent controversies the causes of which are essentially foreign to our concerns. Hence, therefore, it must be unwise in us to implicate ourselves, by artificial ties, in the ordinary vicissitudes of her politics, or the ordinary combinations and collisions of her friendships or enmities." -- some crazy loon


12 posted on 01/31/2012 7:24:27 AM PST by GraniteStateConservative (...He had committed no crime against America so I did not bring him here...-- Worst.President.Ever.)
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To: Smokin' Joe

There is too much money to be made by having an open border, and that is why we have an open border.


13 posted on 01/31/2012 7:27:53 AM PST by GraniteStateConservative (...He had committed no crime against America so I did not bring him here...-- Worst.President.Ever.)
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To: Smokin' Joe
First of all I agree w/your sentiments on the southern (or any other) U.S. border.

I see your point about the apparent contradiction; however, I believe the author was trying to draw a distinction between Paul's policy (respond only to direct threats) and the beliefs of many of his supporters (majority are Leftist according to stats I saw posted here recently; only 18% self described as “very conservative”) who are radical anti-war (Code Pink, etc) and believe there are no threats.

That part is not clearly written; so, again, I see your point and would add the author should have written that segment w/greater clarity. (...and you get “points” for having better crtical reading skills than I this morning!)

14 posted on 01/31/2012 7:29:41 AM PST by Ozymandias Ghost
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To: SpringtoLiberty
My brother is a Paul supporter; however, I have not been able to support Dr Paul because of his foreign policy/defense stance. I have other concerns w/Dr Paul's policies; but, they are not “deal breakers” like the aforementioned issues.

As you point out, if Dr Paul could support the foreign policy/defense strategies articulated by the author, he could likely attract a lot more people to his campaign.

Of course the GOP elitists would simply crush Dr Paul; just as they are crushing anyone who becomes a serious threat to their lust for power. My loathing and contempt for those Machiavellian ba$tards and their toadie minions increases exponentially every day.

15 posted on 01/31/2012 7:41:21 AM PST by Ozymandias Ghost
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To: Notary Sojac

I have been a Republican all my life, probably will die a Republican. I have been voting since 1974. The present GOP is not the GOP of yesteryear. Compared to the Red Threat that occupies the White House, these candidates seem conservative, but then, so wouldn’t Chairman Mao.
All war is attrition. We, the Republic, have been loosing a war of financial attrition for decades. We, the Republic are engaged in a war with those who govern us. Drastic measures are required to defeat this enemy in order to stop the bleeding that each of us are seeing in the depreciation of our savings, the constant onslaught of taxes, fees, and licenses. Each of them designed to remove our ability to live free.
If a slave is a person who works for no money, then a paid person who works with no money left for savings or investment is therefore a slave. In each case work is done, the slave is fed and roofed.
We have no choice but to vote for the candidate who will without hesitation stop the death of a thousand cuts. Bring the troops home, set them up defending our boarders to stop the invaders(illegal immigrants), while they spend their paychecks here bolstering our economy instead of someone elses.
If we need to declare war, then we do so, and like in the past, ramp it up again.
Reduction of all Federal Spending, and all taxes, fees, and other theft apparatus, is the only way to save our Republic.
All the candidates have faults and planks we don’t like. But at this time we need an Anti Federal Reserve, spend slashing nut job. It’s our only chance.
Vote Ron Paul, and plead, beg, and demand the others drop out of the race.
They are not interested in the Republic.


16 posted on 01/31/2012 7:52:03 AM PST by RavenLooneyToon
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To: Notary Sojac

This article made me like each of these men a little less.


17 posted on 01/31/2012 7:52:28 AM PST by Psalm 144 (Gov. Perry quit for the right reasons, in the right way, at the right time. Thank you, sir.)
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To: RavenLooneyToon

“I have been a Republican all my life, probably will die a Republican. I have been voting since 1974. The present GOP is not the GOP of yesteryear. Compared to the Red Threat that occupies the White House, these candidates seem conservative, but then, so wouldn’t Chairman Mao.”

I’ve often thought that if JFK could return from the dead and run as Republican, the GOP machine woould marginalize him as a ‘dangerous rightwing extremist’. In fact, I think Hubert Horatio Humphrey was probably more conservative than today’s GOP ‘moderates’.


18 posted on 01/31/2012 7:57:58 AM PST by Psalm 144 (Gov. Perry quit for the right reasons, in the right way, at the right time. Thank you, sir.)
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To: Psalm 144
JFK would be considered a right wing hawk.
That is exactly my point. There is no difference between any of the candidates, Republican or Democrat, we the Republic, have been being denied the choice to say no to socialism. It's a setup.
The only direction we are left with is toward Ron Paul.
By no means the best choice, but the only choice other than the continued destruction of the Constitutional way of life.
19 posted on 01/31/2012 8:06:59 AM PST by RavenLooneyToon
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To: Notary Sojac

Santorum would not rush the country into another war. He is just accurately aware of the truth: there is danger for us and our allies, especially Israel, from Iran.

He also sees correctly the danger of illegal immigration.

He wants to stop both the abject and subtle ways to destroy America.


20 posted on 01/31/2012 8:17:03 AM PST by Yaelle
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