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The new world order grows teeth
WorldNetDaily ^ | 9/9/2002 | Pat Buchanan

Posted on 09/09/2002 5:38:08 AM PDT by A Vast RightWing Conspirator

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WND Commentary


The new world order grows teeth


Posted: September 9, 2002
1:00 a.m. Eastern

© 2002 Creators Syndicate, Inc.

The World Trade Organization has just given Europe the right to hit the United States with $4 billion in tariff sanctions – to punish us for giving tax breaks to U.S. exporters like Boeing, Microsoft and GE.

Under WTO rules, we are not permitted to retaliate. We must stand and take the EU sucker punch, however hard it wants to hit.

Perhaps this "stick-it-to-the-Americans" ruling will at last awaken us to the folly of having created this monster. A showdown with the WTO over whether free trade trumps U.S. national interests was inevitable the day we joined this outfit. Let's get it on, and let's get it over with.

Even creating the WTO was a blunder. We shaped and joined a global body where, for the first time, America had neither the veto power nor voting power to protect U.S. vital interests from hostile and envious rivals. What were we thinking of?

The WTO enshrines as infallible dogma the tenets of a 19th-century free-trade cult that helped to reduce Britain, homeland of the Industrial Revolution, to today's third-tier manufacturing power.

Under WTO rules, everything is subordinated to trade. Yet no trade policy – mercantilism, protectionism or free trade – is always right for all nations all the time. Before 1933, America was the most protectionist nation on earth, and it grew from 13 rural farm states into the greatest manufacturing power in history.

After 1933, free-traders captured both parties. Yet, their victory was not irreversible. We had not reached the end of history. And by 1993, populists had arisen to almost defeat a NAFTA trade deal endorsed by the nation's academic, corporate, media and political elites.

Fearing they were losing the country, free-traders pulled one of the most anti-democratic stunts in U.S. history. They wrote their free-trade ideology into international law, to impose it on the United States, forever, from without. Davos Republicans had colluded with San Francisco Democrats in economic treason. Both put free trade before country and sold out American sovereignty.

Under today's WTO rules, Reagan's patriotic interventions to save the U.S. steel, machine-tool, auto and semiconductor industries would be prohibited and punished, as would his rescue of Harley-Davidson.

The foreign sales corporations that so outraged the EU and its agent, the WTO, permit U.S. companies to set up offshore subsidiaries to avoid taxes on exports and help our manufacturers survive, a legitimate U.S. national interest. But under WTO rules, laws written to prosper America and Americans first are crimes against globalism.

That principled protectionist Teddy Roosevelt would have known how to respond to these arrogant Eurocrats. "If Europe wants a trade war, let it begin here!" he would have roared. But consider the reaction of the current crowd.

"I believe that today's findings will ultimately be rendered moot by U.S. compliance," said Trade Rep. Robert Zoellick, an echo of Treasury's Ken Dam, "I am confident that today's findings regarding damages will be rendered moot by our coming into compliance."

"This is a time for statesmanship, not retaliation," purrs the Clinton aide Stu Eizenstat. Ways and Means Chair Bill Thomas is already at work rewriting America's laws to conform to Europe's demands.

But Brother Thomas has a problem.

With Clinton gone, House Democrats see populist votes in the trade issue. And with America running a merchandise trade deficit near $500 billion, few are toasting NAFTA or the WTO. Indeed, Boeing, Microsoft, Caterpillar, Cisco Systems, Motorola and GE have all come to depend on these foreign sales corporations, and they want them left alone.

On the other side of the pond, however, the EU sees the $4 billion in punitive tariffs as a loaded shotgun to wave in our face to make us behave and stop protecting our farmers and steel industry. In a few days, the EU will publish a list of U.S. exports on which it reserves the right to impose tariffs at will, and with impunity. When that list is published, we shall find out what the Bushites are made of.

"For the WTO to start commenting on whether U.S. tax policy is acceptable is a huge expansion of its authority," wails Daniel Mitchell of the Heritage Foundation, "You have to ask, where does it stop?"

No, Dan, you should have asked that question, eight years ago, when the Heritage boys were bunking down with Bill and Al, working to bring us all under the rule of the WTO. Prediction: Conservatives who put free trade ideology ahead of U.S. sovereignty and the national interest will one day soon pay a blood tax at the ballot box.




Related offer:

Buchanan's latest book is here!
"The Death of the West" is an eye-opening exposé of how immigration invasions are endangering America. Both autographed and unautographed copies are now available at WorldNetDaily's online store!


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



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TOPICS: Business/Economy; Foreign Affairs; Government
KEYWORDS: buchanantradewto
I believe this was not posted yet.
1 posted on 09/09/2002 5:38:09 AM PDT by A Vast RightWing Conspirator
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: A Vast RightWing Conspirator
I guess no one cares to comment on this one. Saddam's Viagra habits are evidently more important than our half-trillion Dollars annual trade deficit.
2 posted on 09/09/2002 6:32:56 AM PDT by A Vast RightWing Conspirator
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To: A Vast RightWing Conspirator
Prediction: Conservatives who put free trade ideology ahead of U.S. sovereignty and the national interest will one day soon pay a blood tax at the ballot box.

I pray for this to happen everyday. It is in our national interest of sovereignty to close our borders before yours and my family pay a blood tax that will only be stopped by conventional war here in America. Illegal aliens and terrorists come across the borders everyday facing minimal resistance from our government.

The trade deficit will bring a recession that we don't need and surely can prevent if we stand up and determine to forbid the tact of increasing socialism to continue to weaken our citizens liberty. Small businesses are collapsing everyday unnoticed by Washington and long term unemployment has become a common situation in our cities. Under-employment is so common my friends wonder why they bothered to obtain doctorates when a BA or MA certainly would fulfill their need. The stock market has been in an almost constant decline for three years. The number of American farmers declaring bankruptcy has been increasing for the past decade. America's downhill slide is being ignored by our elected leaders and promoted by the United Nations.

3 posted on 09/09/2002 9:11:13 AM PDT by B4Ranch
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To: B4Ranch
"The trade deficit will bring a recession "

We are part way there. Anything we can make, we should not import. It is the best way to prosperity again.

4 posted on 09/09/2002 11:16:11 AM PDT by ex-snook
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To: A Vast RightWing Conspirator
I'm surprised some free traitor hasn't brought out some tired cliche from the neo-con playbook like protectionism is what gave us the Smoot-Hawley act and you know what came after that etc..etc..I'm still waiting for somebody to tell me what jobs are suppose to replace the manufacturing jobs that NAFTA and GATT so effortlessly eviscerated from our country. Wheres all the new high tech jobs we were promised?
5 posted on 09/09/2002 8:10:23 PM PDT by Stainsoul
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To: Stainsoul
They will not only never admit they were wrong, they will craft Clinton-like lie after lie to bolster their argument.

I long for the days of the old FR when people would argue an invalid point for months and then one day the light dawns and the magic words come, "I was wrong all along. Thanks for setting me straight!"

That doesn't happen around here anymore and it's a GD shame.

6 posted on 09/10/2002 1:10:25 PM PDT by HalfIrish
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To: ex-snook
We are part way there. Anything we can make, we should not import. It is the best way to prosperity again.

Like cars, stereos, firearms (don't let the glock guys here that), liquor?

I'm not bate you just not sure what you mean.

7 posted on 09/10/2002 1:20:06 PM PDT by gilor
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To: B4Ranch
America's downhill slide is being ignored by our elected leaders and promoted by the United Nations.

oh how right you are!!

8 posted on 09/10/2002 4:12:36 PM PDT by USA21
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To: gilor
It's the usual socialist drivel--protect our workers from outside competition, and we'll be prosperous.

Of course, the problem is that we can produce far more than we can consume, so we have to export the remainder or accept incredibly high unemployment (50%+)

9 posted on 09/10/2002 4:15:48 PM PDT by Poohbah
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To: A Vast RightWing Conspirator
Our country already buys so much crap from Taiwan, China, Japan, and Korea,

why should we be sanctioned by anyone, for not following their Global economic strategy.

Oh....I see..I guess its cause we aren't buying their crap.

10 posted on 09/10/2002 4:24:19 PM PDT by DainBramage
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