Showing posts with label National Sovereignty. Show all posts
Showing posts with label National Sovereignty. Show all posts

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Why Was Gaddafi Overthrown?




I will emphatically state that I was never a fan of Muammar Qaddafi or any authoritarian leader, but I was deeply troubled by the American led overthrow of his regime. It is obvious that the rebels were armed and government sites were bombed by NATO troops, not because of the violence it used in suppressing a revolt. By African and Middle-Eastern standards, the Qaddafi regime was not particularly brutal or corrupt and actually had some impressive accomplishments

From 1977 onward, per capita income in the country rose to more than US $11,000, the fifth-highest in Africa,[56] while the Human Development Index became the highest in Africa and greater than that of Saudi Arabia.[57] This was achieved without borrowing any foreign loans, keeping Libya debt-free.

The presence of oil, combined with his unwillingness to follow the lead of the United States and the European Powers is the most probable reason we engineered his removal. And in the end, what did we accomplish? There is nothing that indicates that the fragmented regime of the rebels is any more democratic and popular than Qaddafi's. So far they've harassed and even massacred black Libyans and by overturning the previous ban on polygamy, they've shown an inclination towards Islamic Law. And there is no reason to believe that their enthusiasm for the western powers  is anything more than a transitory phenomena. If the new regime doesn't deliver on its political and economic promises, soon we will get blamed for its failings. All this for the bargain of only $1 billion, paid for by you, the American Tax Payer!

Saturday, January 28, 2012

Debt And National Sovereignty

Interesting, but troubling article from the Washington Post. Germany is calling on Greece to temporarily cede its right to determine its tax and spend policies to a eurozone commissioner, before it can secure further bailouts. Let his be a lesson to the United States; spend beyond your means and sooner or later your national sovereignty will be compromised. 

German proposal seeks EU commissioner with sweeping powers to directly control Greece’s budget


(Associated Press) - Greek Prime Minister Lucas Papademos, left, and Greek Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos leave Maximos Mansion after a meeting Charles Dallara and Jean Lemiere from the Institute of International Finance in Athens on Saturday Jan. 28 2012. Talks between Greece and private creditors on halving the country’s privately held debt load have ended and a deal is very close, according to the creditors’ representatives.

BERLIN — Germany is proposing that debt-ridden Greece temporarily cede sovereignty over tax and spending decisions to a powerful eurozone budget commissioner before it can secure further bailouts, an official in Berlin said Saturday.
The idea was quickly rejected by the European Union’s executive body and the government in Athens, with the EU Commission in Brussels insisting that “executive tasks must remain the full responsibility of the Greek government, which is accountable before its citizens and its institutions.”


But the German official said the initiative is being discussed among the 17-nation currency bloc’s finance ministers because Greece has repeatedly failed to fulfill its commitments under its current €110 billion ($145 billion) lifeline.
The proposal foresees a commissioner holding a veto right against any budgetary measures and having broad surveillance ability to ensure that Greece will take proper steps to repay its debt as scheduled, the official said. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the talks are confidential.
Greece’s international creditors — the International Monetary Fund, the European Union and the European Central Bank — already have unprecedented powers over Greek spending after negotiating with Athens stringent austerity measures and economic reforms in return for the first bailout.
The so-called troika of creditors is currently negotiating another €130 billion rescue package for the heavily indebted country. German news magazine Der Spiegel on Saturday cited an unnamed troika official as saying Greece might actually need a €145 billion package because of its prolonged recession.
The German proposal, first reported by the Financial Times, is likely to spark controversy in Greece.
Despite the quick rejection from the EU Commission, Germany’s demand underlines the frustration of the eurozone with Greece’s slack implementation of the promised reforms, spending cuts and privatizations. During every verification mission last year, the troika found huge implementation shortfalls, which in turn increased gaps in Athens’ budget and intensified the need for a second bailout.
A powerful budget commissioner would further diminish the political leeway of Greece’s government, just as politicians there are gearing up for an election set to take place this spring.
A government official in Athens said a similar proposal had been floated last year but got nowhere. Greece would not accept such a measure, he added. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because no formal proposal has been made by the EU or Germany yet.
The unprecedented and sweeping powers for creditors would indeed deal a huge blow to Greece’s sovereignty, but they could help mobilize more support for the government in Athens from its European partners.
Several German lawmakers have repeatedly said that giving more money to Greece is unthinkable without stricter enforcement and control of the conditions attached to the rescue packages.
Greece is currently locked in a twin effort, seeking to secure a crucial debt relief deal with private investors while also tackling the pressing demands from its European partners and the IMF for more austerity measures and deeper reforms.
Failure on either front would force the country to default on its debt in less than two months, pouring new fuel on the fires of Europe’s debt crisis.
In that case, Greece would likely leave the eurozone, which would bring disaster to the country, destabilize the currency bloc, fuel panic on financial markets and ultimately threaten the fragile world economy.
Despite two weeks of intensive talks, a debt relief agreement with private investors worth some €100 billion has yet to be reached.
Greek Prime Minister Lucas Papademos and Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos met anew with representatives of international banks and other private institutions Saturday, with a final deal being very close, officials in Athens said.
A statement from the creditor representatives said the two sides are “close to the finalization” of the voluntary writedown that would roughly halve Greece’s privately held debt. “We expect to conclude next week as discussions on other issues move forward,” they said.
The statement also referred to a previous framework agreement which indicated that the creditors have accepted an interest rate below 4 percent for the new bonds to be issued in place of the old ones — a very favorable rate that will make it easier for the Greek government to service its debt.
With the current troika mission still ongoing and no final deal with the private sector creditors, Greece is unlikely to feature prominently at a summit of the EU’s 27 leaders Monday, according to officials in Brussels.
___
Demetris Nellas in Athens and Gabriele Steinhauser in Brussels contributed to this report.
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Sunday, September 18, 2011

Disregarding National Sovereignty

The governments of Mexico and 9 other nations are suing the State of Georgia in a federal court over its immigration law HB 87. Shame on President Obama and any other politician who has chosen to remain silent in this violation of our sovereignty.  The issue is not the wisdom of the law itself, which I have yet to determine, but the right of the American People to resolve these questions without foreign interference. Even American organizations that are partaking in the lawsuit, such as the ACLU and the Southern Poverty Law Center, should unequivocally state that although they oppose this law, it is a question that should be resolved via the electoral and court system. And having read the Mexican Constitution, I would encourage our government to enact the principles of Article 33, which states that "Foreigners may not in any way participate in the political affairs of the country." In other words, while non-citizens are entitled to civil rights and due process, it is not their place to protest or seek to change the laws of the land. But, perhaps this is the inevitable result of the American Government's continuous interference in the internal affairs of other nations, such as Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya and much of Latin America. Disregard the sovereignty of others for long enough and you shall soon disregard your own. The writer Steve Sailer best described the ideology that has dominated the American Government for decades as "Invade the World, Invite The World."

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Ottoman Public Debt Administration



If you want to better understand the ruinous effect that debt has on a nation, I reccomend that you read up on the history of the Ottoman Empire. Through out of control spending driven by warfare, public works and corruption and by the 1870's, the empire was plunged deep into debt. In 1875 it was unable to continue payments to its foreign debtors and in 1881, after years of contentious negotiations, the Ottoman Public Debt Administration (OPDA) was established. The OPDA was controlled by the European creditors and bond holders. They exercised enormous power over the empire, by directly collecting taxes from the most lucrative sectors of the Ottoman Economy, such as the tobbaco, timber, silk & alcohol industries. The increasingly heavy tax burden places on peasants and religious minorities, that contributed to serious unrest, was at least partially driven by financial obligations to foreign creditors. Most painful to the Ottomans was the erosion of sovereignty brought on by the OPDA; they rewrote laws to the benefits of western powers and granted considerable extraterritorial rights to westerners and wealthy Ottoman minorities. Thankfully the United States is nowhere near this point, but it would be wise for more Americans to aquaint themselves with the experiences of other nations ruined by foreign debt. With a better understanding of this history, more Americans would be willing to part with unsustainable warfare, welfare and tax rates, in order to get our fiscal house in order. Our choice is to suffer austerity now, or future prospects of reduced sovereignty under the auspices of an American Public Debt Administration headed by China, Japan and our many other foreign creditors.

Borrowing in the Ottoman Empire by the government and within the private sector.

Throughout most of its history, from 1300 to 1922, the government of the Ottoman Empire relied on short-term loans from individual lenders as well as currency debasement and short-term notes to resolve fiscal shortfalls. On occasion, the Ottoman government just confiscated the monies needed, either from the lenders or from state officials. In the private sector, individuals, who only sometimes were professional moneylenders, lent their surplus to others. Both public and private borrowers commonly paid interest for the privilege. Both public and private borrowing persisted until the end of the empire - although confiscation became rare after about 1825. Very important changes occurred in the forms of borrowing, within and outside the government, beginning about 1850, when foreign capital became available and assumed an unprecedented role.

In many ways, the international borrowing experiences of the Ottoman Empire during the nineteenth century anticipated those of today's third-world nations. The Ottoman economy was competing in a world dominated by the industrialized nations of the West, which possessed superior military technologies and political and economic power. Ottoman survival strategy required large, modern military forces and state structures. As both were exceedingly expensive, government expenditures mounted accordingly. Unlike the economies of many of the countries with which it was competing - notably Britain and France - the Ottoman economy remained essentially agrarian and incapable of generating the funds needed for increasingly complex and costly military and civilian structures. Thus, the government borrowed to modernize and survive.

Acutely aware of the dangers, Ottoman statesmen resisted international borrowing until the crisis provoked by Ottoman participation in the Crimean War, 1854 - 1856. International loans then quickly succeeded one another, on decreasingly favorable terms. These loans were private, the creditors being European bankers and financiers who were usually given diplomatic assistance by their own governments. By the early 1870s, Ottoman state borrowing too easily substituted for financial planning; between 1869 and 1875, the government borrowed more than its tax collectors took in. The Ottoman state suspended payments on its accumulated debt in 1875, after crop failures cut revenues between 1873 and 1875 and the global depression of 1873 dried up capital imports.

Perhaps fearing occupation by the European governments of its creditors, the Ottoman government eventually honored its obligations. Prolonged negotiations resulted in a reduction and consolidation of the total Ottoman debt and the formation, in 1881, of the Ottoman Public Debt Administration; this body took control of portions of the economy. The Ottoman Public Debt Administration supervised the collections of various tax revenues, turning the proceeds over to the European creditors - an international consortium representing bond-holders of Ottoman obligations. Residents of France, Great Britain, and Germany held most of the bonds. The ceded revenues came from the richest and most lucrative in the empire - taxes imposed on tobacco, salt, silk, timber, alcohol, and postage stamps.

Although nominally a branch of the Ottoman government, the Debt Administration actually was independent and answerable only to the bondholders. Many scholars consider its founding as the beginning of Ottoman semicolonial status - when the state lost control over parts of its economy. Still worse, perhaps, the state's legitimacy and relevancy also declined in the eyes of subjects who had to pay their taxes to a foreign group rather than their own state. The Debt Administration represented a true loss of Ottoman sovereignty, but, as the government may have hoped, the consortium reassured foreign investors, who provided still more loans to the state, which needed still more cash to finance modernization.

Foreign capital invested in the Ottoman private sector became significant only after 1890. A part of the more general diffusion of European capital into the global economy, these investments also derived from the comforting presence of the Debt Administration, which was involved in many of them. Industrial or agricultural investment was nearly completely absent. Railroads, port facilities, and municipal services absorbed most of these monies, more firmly linking the Ottoman and international economies by facilitating the outward flow of raw materials and the import of finished goods. French financiers were the most important single source of funds, while the British and Germans also were significant providers. Almost all these new loans were administered by the Debt Administration.

By 1914, Ottoman public and private debts to foreign financiers consumed, in roughly equal shares, more than 30 percent of total tax revenues. In one way or another, the Debt Administration administered virtually the entire amount. This pattern of indebtedness makes clear the ongoing subordination of the late Ottoman economy to the European until the demise of the empire after World War I.

Bibliography

Blaisdell, Donald. European Financial Control in the OttomanEmpire. New York: Columbia University Press, 1929.

Issawi, Charles. An Economic History of the Middle East and NorthAfrica. New York: Columbia University Press, 1982.

Read more: http://www.answers.com/topic/ottoman-empire-debt#ixzz1EquBkRKl

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ottoman_Public_Debt_Administration

http://www.worldlingo.com/ma/enwiki/en/Ottoman_Public_Debt_Administration

http://www.answers.com/topic/ottoman-empire-debt

Saturday, February 5, 2011

Dear President Calderon


Dear President Calderon,

While I am very fond of the majority of Mexicans, you and much of your political elite are raving hypocrites. You spend much time and energy criticizing the efforts of some American states to control undocumented immigration, while countless Central American migrants are being kidnapping, robbed and raped in your country. And you have the gal to criticize our laws, while yours are far more "anti-immigrant" and "nativist." And we are aware that you preside over a nation that is rich in natural resources, but large segments of your political elite has chosen to outsource the responsibility of providing employment, education and health care to its poorest citizens. While I personally welcome the rational, controlled immigration of hard working Mexicans, we ask that you keep your opinions to yourself when you are visiting the United States. Don't worry, I will also ask that our elected officials stay out of the internal affairs of other nations, at least until we have our own house in order.

Sincerely,

The Informed Citizens of America

Mexico investigating kidnapping of 50 Central American migrants

Mexico's announcement comes a day after it declared that no such incident occurred. Migrants arrested during a roundup allege that gunmen seized the group on Dec. 16 in Chiapas.

By Ken Ellingwood, Los Angeles Times

December 23, 2010

Mexican officials said Wednesday that they are investigating the reported mass kidnapping of 50 Central American migrants, a day after declaring that no such incident took place.

The turnabout could head off possible diplomatic frictions. The National Institute of Migration said Commissioner Salvador Beltran del Rio was in touch with representatives of El Salvador and Honduras, which have drawn attention to the alleged Dec. 16 kidnapping in the southern state of Oaxaca.

Mexico's human rights commission opened its own investigation, saying it had heard from 18 migrants who said they witnessed the abductions.

Kidnappers have long preyed upon migrants traversing Mexico on their way to the United States, prompting charges that Mexico doesn't provide adequate security. The issue has grown more politically sensitive since the August massacre of 72 Central and South American migrants in northern Mexico.

Mexican officials vowed to redouble efforts against armed groups that kidnap migrants to extort money or recruit them for drug-trafficking activities.

Authorities regularly find large groups of migrants in safe houses along smuggling corridors, mainly in southern Mexico. Last month, officials announced the rescue of more than 100 people, mostly from Central America, who were being held in the southern state of Chiapas.

In the Oaxaca case, Central American migrants arrested during a roundup by Mexican authorities reported that 50 others had been seized by gunmen who stopped the train on which they were riding. Central American migrants often make their way north atop freight trains.

A Honduran migrant told radio host Carmen Aristegui that he and others fled after gunmen halted the train. "We heard the shots and had to run," he said.

El Salvador's government said it believes the migrants' account. But Mexican immigration officials said Tuesday afternoon that "no evidence exists of the train having been blocked or held up by any group."

But by Wednesday, the immigration agency said it was interviewing migrants from El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala. Beltran said Mexican officials switched course after a Oaxaca priest, Alejandro Solalinde, contacted them with 19 witnesses willing to testify.

In San Salvador, Juan Jose Garcia, El Salvador's vice minister for citizens abroad, applauded the shift. "There is no question that we, the government of El Salvador, are onto the truth of the facts," he said in a brief interview.

Fallout from last summer's migrant massacre prompted the resignation of the Mexican immigration agency's commissioner, Cecilia Romero.

A survivor said the migrants were seized by gunmen from the Zetas drug gang. Mexican officials said the migrants were killed for refusing to join the group, but some of the victims' relatives said they had received phone calls demanding money.

ken.ellingwood@latimes.com

Special correspondent Alex Renderos in San Salvador contributed to this report.

Copyright © 2011, Los Angeles Times

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-mexico-migrants-20101223,0,6750353.story

Thursday, December 16, 2010

Selective Sovereignty?



During a visit to Kosovo, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton publicly stated:

"[The] status, sovereignty and territorial integrity of Kosovo are not up for discussion,"

She was referring to the compact Serb majority enclaves in northern Kosovo that wish to cede.

The absurdity of this statement should be apparent to all - the territory of Kosovo was allowed to cede from Serbia because of the sovereign will of its Albanian majority, yet the Serbian majority in northern Kosovo is not entitled to this same right?

http://www.aolnews.com/2010/10/13/beleaguered-kosovo-cheers-clinton/

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kosovo

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kosovo_Serb_enclaves

Saturday, June 12, 2010

The Jimmy Carter Prize for the Advacement of Douchebagery



Up until now the Jimmy Carter Prize for the Advancement of Douchebagery has been solely awarded to individuals. But, recent events compel the Chicago Freedom Forum to convey this award to a group: President Obama and the American politicians who applauded the President of Mexico's address to the congress. During this address Mr. Calderon openly attacked SB1070, Arizona's new immigration law. Although I ultimately do not support this law, the principles of national sovereignty and self respect makes his address totally inappropriate. Before the speech President Obama should have privately stated to Mr. Calderon:

"The domestic policies of the United States must be debated and decided upon by officials who were elected by the American people, not by foreign leaders...furthermore, as flawed as Arizona's policies may be, it's hypocritical of you to criticize them, because Mexico's own immigration policies are much harsher..."

Another affront to American sovereignty occurred when Carlos Navarrete Ruiz, the President of the Mexican Senate who accompanied President Calderon publicly called on the Hispanic community of the United States to secure an electoral triumph for the Democratic Party in the coming elections.

The Chicago Freedom Forum has not awarded President Calderon the Jimmy Carter Prize, because he simply responded to the political and cultural signals that our "leadership" sent him. If they had conveyed their commitment to sovereignty and self respect, Mr. Calderon would not have made such a speech. And I neither bear Mr. Calderon nor his cohorts a grudge, because they are doing what their people elected them to do: represent their national interests. I wish I could say the same for President Obama and our elected officials.


http://www.spokesman.com/stories/2010/may/20/obama-calderon-decry-arizona-immigration-law/

http://www.eluniversal.com.mx/notas/681952.html

http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-503544_162-20005551-503544.html

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Jorge G. Castañeda: a Window Into Mexico (part III)


Not even Mr. Castañeda can stand the
stench of his own hypocrisy.

As documented in Part I & II of this essay, Jorge G. Castañeda and key members of the Mexican government have harshly criticized the United States for its immigration policies and aggressively lobbied for amnesty and liberalization. Two important questions that few people have posed during the immigration debate are: what are Mexico's own immigration policies and how does Mexico treat its own large immigration population? After reading the constitution and the General Law of Population of Mexico, I concluded that in contrast to our own immigration policies, Mexico's policies are rational and firmly based on the principles of sovereignty and the promotion of national interests. In the following paragraphs I will highlight the dramatic contrast that seen between American and Mexican immigration law, which reveal the sheer hypocrisy of the demands that the Mexican government has placed on the United States.

In sharp contrast to the United States, Mexican law and political sentiments clearly prohibits non-citizens from discussing, let alone protesting Mexican law while on Mexican soil. Specifically, Article 33 of the constitution state"Foreigners may not in any way participate in the political affairs of the country." In other words, if thousands of documented, let alone undocumented immigrants were to participate in protests, they would be promptly deported. And of course, Mexico would not tolerate American officials interfering in the application of Mexican laws.

The implications of Mr. Castañeda's demands are that interests and opinions of immigrants and foreign nations should be factored into American policies. So, it comes as a surprise that the Mexican constitution unequivocally presents immigration as a phenomena that must be carefully planned and tightly controlled for the benefit of the nation.

Article 32 of the General Law of Population states that the government must conduct demographic studies to determine the volume and composition of immigration that is most beneficial for the economic and social welfare of the Mexico.

Article 34 emphasizes that the government must factor in the professional background and intended place of residence to ensure that immigrants are economically useful for the nation and will not be an economic burden on the state. It also explicitly states that immigrants must have sufficient economic resources to ensure their own economic sustenance and that of the people that of their dependents; in other words, no welfare and social services for non-Mexican citizens.
And most interestingly, Article 37 states that foreigners may be barred from entering the country if their presence upsets the "the equilibrium of the national demographics" and are deemed detrimental to "economic or national interests," "when they have broken Mexican laws" and when "they are found to not be physically or mentally healthy."

These articles make it quite hypocritical for Mexican officials to so shrilly protest when Americans push for restrictive immigration policies that they believe represent their economic interests, such as Proposition 187 that barred undocumented immigrants from receiving welfare benefits in the state of California. And also it casts a bad light on political commentators like Jorge Ramos who has labelled all Americans who express concerns about massive demographic changes as being "racist and anti-immigrant." Clearly Mexico believes it demographic reality is something that must be controlled by and serve the interest of the nation, yet it demands that the United States accept changes that do not reflect the laws or desires of the nation.

Mr. Castañeda and like minded individuals have harshly criticized the United State's treatment of undocumented immigrants. So, perhaps they have not read Article 123 that states that illegally entering Mexico is a criminal offense that can be punished by up to two years in jail and a $5,000 peso fine and Article 33 of the constitution that grants the government the power to expel any foreigner without due process of the law.

Article 118 mandates a prison term of up to 10 years and a fine of up to $5,000 pesos for all individuals who have been expelled who attempt to re-enter the country without legal permission.

Article 116 clearly states that those who are caught using false documents run the risk of being fined and imprisoned.

Article 119 & 120 states that those who violate the terms of their visa (such as working without a permit) can be fined and imprisoned for up to 6 years.

Immigration activists have protested and initiated law suits against localities that seek to enforce immigration law, so it comes as a surprise that the Article 73 explicitly states that local and municipal police must fully cooperate with federal immigration authorities.

In regards to equal employment opportunities, the Mexican Constitution bars immigrants from many professions, even if they have obtained citizenship, such as: serving as military officers, airline crews and federal lawmakers, cabinet secretaries,and even clergy members (Article 130).
So, how does Mexico fair in its actual treatment of immigrants? Jose Luis Soberanes, the President of the Mexico’s Center for the National Commission of Human Rights (CNDH) aptly sums it up in the following sentence:

"We demand that they (Americans) treat us (Mexicans) well, and we are incapable of treating Central Americans well."

According to Mr. Soberanes, numerous complaints have been filed against military personnel and Mexican Immigration Authorities (INM) for stealing money, physically and sexually abusing Guatemalans, Hondurans and Salvadorans.

So, the question remains - how should we respond to the sheer hypocrisy of Mexican officials who demand that the United States pursue policies that are in sharp contrast to their own? A good starting point would be for the Congress to re-boot the entire immigration debate by adopting each and every one of Mexico's strict immigration laws. This would hold up a mirror to Mexico and completely disarm their criticism of the American immigration policy. The starting point of any debate with Mexico and the American left would be based on the following givens:

Until Mexico liberalizes its own laws and improves the treatment of its large population of undocumented immigrants, there shall be no discussions.

The United States, like Mexico has the right to determine and enforce its laws for the benefit of its own people. No country is obligated to provide jobs, health care or education to non-citizens.

The limited cases of enforcement do not make the United States "anti-immigrant," rather the millions of cases in which the United States does not enforce its laws and provides unparalleled opportunities to immigrants is a testament to the generosity and pro-immigrant spirit of America.

I close this discussion with the following thoughts: my ire does not lie with the Mexican government and especially not with the Mexican people, who like all healthy beings, unabashedly pursue their self interest and sovereignty, in contrast to large segments of the American elite who are indifferent or even hostile to the will and welfare of the American people. So, if anything, we have a lot to learn from Mexico.

http://www.citizensforaconstitutionalrepublic.com/1917_Constitution_of_Mexico.html#TitleIChapterIII
http://www.migracioninternacional.com/docum/indice.html?mundo=leypob.html

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1608703/posts

http://www.cbn.com/cbnnews/world/060815a.aspx

http://vivirlatino.com/2007/07/23/rights-group-demands-mexico-look-into-abuse-against-central-american-immigrants.php

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Jorge G Castañeda: A Window Into Mexico (part II)



After reading Jorge G. Castañeda's article in the Atlantic Monthly, I did a little research on him and learned of his long and questionable involvement in internal American politics. This highlights a truly revolutionary role reversal between the United States and Mexico: historically the United States has shamelessly interfered in Mexico's internal affairs, but in recent years Mexican politicians have shown a disregard for American sovereignty by interfering in internal American affairs. Mr. Castañeda presided over this shift when he demanded that the United States undertake "integral immigration reform" or what he colorfully labeled as the "whole enchillada or nothing," which includes a complete amnesty, a massive guest worker program (in spite of our high unemployment), a removal of the quota on Mexican immigration and the suppression of ranchers that guard their property. He went on to declare that undocumented immigrants should "organize themselves in order to defend themselves against the federal, state and local authorities that are against them..." Before we continue, I must clarify two essential points:

One - although I see the necessity of achieving a humane, rational and comprehensive immigration reform, it constitutes an internal affair of the United States that must be decided by the American people, not by foreign officials nor even by the immigrants themselves.

Two - I am not criticizing Mexico; if anything I admire the national zeal that these Mexican officials are demonstrating in promoting their economic and social interests. Rather my disgust and criticism is directed towards the large segments of America's political, economic and academic elite, whom in contrast to the bulk of the American people, totally lack a sense of national sovereignty and pride.

In 1995 President Zedillo actively campaigned, within the United States, against proposition 187, a referendum that would have cut off welfare benefits to California's undocumented immigrants. While there was much to criticize about this proposition, it was completely unacceptable to allow a foreign leader to involve himself in the internal political affairs of the voters of California. This is particularly noteworthy, because in Mexico is is a criminal offense for non-citizens to even discuss Mexico's internal politics. And most definitely the Mexican government does not permit documented or undocumented immigrants to participate in politics and marches.

In 2002 & 2003 Castañeda spoke in front of a LULAC convention, which is an organization of Latin Americans within the United States. During his speech he harshly criticized America's immigration policies and urged convention goes to lobby US legislators to push for an immigration accord. Mexican nationalists would rightfully howl with indignation if an American politician, standing on Mexican soil gave political instructions to Mexican voters.

While speaking in Los Angeles, Castañeda on Monday stated "We won't rest until we achieve the regularization of our countrymen" and "The Mexican agenda will focus its strategy to reach these goals through reinforced dialogue with the U.S. Congress and its leaders, governors, media and business community." Regardless of the merits of amnesty, it is beyond the pale of reason to allow a foreign government to aggressively seek to influence internal American affairs against the will of the majority of the American electorate.

Former President Fox reiterated this when he stated: "In the last few months we have managed to achieve an improvement in the situation of many Mexicans in that country, regardless of their migratory status, through schemes that have permitted them access to health and education systems, identity documents, as well as the full respect for their labor and human rights." Although I strongly affirm the importance of human treatment of all immigrants regardless of their status, it is the sole right of the American people and not foreign leaders to determine our health and welfare policies. I am equally critical of the the American government when it seeks to interfere with the policies of other governments, even if I find them distasteful.

Beyond individual politicians, Mexican consulates have been at the forward of interfering in America's internal affairs. In California members of the state legislature and the consulate
discussed issues of granting driver's licenses and in-state-tuition to undocumented immigrants. The consulate's defense of the interests of Mexican citizens is perfectly understandable, but having elected American politicians collaborate with foreign officials is troubling. One of the California legislative bests sums up this relationship when he stated "We want to discuss all the themes that affect the Mexicans living here and at the same time recognize the point of view that Mexico has." The only point of view that elected American officials should consider is that of the American citizens that elected them. In addition, Teodoro Maus, the consul general in Atlanta (from 1989 - 2001) vociferously opposed the declaration of English as the official language of Georgia and demanded an apology from a local radio talk show host who suggested that machine gun posts be placed at the border. While I am undecided on the merit of the 1st proposition and disgusted by the talk show host, the head of the Mexican consulate greatly overstepped his boundaries.

We end this post with the troubling questions: what does is say about the spirit and vision of our political, economic and academic elite when so many of their members allow or even abet foreign officials in the violation of our sovereignty and national interests? Forging a path towards humane and sustainable immigration policy is essential for the economic and social welfare of the United States, but it is a path that must be solely determined by the people of the United States. On a deeper level, the political interference that I have amply documented shows that the rapid economic and demographic convergence of Mexico and the United States is being accompanied by a gradual political convergence. Ironically, the Mexican nationalists that aggressively interfere in America's domestic affairs are setting the stage for political convergence that will most erode their own cherished sovereignty.
For all their differences, Mexican and American elites share one thing in common: an utter disdain for the will and welfare of their own people.

http://www.thesocialcontract.com/artman2/publish/tsc1302/article_1123.shtml

http://archive.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2002/2/14/223039.shtml

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Darth Bader Ginsburg...


Darth Bader Ginsburg, a black robed sith of the Supreme Court and a "post-American progressive" who does not believe in national sovereignty and American Exceptionalism.

Supreme Inconsistency on Foreign Law

by Hans Bader

April 13, 2009 @ 8:20 pm

Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg says that American courts should look more to foreign court rulings in interpreting our Constitution. But she herself does so only when it is ideologically convenient. For example, Justice Ginsburg cites foreign court rulings to advocate cutting back on the use of the death penalty. Some liberal lawyers go further, claiming that since most European countries don’t have capital punishment, the death penalty must be against “customary international law” and the weight of world opinion (even though ordinary citizens in many European countries, like the United Kingdom, typically support the death penalty).

But Justice Ginsburg, and American lawyers, tend to ignore foreign law and world opinion when it calls into question liberal policies in the United States. One classic example is the horror that most countries’ courts have for the American practice of letting virtually unguided juries award punitive damages. In most of the world, punitive damages are forbidden.

Justice Ginsburg is the biggest advocate of punitive damages on the U.S. Supreme Court. She opposes any limits on punitive damages under the Due Process and Excessive Fines clauses of the Constitution, and interprets federal laws as authorizing punitive damages even when they are silent on the issue.

Another example is abortion; while most European countries recognize the right to an abortion, they recognize that that right, like all rights, has limits, and typically require that abortions be performed prior to the end of the first trimester (unlike in the United States, where third-trimester partial-birth abortion was long de facto legal, and remains difficult to regulate as a result of court rulings).

Justice Ginsburg, by contrast, dissented against the Supreme Court ruling upholding limits on partial-birth abortion.

Foreign constitutions are often very different from ours, but that doesn’t stop Ginsburg from citing court rulings interpreting those constitutions as if they were relevant to ours. Yet she ignores relevant foreign court rulings involving provisions that are identical to American laws when it is convenient to do so.

For example, both the U.S. and foreign countries signed the Warsaw Convention, and helped craft it, so U.S. courts should look to foreign court rulings for any insights they may have about what its vague provisions mean and what its drafters intended. But in Olympic Airways v. Husain (2004), Justice Ginsburg did just the opposite, joining a Supreme Court decision that, as Justice Scalia noted in dissent, rejected the rulings of every foreign court that has considered the meaning of the Warsaw Convention. (The ruling that Ginsburg joined, not surprisingly, was “liberal” in that it allowed for more liability than foreign courts would have permitted). That ignored the longstanding principle that in interpreting a treaty, courts of one country are supposed to “accord the judgments of our sister signatories considerable weight.”

American lawyers also ignore foreign law when it comes to privacy. Many foreigners are puzzled by the multibillion dollar lawsuits brought by lawyers against phone companies for cooperating with government antiterror surveillance programs after 9-11. Other countries like Sweden permit their governments to engage in much broader surveillance than the FISA bill would permit the U.S. government to do. The belief by many liberal commentators that the government should have to obtain a warrant before monitoring communications with foreign terrorists strikes many foreigners as peculiar. So, too, does the claim that the phone companies should be subject to punitive damages, even if the government itself doesn’t have to pay a dime.
There are risks to looking to “international law” in interpreting our Constitution. So-called “international law” has been a major obstacle to combatting piracy in the crucial shipping lanes off the coast of Somalia, leading to killings, kidnappings, and billions of dollars in losses.

“International law” is also vague and manipulable. International tribunals and “human rights” bodies issue rulings that purport to have the force of law. But much of their reasoning is based not on written laws found in any law book, or agreed to by any legislature or citizenry. Instead, it is based on vaguely-defined “customary international law,” principles of so-called “natural law” derived from a supposedly “clear consensus” by enlightened people across the globe. But that “consensus” is often illusory, since it can easily be fabricated, manipulated, or distorted by international lawyers.

Lawyers are, on average, further to the left politically than the average citizen. And so-called international lawyers are even more so. Just as the grass always seems greener on the other side of the fence, lawyers often claim that the law is more liberal elsewhere in the world than in their own benighted country, and that such liberal norms — at odds with their own country’s law — constitute customary international law. Thus, it is commonly argued that customary international law bans the death penalty for mass murderers, and requires countries to ban disfavored forms of speech (such as “hate speech,” or criticism of any religion), although in reality, the strongest support for bans on such speech actually comes from undemocratic regimes like Cuba and China.

It is hard to fight these claims even when they are false, because ordinary people (and even most lawyers) don’t know much about foreign law. The lawyers who fashion “customary international law” are thus largely unaccountable. Perhaps as a result, customary international law is generally of poorer quality than domestic law. Scholars have cited this fact in celebrating the Supreme Court’s recent decision in Medellin v. Texas (2008), which refused to make Texas hear yet another challenge to a murderer’s conviction (which had already twice been upheld by different court systems) when ordered to do so by the International Court of Justice (a ruling at odds with the fact that virtually all ICJ member countries permit only one appeal of a conviction, not successive appeals).

Misleading the public about foreign law is common among “human rights” officials. For example, an official in Australia’s new Labour government claims that people accused of race discrimination should have to prove themselves innocent, rather than being proved guilty. To justify this outrage, he and Australia’s “human rights” commission claim that is the practice in America, when in fact it is quite the contrary.

American law puts the burden of proof on the complainant and the government, not the alleged offender, in discrimination cases. The U.S. Supreme Court explicitly so ruled in Texas v. Burdine (1981) and St. Mary’s Honor Center v. Hicks (1993). But Australia’s Race Discrimination Commissioner, Tom Calma, and the Australian Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission falsely claim that under American law, “the onus of proof” is on “the person who has been accused of discrimination.” (See “Call to Switch Onus on Racist Offenses,” The Age, News, April 5, 2008).

Joseph H.H. Weiler, a law professor who co-drafted the European Parliament’s Declaration of Human Rights and Freedoms, made American legal thinking seem more liberal than it is, by inviting to Europe to represent it two of America’s most radical law professors: the University of Michigan’s Catharine MacKinnon, who considers most heterosexual sex to be rape; and Harvard Law School’s Duncan Kennedy, who advocated having law school professors periodically exchange their positions with college janitorial staff in order to promote diversity and social equality.

By contrast, when laws across the world are more conservative than a law professor’s own, they are studiously ignored in formulating “human rights” law (like the world-wide aversion of most countries’ legal systems toward civil punitive damages and late-term abortions, which U.S. law often permits).

The very international “human rights” lawyers who insist that “hate speech” should be curbed are often radicals who are blind to certain forms of prejudice. A classic example of this is the disturbing Richard Falk, recently appointed by the U.N. Human Rights Council to investigate Israel. Falk, a liberal Princeton professor emeritus, has likened Israel to the Nazis, praised the Ayatollah Khomeini (the Iranian dictator whose regime ordered the killings and torture of many religious and ethnic minorities in Iran), and promoted 9/11 conspiracy theories that accuse the U.S. government of complicity in the 9/11 attacks. Falk’s wackiness may offend the general public and Israel, which plans to bar him from coming to Israel, but it apparently does not offend lawyers and state judges very much: it did not stop the Washington State Supreme Court from citing his advocacy of affirmative action to uphold a discriminatory, gender-based affirmative-action set-aside in public contracting, in Southwest Wash. Chapter v. Pierce County, 667 P.2d 1092 (1983).

http://www.openmarket.org/2009/04/13/supreme-hypocrisy-on-citing-foreign-law/