Posted on January 18, 2015 Written by mesquitelocalnews.com
Empires have been built throughout history and most eventually
fell when the empire got too large or too tyrannical. There has always been,
and probably always will be, a tension between consolidating power at
the top or decentralizing power to the people. Our Founding Fathers gave
us a highly decentralized Republic with most power vested in the states and
with the people. Over time our federal government has shifted this ever so
slowly to centralized power at the top. The Founding Fathers wrote language
into the Constitution to guard against this loss of sovereignty of the
states.
Most Americans hope to pass on to their children and
grandchildren a nation of laws with defined, secured borders and a common
language. Some in our country and in our government are making decisions
concerning our future and have a far different America in mind.
Steps taken during the last three administrations,
largely without approval of the American people, have eroded our economic
sovereignty. Americans need to ask ourselves: “Do we want a sovereign
nation of self– governed people with secure borders and the rule of law or
do we want to join a “New World Order” and subjugate ourselves to international
organizations that are beyond our laws and the voters?”
The term globalization is how we discuss this conflict
of visions and is used in two ways: as globalization with a small “g” and
Globalization with a capital “G”. The former is a fact; the latter is a
political ideology.
Small “g” globalization is the reality that technology,
organizational advancements, and global politico-economic stability are
increasing the level of interaction among nations, and as a result, formerly
isolated people are rapidly learning what works best, abandoning ways that
inhibit human development, and adopting ways of freedom and progress.
Small “g” globalism is a good thing, lifting many out of
poverty and oppression. The challenge of globalization is global governance.
How do we manage commerce and protect human rights and the environment in
our highly integrated and rapidly developing world without jeopardizing
the political sovereignty of nations and the personal liberty of
individuals?
Leaders committed to capital “G” Globalism believe
that the sovereignty of nations is a bad thing. Their goal is to dissolve
all national boundaries, blend all cultures, and merge all nations into one
big political/economic system.
Making a claim like this used to be considered “conspiracy
theory.” Now it’s discussed openly. One of the reasons those in the growing
U.S. trade policy reform movement call for a moratorium on trade agreements
is that these agreements go far beyond addressing the challenge of small “g”
globalism. They move us toward capital “G” Globalism. They unnecessarily
include stipulations that subordinate the U.S. to global governance
organizations that virtually nullify the political authority of our
local, state, and national governments to make and enforce our own policies
relative to trade, environmental protection, and more.
Global commerce and governance can be better accomplished
without overstepping the U.S. Constitution, pulling America into “entangling
alliances”, and surrendering America’s sovereignty. If America’s leaders
desire to embrace capital “G” Globalism, they should lay these issues honestly
before the American public for open dialogue and debate, rather than subtly
and incrementally merging the U.S. into a globalist commune without the
thoroughly informed consent of the American people.
As informed citizens it is our duty to ask our elected representatives
which side they are on: An America as a sovereign nation acting as a good
world citizen exercising good faith with our neighbors and promoting
peace and prosperity for all nations. Or, do they subscribe to the theory
that our nation should no longer serve the people of America, as our constitution
states, but rather subjugate our nation to world organizations? If Americans
were allowed to vote for a platform based on the above, they would pick saving
our nation’s sovereignty almost unanimously.
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http://agenda21news.com/2015/01/global-governance-vs-american-sovereignty/#more-4450
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