The U.N.’s Policeman & Pax Americana

Flanders

Verified User
Melanie Phillips, a British journalist, is a polite lady. She explained President Trump's laissez-faire foreign policy in polite terms.

"But for the West in general, Trump’s decision has significance far beyond Syria or Iran. It signals the end of America’s role as world policeman — the end of what might be called the Pax Americana dependency culture," she wrote.


No more sponging off America
Don Surber
Friday, December 28, 2018

https://donsurber.blogspot.com/2018/12/no-more-sponging-off-america.html

The non sequitur Pax Americana contradicts globalism and national sovereignty. You cannot have it both ways.

QUESTION: How come television honors the promise print press gave to bankers in the early 1950s?

"We are grateful to the Washington Post, the New York Times, Time Magazine and other great publications whose directors have attended our meetings and respected their promises of discretion for almost forty years.”

“It would have been impossible for us to develop our plan for the world if we had been subjected to the lights of publicity during those years. But, the world is more sophisticated and prepared to march towards a world government. The supernational sovereignty of an intellectual elite and world bankers is surely preferable to the national autodetermination practiced in past centuries." David Rockefeller, Bilderberg meeting 1991

http://vigilantcitizen.com/latestne...berg-mystery-why-do-people-believe-in-cabals/

David Rockefeller (1915 – 2017) and his bankers wrapped themselves in the flag with Pax Americana so they could transform the U.S. military into the world’s policeman. The record shows that their Pax Americana brought the world closer to world war and violent revolutions.

Speaking for myself, I am one archconservative who does not give a flying F--- about the rest of the planet. Let the rest of the world go straight to hell as far as I am concerned. This is my Pax Americana:

Commerce with all nations, alliance with none, should be our motto. Thomas Jefferson

If “. . . alliance with none . . . “ means anything it means self-defense against any aggressor nation above all else as T.J. proved when he sent U.S. Marines to Tripoli in the first wars against Muslim terrorists:


The cause of the U.S. participation was pirates from the Barbary States seizing American merchant ships and holding the crews for ransom, demanding the U.S. pay tribute to the Barbary rulers. United States President Thomas Jefferson refused to pay this tribute. Sweden had been at war with the Tripolitans since 1800.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Barbary_War

NOTE: Technology and modern weapons of war require preemptive strikes against clear and imminent military threats. The alternative to preemptive is retaliation after an attack. If retaliation becomes necessary it must be a total war in order to prevent a defeated enemy from wrapping themselves in a peace treaty where they can regroup and rearm for another try. In short: Touchy-feely freaks should have no say before, or after, this country’s wars of self-defense.

I am for free commerce with all nations, political connection with none, and little or no diplomatic establishment. And I am not for linking ourselves by new treaties with the quarrels of Europe, entering that field of slaughter to preserve their balance, or joining in the confederacy of Kings to war against the principles of liberty. Thomas Jefferson to Elbridge Gerry, 1799. ME 10:77

The minute you move away from T. J.’s caution you open the door to every priest and wannabe priest. Every freak that ever lived wanted to save the world. In truth, they save everything except individual life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
GCSE-History-Revsion-Wilson-and-League-of-Nations-Dove1.png



Finally, President Trump ending this country’s role as the world’s (the U.N.’s) policeman uproots Pax American. If you read this article you will see that Woodrow Wilson was the first touchy-feely freak to get his bloody hands on war:


"There has been no greater advance than this, gentlemen," the President of the United States said. "It is a definite guaranty of peace. It is a definite guaranty by word against aggression."

"If you look back upon the history of the world you will see how helpless peoples have too often
been a prey to powers that had no conscience in the matter... Now, the world, expressing its conscience in law, says there is an end of that."

The year was 1919. The speaker was President Woodrow Wilson and the tremendous advance in human history that he was talking up was the League of Nations.

Thirteen years later, Japan seized Manchuria and turned it into a puppet regime. China turned to the League of Nations which ordered Japan to withdraw from Manchuria. Japan instead withdrew from the League of Nations.

The United States declared that it would not recognize the new government. Japan replied that its puppet regime was "the necessary act of the local population". Five years later, Japan invaded China. China asked for help from the League of Nations. The League proved to be just as useless again.

Western sanctions against Japan were erratic. Chamberlain vowed that Britain would never submit to Japanese threats, but tacitly recognized Japan's conquests. He called Japan's repeated humiliations, "almost intolerable".

Almost.

Japan told Robert Craigie, the British ambassador who urged appeasement and would go on to chair the UN War Crimes Commission, to apologize for Britain's opposition to the Japanese conquest and its acceptance of all future Japanese conquests as a pre-condition to further negotiations.

The UK had accepted the annexation of Austria and abetted the seizure of the Sudetenland. Japanese officials knew that behind British diplomacy lay not strength, but fear of provoking the rising power of the Rising Sun.

A few months before WWII, British negotiators had finally convinced the Japanese to stop stripping British subjects naked, but by then the forcible stripping of British men and women had served its purpose of stripping British power naked.

"We lived on bluff from 1920-1939, but it was eventually called," Alexander Cadogan, the Permanent Under-Secretary for Foreign Affairs, wrote.

Wilson's "definite guarantee of peace" had failed miserably. International law had been exposed as magical thinking. When confronted with aggression, the diplomats who had talked boldly of ending war crawled on their bellies and proposed territorial partitions, desperately trying to appease Japan, Germany and Italy.

The end of war really meant the beginning of a self-righteous appeasement in which decadent states besotted with their own moral high ground sacrificed the weak to the strong in exchange for maintaining the moral illusion of their peacemaking.

The rhetoric of the illusionists of peace hasn’t changed. Diplomacy must be given time to work. The invaded countries brought it on themselves. The invaders have a legitimate territorial claim. Does anyone really want to die for Manchuria, the Sudetenland and Abyssinia? They didn't. Instead they ended up having to die for Hawaii, London and Paris.

Debating whether Putin is following the Hitler playbook displays a basic ignorance of history. Japan followed that same playbook in its invasion of Manchuria; a staged incident, a rapid invasion and a puppet regime. It didn't originate that playbook. It's probably as old as human history. Hitler's invasion of Poland made it notorious in a world that has managed to forget everything else that happened around that time.

Secretary of State John Kerry mumbled that Putin was guilty of 19th century behavior in the 21st century, but it's actually Kerry who is guilty of 19th century behavior. President Woodrow Wilson had lived through the Civil War. His father had owned slaves. Lord Balfour's godfather was the Iron Duke who had defeated Napoleon. Georges Clemenceau narrowly avoided being locked up by Napoleon III.

The League of Nations was the successor to a 19th century organization and the men who conceived it and built it had largely been born in the 1850s and 60s. They weren't 20th century men building a better world, but 19th century men inflicting ideas that were already outdated on the modern world.

Their ideas didn't work then and they don't work now.

The bewildered responses to Russia's invasion of Ukraine are a naïve piece of theater that should have been retired in the 19th century, but somehow endures into the 21st as the lovers of peace insist on guaranteeing an end to aggression based on worthless pieces of paper that they have no intention of defending by armed force and then act surprised when their bluff is called and they frantically scramble to convince their own people that peace has been secured for our time.

Alexander Cadogan's blunt statement remains relevant today. The Pax Americana is over. We have been living on bluff and Putin called it.

Our response will be a variation on the Stimson Doctrine in which we will refuse to recognize Russia's puppet regime in Crimea, just as we refused to recognize the Soviet annexations of Lithuania, Estonia and Latvia. There will be endless debates over whether the Ukrainians had it coming and praise for our wise leaders who kept us out of war.

Eventually war may come anyway.

The peacemakers have never been known for their honesty. When Woodrow Wilson tried to sell Americans on the League of Nations, he did it with the Pueblo Speech in which he accused opponents of the League of being disloyal foreign traitors.

"Certain bodies of sympathy with foreign nations that are organized against this great document," Wilson claimed, the great peacemaker sounding like the cheap jingoistic agitator with KKK sympathies that he really was. "Any man who carries a hyphen about with him carries a dagger that he is ready to plunge into the vitals of this Republic whenever he gets ready."

This vast hyphenated dagger conspiracy was directed at preventing Wilson from dragging the country into an international organization that would undermine national sovereignty

Switching back to imaginary progressivism, Wilson claimed that the League would work because countries would be embarrassed to invade other countries for fear of being frowned on by their neighbors.

"He will be afraid of the eyes of his neighbors. He will be afraid of their judgment of his character. He will know that his cause is lost unless he can sustain it by the arguments of right and of justice. The same law that applies to individuals applies to nations."

But foreign leaders are not part of a community of one street, instead they answer to the cultural pressures of their own societies and nations. Wilson’s expectations of decent behavior meant nothing in Berlin, Rome or Tokyo. They still mean nothing in Beijing, Moscow or Tehran.

Wilson assured everyone that China would be taken care of. "I am proud to have taken part in an arrangement which promises the protection of the world to the rights of China."

The League of Nations proved unable to protect China's rights. Only China was eventually able to do that.

International law did not protect any of the weaker nations of the world. Strong alliances did. There is no world government of the moral high ground that can substitute for alliances built on strength. International law does not stop invasions. Armed force does.

Ukraine is a reminder of the folly of putting our faith in 19th century illusions that have been discredited more times than spirit-rapping or phrenology. The only law that matters is the law of strength. The only agreements that matter are those that are kept, either through genuine friendship rooted in a shared cultural history, or the threat of force.

The illusion of international law is pervasive. It tells us that the world does not have to work the way that it really does if only we hold hands, think good thoughts and pledge to wage war no more. Its advocates pretend to be sober and sensible, but they might as well be the counterculture hippies trying to levitate the Pentagon.

There is no exit strategy from reality. The moral high ground is no substitute for battleships and peace doesn't come from pieces of paper, but from weapons and men willing to use them.

The United States did China no favors by holding out the promise of a collective security based on a common decency that had no defense against its violation except a scandalized harrumph and we have done Ukraine no favors by offering it useless pieces of paper while encouraging its disarmament.

"These men were crusaders. They were not going forth to prove the might of the United States. They were going forth to prove the might of justice and right," Woodrow Wilson said of the dead Doughboys of WWI, but the two are indivisible.

Wilson did not live long enough to discover that without the might of the United States, justice and right were easily overpowered by tyranny and evil.

American might allowed the advocates of international law to live in an imaginary world in which their doctrines and documents actually matter. And now that they have finally succeeded in tearing down American strength and ushering in a post-American world, their own world will end.

International law is a Potemkin village. A hollow facade upheld by the might of the United States. A post-American world means the end of international law.


Sunday, March 16, 2014
The End of International Law
Posted by Daniel Greenfield

http://sultanknish.blogspot.com/2014/03/the-end-of-international-law.html
 
Listen to Cronkite and Hillary Clinton:



Jeez, the kraut and the frog got their view of national sovereignty from Uncle Walter and Hillary Clinton:


German Chancellor Angela Merkel gave a very troubling speech yesterday to the Konrad Adenauer Foundation in Berlin where she said, “Nation states must today be prepared to give up their sovereignty” [Let us all hope Merkel is talking about European nations only.] and that the will of the people on issues like immigration and border security doesn't matter.

Zero Hedge:


“There were [politicians] who believed that they could decide when these agreements are no longer valid because they are representing The People”.

“[But] the people are individuals who are living in a country, they are not a group who define themselves as the [German] people,” she stressed.


And if you follow that logic, you're a pretzel.

French President Emmanuel Macron recently said something similar:

Her words echo recent comments by the deeply unpopular French President Emmanuel Macron who stated in a Remembrance Day speech that “ patriotism is the exact opposite of nationalism [because] nationalism is treason.”

The French president’s words were deeply unpopular with the French population and his approval rating nosedived even further after the comments.

Macron, whose lack of leadership is proving unable to deal with growing protests in France, told the Bundestag that France and Germany should be at the center of the emerging New World Order.

“The Franco-German couple [has]the obligation not to let the world slip into chaos and to guide it on the road to peace”.

I wish public voices would stop speaking about democracy as though it is a good thing. It is the Democracy Movement that brought the world to one disaster after another thanks to good ol’ Woody:


Making the World “Safe for Democracy”: Woodrow Wilson Asks for War

http://historymatters.gmu.edu/d/4943/


Yes, listening to the voice of the people leads to "chaos." All that messy democracy stuff. Better to let the elites determine the future of ordinary people who need to be "guided" into making the "right" decisions.

This is especially true on immigration, national borders, and sovereignty. These topics are far too complicated and nuanced for ordinary people to trouble their little minds with. It would be far better to let EU bureaucrats make these important decisions, rather than the people who are most directly affected.

Merkel, Macron, and other EU leaders have a huge problem: they aren't listening to what their citizens are saying. The result is violence in the streets of France and Belgium, and the continued rise of nationalist and right-wing parties in Europe. As much as these elites try desperately to portray a vote for the nationalists as a vote for Hitler, it isn't working.

How many more people would be voting for nationalist parties if the media wasn't full of warnings about "fascism"? There are certainly dangerous elements in most EU nationalist parties and until they are marginalized completely, they won't be able to win a majority of voters.

But there is nothing "fascist" about the sentiments clearly expressed by ordinary voters who don't want to lose their sovereignty, their culture, their heritage, or their history. Merkel and her crew of globalists are having problems understanding that and until they do, they will continue to lose political ground to the right.


Chancellor Merkel Says Nations Must 'Give up Sovereignty' to the EU
By Rick Moran
December 29, 2018

https://pjmedia.com/trending/chancellor-merkel-says-nations-must-give-up-sovereignty-to-the-eu/



I have not been watching much TV ‘news’ so I have to ask if media mouths gave the topic any coverage?

And we can see this struggle even more starkly in recent statements by German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Emmanuel Macron.


The New Year and the New World Disorder
Posted By Lowell Ponte On 12/30/2018 @ 7:11 pm

https://www.wnd.com/2018/12/the-new-year-and-the-new-world-disorder/
 
I sure as hell do not want one American killed for democracy in Venezuela or anywhere else.

I wish public voices would stop speaking about democracy as though it is a good thing.



The U.S. Military should be fighting against the Democracy Movement not fighting for it.
 
Back
Top