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To: beyond the sea
U.S. Official Outlines Essential Elements of Democracy
Maisto said that even though the [Inter-American Democratic ]charter can serve as an effective tool to "ward off political crises or impending challenges to constitutional order, there is still reluctance on the part of some countries to use it in this way."

So some two bit phony ambassador is promoting a supranational 'agreement' (they won't call it a treaty) that gives Venezuela the right to ward off a political crisis in our country, just as it gives us the right to invade his, or any other country in the hemisphere, ostensibly in the name of the war on terror.

Are we experiencing a 'constitutional crisis' yet with the 'shadow government'?
72 posted on 09/27/2006 7:12:40 AM PDT by hedgetrimmer
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To: hedgetrimmer
Are we experiencing a 'constitutional crisis' yet with the 'shadow government'?

........ way past that point, but the citizens are sleeping, have pizza in their mouth, or have a cell phone stuck to their ear.

;-)

74 posted on 09/27/2006 8:09:10 AM PDT by beyond the sea ( May Byron Nelson ............ rest in peace.)
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To: hedgetrimmer
Are we experiencing a 'constitutional crisis' yet with the 'shadow government'?

We were probably "there" by the time NAFTA was signed. And the "shadow" is people like John Cornyn who keeps, year after year, introducing a bill [http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=51222]to implement this mess and then acts surprised about the bill when he's called on it,as if he didn't understand what it said.

One would imagine by this time in human history, that we would realize that politicians have been the same short sighted, greedy, self indulgent sell outs that they've always been. Periodically they have to be reigned in, or they take over and muck up whatever progress was made. I believe our founding fathers weren't "politicians" (many succeded later in that), they just set out to "reign" in that out of control power. I understand more and more every day why they were so against established political parties. Unfortunately that didn't last long either. People became complacent and found other wars to fight and let this government get out of hand then and several times since. I think this is one of those times.

Few seem to want to reign them in if that big "R" or "D" is next to their names. It's almost tribal and primitive. My "R" right or wrong! Not for any logical or honorable reason, just "because".

This is interesting by John Stossel today.

Big Business Loves Government

I keep reading that big business wants government off its back. But that's a myth. Here's the truth:

"[B]ig business and big government prosper from the perception that they are rivals instead of partners (in plunder). The history of big business is one of cooperation with big government."

That's Timothy Carney writing in a recent Cato Policy Report. He's the author of a new book, "The Big Ripoff: How Big Business and Big Government Steal Your Money." Carney's book shows that government and business are not antagonists but allies. They've always been allies. Politicians like it that way because they get power and prestige, and businessmen like it because they get protection from competition.

There was never a time in America when big business didn't get favors from government, which means the taxpayers. Canal and railroad companies loved the big government contracts. Corruption was rampant, and work was often shoddy, but the contracts paid handsomely. The politicians prospered, too. Only taxpayers and consumers lost out. The history books say that during the Progressive era, government trustbusters reined in business. Nonsense. Progressive "reforms" -- railroad regulation, meat inspection, drug certification and the rest -- were done at the behest of big companies that wanted competition managed. They knew regulation would burden smaller companies more than themselves. The strategy works. Regulation isn't the only form of protection that big business gets from government. Companies with political clout get cash subsidies, low-interest loans, loan guarantees and barriers to cheap imports. Even foreign aid is a subsidy to big business because governments receiving the taxpayers' money buy American exports. Fans of foreign aid say those exports are good for the economy because they create jobs. Don't believe it. If the taxpayers had been able to keep the money, their spending would have created other jobs -- probably more jobs.

Most people don't realize that Enron favored the Kyoto Protocol on climate change and wanted energy regulations beneficial to itself; Philip Morris favors tobacco regulation; Wal-Mart's CEO came out for a higher minimum wage; and General Motors embraces tough clean-air rules. Why? Because, as Carney points out, big companies with lots of lawyers and accountants can make the regulations work for themselves, while smaller competitors are hampered.

Carney's is not the first book to bash big business. What makes his different is that rather than opposing the free market, he loves it -- which is why he hates the business-government alliance. In a free market the consumer calls the shots. In the corporate state the business-government alliance restricts consumer choice.

Another friend of the free market hated the business-government alliance: Adam Smith. In "The Wealth of Nations" Smith wrote, "People of the same trade seldom meet together, even for merriment and diversion, but the conversation ends in a conspiracy against the publick. . . . But though the law cannot hinder people of the same trade from sometimes assembling together, it ought to do nothing to facilitate such assemblies; much less to render them necessary."

There's where things went wrong. The government does facilitate such assemblies. More than that, it provides big business something it can't have in the free market: the power to restrict competition by force. Anyone worried about the power of big business should remember real coercion comes only from government.

The voluntary, competitive marketplace is better for us all.

__ http://www.realclearpolitics.com/printpage/?url=http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2006/09/big_business_loves_government.html___

_

76 posted on 09/27/2006 3:10:04 PM PDT by WatchingInAmazement ("Nothing is more expensive than cheap labor," prof. Vernon Briggs, labor economist Cornell Un.)
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