Posted on 08/03/2004 5:45:53 PM PDT by Tailgunner Joe
Imagine that you and your family move to a new home in a neighborhood of 190 other residences. As you carry in some of your possessions, you are welcomed outside your front door by the Chairman of the Neighborhood Community Services Organization. He extends his hand and introduces himself. "Welcome! We have 190 members in our Neighborhood Community Services and we would like to have you in our organization as our 191st member! We had a meeting yesterday and all of your neighbors would like you to join."
"How nice. Is it a kind of Homeowners Association?" you ask.
"You could say that."
"Im sure that would be fine," you nod. "It sounds good."
The chairman smiles. "It is good. And because you have such a nice home really the nicest in the neighborhood our members expect you to pay 22% of our budget."
There would be some silence, and then your response: "You have 190 members and I would have to pay 22%?"
"Your home shows that you can afford it."
"Isnt that a little on the high side? After all, I worked for what I have."
"Of course you did. Thats wonderful. Maybe you could be a good influence on your neighbors if you know what I mean." And he laughs.
"I dont know anything about my neighbors. Youre the first one Ive met. Tell me a little about them."
The chairman nods. "Our members are diverse. Youll like them. Oh, sure, we have some who may give you some difficulties. You see, some of them are murderers, kidnappers, rapists, hostage-takers and slave-masters. But not all of them!"
You have yet to sign up. Would you join? Would you want to be in a club with those members? Would you want to regularly sit next to those guys?
Whether you know it or not, we all regularly sit next to those guys. It isnt called the Neighborhood Community Services Organization. Its called the United Nations Organization.
It was in the middle of the 1970s that the late Daniel Moynihan entered and exited as the U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations. Upon his leaving he gave three definitions of that organization: "A theater of the absurd, a decomposing corpse, and an insane asylum." Then, giving his remarks support, he quoted a leading British journalist of the time who said that the U.N. was among "the most corrupt and corrupting creations in the whole history of human institutions."
In the 1980s, another U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, Jeane Kirkpatrick said, "Rather frequently, what goes on in the U.N. actually exacerbates conflicts rather than tending to resolve them."
Those were the days when the U.N. debated the threat posed not by 14 concurrent Soviet proxy wars, and not by Fidel Castro's 40,000 troops on the African Continent, but by U.S. forces in the U.S. Virgin Islands since 14 U.S. Coast Guardsmen were stationed there.
Even the United Nations Children's Emergency Fund (UNICEF), financed in large part by U.S. purchasers of UNICEF's Christmas Cards, had sent millions of dollars in aid to North Vietnam during the last year of its war against South Vietnam. UNICEF's spokesman said, "UNICEF has no way to make sure the supplies got to the children. They were dropped off at the airports and docks and we assume they were used as we intended." But what UNICEF had dropped off at the airports and docks were not crayolas, dolls, and lollipops. They dropped off trucks, bulldozers, and heavy construction material.
That fit a pattern of the United Nations Organization throughout the Cold War years.
But time has passed, and the Soviet Union is gone, its empire has been dismembered, and the Cold War was won, no thanks to the U.N. that supported what the organization called Wars of National Liberation.
During the last full year before the Berlin Wall came down, the U.N. was the last to give up. That was when the majority of the General Assembly voted with the Soviet Union 95.16% of the time. On economic development and international regulation questions, the ratio was even more pronounced. It isnt that the United States was completely disregarded: after all, the positions of the United States were embraced 2.71% of the time, while the positions of the Soviet Union were supported 96.62% of the time.
Perhaps the U.N. should have been buried with the Soviet Union but it survived, looking in new directions. The military expansion of the U.N. increased from its 1990 level of 11,550 troops under its command to 80,000 troops two years later.
What were called "peacekeeping operations," which cost $230 million in 1988, were raised to $3.6 billion by 1994. The difficulty, of course, was that peace was not kept despite the increasing funds.
When the horror of genocides in Rwanda and Bosnia became evident, the U.N. looked the other way. Secretary General Boutros Boutros-Ghali warned the United States that under existing Security Council resolutions only he had the power to launch air strikes against the Serbian aggressors fighting Bosnians, and the United States would be in violation of the U.N. Charter if the U.S. acted on its own.
Secretary General Boutros Boutros-Ghali made a plea in his book, "Agenda for Peace," that its the task of leaders of states to understand that the time of absolute and exclusive sovereignty had passed.
From 1990 to 1998, the U.N.s staff grew from 23,000 to 53,000. (There were also $4.1 million owed in New York City parking tickets.) In 1995, the U.N. sponsored over 7,000 conferences in Geneva alone while the quest as articulated by its Secretary General was "empowerment" with a U.N. standing army and the ability to collect direct taxes. That quest did not stop when Boutros Boutros-Ghalis term of office was done, but continues to this day while Kofi Annan occupies the office of Secretary General.
Under Kofi Annans leadership, the U.N. had its Millennium Summit in the year 2000 with the attendance of 152 World Leaders, which is the largest gathering of world leaders ever held. Its stated purpose was "to make the 21st Century free of war, poverty, ignorance, and disease." Notice no mention of making the 21st Century free of oppression, totalitarianism, dependence, persecution, and dictatorships.
The next year, 2001, the United States was kicked out of the United Nations Human Rights Commission.
Being ejected from the U.N. Human Rights Commission was thought by some in the United States to be an outrage. But it should have been thought of as a blessing. Admittedly, expulsion from the U.N. Human Rights Commission is not the highest honor a nation can receive: the highest honor would be expulsion from the entire U.N. Organization. That has only been achieved by the Republic of China on Taiwan in 1971 when it was expelled to make room for the membership of the non-democratic human rights violators of the Peoples Republic of China. Maybe some day we, too, can have the privilege that was accorded Taiwan.
Then came September the 11th of 2001.
Statements of condolences were extended to the United States by the United Nations Organization, but nothing had changed. When it came to fighting Al Qaeda and its hosts, the Taliban Government of Afghanistan, and when it came to fighting Iraqs Saddam Hussein in the second battlefield of the War Against Terrorism, the U.N. was less than impotent. It became an impediment to the United States and even ignored its own previously passed resolutions that had warned Iraq. When it counted, the U.N. insured its resolutions were toothless.
As the United States put together a coalition of nations willing to fight against Saddam Husseins government independent of the U.N., the U.N. continued its Oil for Food program for Iraq that began in 1995. Through the years, the perception of the United States and most of the world was that the program was worthwhile. It allowed Iraq to sell a limited amount of oil in order to buy food, medicine and other humanitarian goods for the people of Iraq. What was not known by the United States until this year, 2004, was that some estimated $10.1 billion was used for Saddam Husseins own purposes. The General Accounting Office of the United States charged that evidence shows that Saddam Husseins government levied surcharges against oil purchasers, including commissions of 5 to 10 percent against the suppliers of humanitarian aid. All of this indicates the U.N. was not the best overseer of funds to members of that organization.
Back when I lived in So Cal (years ago) I used to enjoy watching him on one of the local news stations (can't remember which...). An additional point and a question. Firstly, it is even more sad that it was a cabal of various Communist and liberal US intellectuals who started the whole #$@$) thing (albeit, with Gromyko planting the bug in their ears). And, the question: Could it be that the USSR still survives, in the form of the UN?
Perfect! America does need to quit the U.N. and start a new affiliation which only allows democracies to be full members..
The UN should be prosecuted under RICO. Failing that, maybe W ought to have the troops invade the UN building and liberate it.
I was a pressman at this time and refused to print anything for unicef...my boss was kind enough to move those jobs to another press.
Perhaps the U.N. should have been buried with the Soviet Union
Needs repeating, over and over.
FMCDH(BITS)
At the very least, that is very feasable.
FMCDH(BITS)
FMCDH(BITS)
What a crock. Who started the UN in the first place? Far from being asked to be the 191st, we were the first. And the article goes downhill from there.
Yes, the UN has lots of things wrong with it. But why not criticize with truth and facts rather than twisted pseudo-facts? Sorry, but Michael Moore tactics are Michael Moore tactics, whether used by the right or the left.
Great post!
Sixteen U.S. officials who were instrumental in the formulation of the policies which led to the creation of the U.N. were later exposed in sworn testimony to be communist spies. The two most notorious were Alger Hiss, then acting director of the State Department's Office of Special Political Affairs in charge of all postwar planning and Secretary-General of the U.N. founding conference, and the Assistant Secretary of the Treasury Harry Dexter White. Other high-level American communists who served as original U.N. delegates included Noel Field, Harold Glasser, Irving Kaplan, Nathan Gregory Silvermaster, Victor Perlo, Soloman Adler, Virginius Frank Coe, Lawrence Duggan, Abraham G. Silverman, William H. Taylor, William L. Ullman, John Carter Vincent, David Weintraub, and Henry Julian Wadleigh. - LINK
The UN is a communist designed tool of International Socialism and it should be abolished.
how do you mean that?
FMCDH(BITS)
As in the article is very good, I agree with it. I also think that blah blah blah...
bump
Bump
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