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Dubai Ports Deal: A Pitchfork Moment
Human Events ^ | February.24, 2006 | Pat Buchanan

Posted on 02/24/2006 10:18:56 PM PST by Reagan Man

“This Dubai port deal has unleashed a kind of collective mania we haven’t seen in decades ... a xenophobic tsunami,” wails a keening David Brooks, “a nativist, isolationist mass hysteria is ... here.”

The New York Times columnist obviously regards the nation’s splenetic response to news that control of our East Coast ports had been sold to Arab sheiks as wildly irrational. In witness whereof he quotes Philip Damas of Drewry Shipping Consultants, “The location of a company in the age of globalism is irrelevant.”

But irrelevant to whom?

Why is it irrelevant, in a war against Arab and Islamic terrorists, to question the transfer of control of our East Coast ports from Britain to the United Arab Emirates?

Our cosmopolitan Mr. Brooks lives in another country. He has left the America of blood and soil, shaken the dust from his sandals, to enter the Davos world of the Global Economy where nationality does not matter and where fundamentalists and flag-wavers of all faiths are the real enemies of progress toward the wonderful future these globalists have in store for us.

“God must love Hamas and Moktada Al-Sadr,” snorts Brooks, “He has given them the America First brigades of Capitol Hill.”

To Brooks there is little distinction between Islamic mobs burning Danish consulates and America First patriots protesting some insider’s deal to surrender control of American ports to Arab sheiks.

But the reflexive recoil to this transaction between transnationals is a manifestation of national mental health. The American people have not yet been over-educated into the higher stupidity. Common sense still trumps ideology here. Globalism has not yet triumphed over patriotism. Rather than take risks with national security, Americans will accept a pinch of racial profiling.

Yep, the old America lives.

Like alley cats, Americans yet retain an IFF, Identify-Friend-or-Foe radar that instinctively alerts them to keep a warier eye on some folks than on others.

But in rejecting a deal transferring control of our ports to Arabs, are Americans not engaging in discrimination? Are they not engaging in ethnic prejudice?

Of course they are. But not all discrimination is irrational, nor is all prejudice wrong. To discriminate is but to choose. We all discriminate in our choice of friends and associates. Prejudice means prejudgment. And a prejudgment in favor of Brits in matters touching on national security is rooted in history.

In the 20th century (if not the 19th), the Brits have been with us in almost every fight. It was not Brits who struck us on 9/11, who rejoiced in the death of 3,000 Americans, who daily threaten us from the mosques of East and West, who behead our aid workers, bomb our soldiers and call for “Death to America!” in a thousand demonstrations across the Middle East. And while not all Muslims are terrorists, almost all terrorists appear to be Muslim.

As Mother Church has a “preferential option” for the poor, there is nothing wrong with America’s preferential option for the cousins.

Does this mean all Arabs should be considered enemies? Of course not.

The folks from Dubai may detest the 9/11 murderers as much as we do, for those killers shamed their faith, disgraced their people, and bred a distrust and fear of Arabs and Muslims that had never before existed here.

Yet, just as sky marshals seat themselves behind young Arab males, not grannies taking the tots to Disney World, so, Americans, in deciding who operates their ports, naturally prefer ourselves, or old friends.

Why take an unnecessary risk? Just to get an A for global maturity on our next report card from the WTO?

The real question this deal raises is what happened to the political antenna at the White House? Did it fall off the roof about the time President Bush named Harriet Miers to the Supreme Court?

Anyone in touch with Middle America, especially after 9/11 and endless warnings of imminent attacks on U.S. soil, would know this country is acutely sensitive to terror threats. Surely, before approving this deal with Dubai Ports World, someone should have asked:

“How do you think Bubba will react when he’s told sheiks will take over the port of Baltimore where, in Tom Clancy’s ‘Sum of All Fears,’ Arab terrorists smuggle in an a-bomb and detonate it?”

Apparently, no one bothered to ask, or the question was brushed off in the interests of hastily greasing the deal.

Now this episode is going to end badly. Bush, who has denied advance knowledge of the deal, is being ripped by liberals for living in a pre-9/11 world and being out of touch with his government.

As for our remaining friends in the Middle East, they have been given another reason to regard Americans as fickle friends who, down deep. Don’t like Arabs.

Unquestionably, this will result in a victory for those who wish to sever America’s friendships in the Arab world. But it is Bush and his unthinking globalists, not the American Firsters whom Brooks cannot abide who engineered this latest debacle.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: alwayswrogpat; bloodandsoil; buchanan; buchananisinsane; dubai; foamingbots; globalism; outoftouchpat; patbuchanan; patisright; patrocks; patthepoltroon; ports; spoton; uae
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To: Echo Talon
>>>>You need to settle down, China nor the UAE are managing our "port of entry" US Coast Guard does that.

Port Authority is the immediate overseer of all port operations. The Feds setdown the regulations. The DHS supplies security for US ports of entry. The longshoremen handle dock activities. The Coast Guard handles the waterways around US ports of entry. DPWorld 'type companies' are known as managemnt companies and they handle the commercial aspects of port of entry operations. Here are some terms/words from the DPWorld website, which they use in their mission statement to attrach future business deals and prospective clients.

DPWorld: "port terminal operations ", "operations", "operating and managing ports", "integrated port management", "global network of terminal operations", "port operations", "the ports operated by Dubai Ports".

Special treatment = CFIUS rubberstamping sweetheart deals = governemnt approval.

221 posted on 02/25/2006 1:43:00 AM PST by Reagan Man (Secure our borders;punish employers who hire illegals;stop all welfare to illegals)
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To: All

Thanks for the good conversation/debate/discussion/whatever. It was fun.


222 posted on 02/25/2006 1:46:12 AM PST by Reagan Man (Secure our borders;punish employers who hire illegals;stop all welfare to illegals)
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To: Echo Talon
I am not an isolationist. So if you don't believe in Free trade your an Isolationist. How about we charge tariffs on our products and cut our taxes like they use to when the country was founded. How about we let Japan, China and the rest of the world pay for our healthcare, and military instead of our children. What if that causes prices to raise and AMerican jobs to stay home and help support our economy. And what if due to the tariffs our workers can compete on an equal footing and our trade balances actually come down. And finally what if we find that countries become more friendly to us to receive special considerations and do not call us the Great Satan,

I think we should trade all we can I think we should project our worldview where we can. We should not go into a defensive mode but we should not sell Grandma's China for $1.50 on Ebay either. They has to be a happy medium somewhere.
223 posted on 02/25/2006 1:47:25 AM PST by unseen
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To: Reagan Man
DPWorld 'type companies' are known as managemnt companies and they handle the commercial aspects of port of entry operations

And they have to follow all the rule regulations that WE setup and if they mess up they can be shut down.

224 posted on 02/25/2006 1:49:02 AM PST by Echo Talon
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To: unseen
How about we charge tariffs on our products and cut our taxes like they use to when the country was founded.

How about they put 500% tariffs on your oil?

225 posted on 02/25/2006 1:50:27 AM PST by Echo Talon
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To: unseen
"IMPORT" means that one TAKES IN; you should have used the word EXPORT; except that Mexico doesn't, EXPORT drugs, as a nation.

And since you are obviously unaware of the fact, CANADIANS smuggle vast quantities of POT into America.

None of which is what "free traders" mean by FREE TRADE!

You don't really understand free trade, nor why trading ( not giving away/selling SECRETS, as Clinton and his horde did do! ) with China, is actually not really all that bad a thing to do. So, please get beyond kindergarten and read up on this stuff.

226 posted on 02/25/2006 1:59:46 AM PST by nopardons
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To: unseen

Oh yeah and Smoot-Hawley did wonders for America, too. LOL


227 posted on 02/25/2006 2:04:47 AM PST by nopardons
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To: Echo Talon
They put 500% tariffs on their oil we don't buy it and the economy collapses if our economy collapses their economy collapses. etc. Trade means to trade. You'll talking about a trade war. Like I said the middle road. Is where we should be.
228 posted on 02/25/2006 2:06:38 AM PST by unseen
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To: nopardons
Re: Trading with Authoritarian regimes

"not really all that bad "

Does that mean it's not really all that good?

229 posted on 02/25/2006 2:12:01 AM PST by endthematrix (None dare call it ISLAMOFACISM!)
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To: endthematrix
It means that it is one small way to get the Chinese people to want to NOT be insular and live under that authoritarian regime.

It has worked in other countries.

230 posted on 02/25/2006 2:14:27 AM PST by nopardons
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To: unseen

Well, not exactly. Most of Middle Eastern oil goes to Japan and Europe.


231 posted on 02/25/2006 2:15:25 AM PST by nopardons
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To: babygene
"Because their sucking at our tit... 100 million, it is a disgrace that we took their money."

What a sickening remark. It makes me ashamed that you are an American.

232 posted on 02/25/2006 2:19:34 AM PST by Hound of the Baskervilles (Liberals are unfit for citizenship in a country that values freedom and courage.)
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To: nopardons
Mexico imports alot of drugs they then export them to us. And the lack of drug enforcement by Mexico on their side of the border is a defacto case that the nation of Mexico exports the drugs to the US. I understand free trade fine. You must not have been taught how to form an agrument nor how to read and understand a comment. I stated that trade with us should be based on conditions. Let me spell it out to you slowly. FOR Example....If MEXICO continues to allow the border to be crossed by drug traffickers then they should not be entitled to Free trade with us. This gives them an incentive to increase their police force and to patrol their border and to work more closely with the US so that their free trade status can be maintained. that is called using your assets to leverage in your favor a desired event
233 posted on 02/25/2006 2:19:42 AM PST by unseen
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To: nopardons
Smmoot-Hawley raised tariffs to record levels. I said nothing about record tariffs. Smoot-Hawley was bad for America just as the other extreme complete free trade is bad for America in the long run. Why do free traders always use extremes can they not thing in degrees or is everything always black and white to them?
234 posted on 02/25/2006 2:23:01 AM PST by unseen
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To: unseen
"How does giving up our sovereignty constitute long term strategic thinking."

By continuing to spout the lie that this deal is tatamount to giving up our sovereignty you show yourself to be a person unable to look at this issue with intellectual honesty.

"They need us more then we need them. "

Then why in the hell would they BLOW UP OUR PORTS!???

235 posted on 02/25/2006 2:24:29 AM PST by Hound of the Baskervilles (Liberals are unfit for citizenship in a country that values freedom and courage.)
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To: nopardons
It was a hypothetical answer to a hypothetical question
236 posted on 02/25/2006 2:25:21 AM PST by unseen
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To: nopardons
Trade figures with China are by no means, "small."

As Dr. Phil says, "how's that workin' for ya?" We're seeing fifty odd years of Communist rule.

"It has worked in other countries."

So has orchestrating Coup d'états.

237 posted on 02/25/2006 2:31:27 AM PST by endthematrix (None dare call it ISLAMOFACISM!)
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To: unseen

And as such, was completely baseless and ridiculous.


238 posted on 02/25/2006 2:32:53 AM PST by nopardons
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To: endthematrix
I didn't say that the figures were "small"; I said that it was a SMALL part of a plan to change the perception of the Chinese people.

We haven't been trading with China for FIFTY YEARS and China has been under Communist rule for far more than fifty years.

Facts matter, your emotions don't.

239 posted on 02/25/2006 2:35:41 AM PST by nopardons
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To: Hound of the Baskervilles
Cool book and name by the way.....

I look at this issue from a intellectual point of view and from a political point of view. From the political point of view this is a huge mess. Intellectual the issue has some negative and some positive points. But I feel that the negative far outweight the postive on this issue. And I say sovereignty because the word fits:
Sovereignty
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia:

In constitutional and international law, the concept of sovereignty also pertains to a government possessing full control over its own affairs within a territorial or geographical area or limit, and in certain context to various organs (such as courts of law) possessing legal jurisdiction in their own chief, rather than by mandate or under supervision. Determining whether a specific entity is sovereign is not an exact science, but often a matter of diplomatic dispute.
240 posted on 02/25/2006 2:35:43 AM PST by unseen
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