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America Doesn't Have to Run the World
www.wordlnetdaily.com ^ | 1/3/06 | Pat Buchanan

Posted on 01/03/2007 4:15:54 AM PST by Thorin

If there was a defining moment in 2006, it was the public firing of Donald Rumsfeld, just hours after the Republican rout of Nov. 7.

George Bush was bowing to public repudiation of his war policy, his war minister and, indeed, his war presidency.

Yet one senses voters were doing more than rejecting Bush's leadership on Iraq. They were rejecting the very idea of spilling blood and treasure in crusades for "global democracy," "ending tyranny on earth" or a "New World Order."

By saying, as most of us are saying now, "In the end, it's the Iraqis' problem," Americans seem to be bidding goodbye to all that. And as we turn our backs upon the world, that world – from Europe to the Mideast, to Russia, China and Latin America – seems to be turning its back on the United States.

The disposition to sacrifice for altruistic ends is waning. Like the Brits before us, the Yanks are coming home.

The 21st century was to be the Second American Century. But after we won the Cold War, freed the captive nations, and brought Russia and China into the international community, our victories turn to ashes in our mouths. The world America built now rejects the master builder.

Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson just led a delegation, including the chairman of the Federal Reserve and half a dozen Cabinet officers, to Beijing to convince the Chinese to help us reduce the $230 billion trade deficit we ran this year with the Mainland. Beijing sent the Americans home with a bag of stale fortune cookies.

China will continue to siphon off our technology, jobs and plants to make the Middle Kingdom the factory of the world and the first power in Asia, eventually on earth. They seek to displace us.

Why should they not? Why should China abandon a trade policy that has given her 9 percent growth for 20 years for a U.S. policy that has given us the largest trade deficits in history? Why should nations that are succeeding adopt the policies of nations that are failing, and wailing?

Japan, the European Union, Canada and Mexico are also piling up mammoth trade surpluses at our expense, by manipulating currencies and tax codes to subsidize exports and repel imports from the United States.

And we take it. What the election of 2006 demonstrated, in Ohio and Michigan and among the Reagan Democrats, is that Americans are fed up with being played for free-trade fools by the rest of the world.

Moscow is creating an OPEC-like natural gas cartel to squeeze the ex-Soviet republics and as a reminder to a gas-dependent Europe that Mother Russia is watching you. Partly because we planted NATO on her front porch and sought to subvert her in her "near abroad," Russia is reverting to an autarkic and authoritarian nationalism.

Which seems to sit well with the Russian people, as 81 percent support President Putin, more than twice the support President Bush enjoys.

In the Middle East, anti-Americanism is pandemic. So successful were Islamists in exploiting the elections Bush promoted in Iran, Iraq, Lebanon, Palestine and Egypt, Bush has ceased to beat the democracy drum.

Latin America has turned sharply left, with Brazil, Argentina and Chile gone socialist, and Ecuador, Bolivia and Nicaragua joining Hugo Chavez and Fidel in the radical-populist camp. Peru and Mexico barely escaped being converted to "Bolivarism."

South Korea, fearful of offending the North, has vetoed any tough U.S. policy. Anti-American demonstrations are common there. But why are the North's nukes our problem, 7,000 miles away? Why are U.S. soldiers still on the DMZ, 53 years after the Korean War?

Andrew Roberts, the pro-American Tory historian, says he has never seen such anti-Americanism as in Britain today. Old Europe is reveling in our misfortunes. The French are pulling out of Afghanistan. The Germans want their troops kept out of the fighting. Yet, U.S. elites are pushing to bring Ukraine and Georgia into NATO, which would require us to send our 82nd Airborne to defend Tiblisi. Though the U.S. Army, warns Colin Powell, is "almost broken," we are adding to our commitments to go to war against a nuclear-armed Russia.

We are living in a dream world. America may yet be the world's strongest nation, but our dominance is detested, our leadership is no longer wanted and our people are weary of playing Atlas.

Events abroad and disillusionment at home are causing more and more to ask whether what we call the American Empire or Pax Americana is really worth the aggravation, the cost and the ingratitude.

Interventionism has failed us. Americans are groping toward a new foreign policy that puts America first and a trade policy that puts Americans first.

When we began as a nation, the republic was feared and loathed by many of the monarchs of Europe. Yet, under Washington, Adams and Jefferson, we went our separate way, and prospered as no other republic. We don't have to run the world. Divestiture is an option.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Foreign Affairs; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: buchanan; economicpatriotism; noninterventionism; patbuchanan; talibanpat
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To: Michael81Dus

Why should nations that are succeeding adopt the policies of nations that are failing, and wailing?


41 posted on 01/03/2007 7:48:11 AM PST by Paul Ross (Ronald Reagan-1987:"We are always willing to be trade partners but never trade patsies.")
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To: mariabush

Why should nations that are succeeding adopt the policies of nations that are failing, and wailing?


42 posted on 01/03/2007 7:48:26 AM PST by Paul Ross (Ronald Reagan-1987:"We are always willing to be trade partners but never trade patsies.")
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To: allen08gop
I wouldn't want him for a neighbor or a leader.

He is your neighbor, and a fellow citizen...if you really are. Looks to me like you are a coordinated slew of Bush 'bot lackies. Continuing their campaign of personal destruction.

43 posted on 01/03/2007 7:50:32 AM PST by Paul Ross (Ronald Reagan-1987:"We are always willing to be trade partners but never trade patsies.")
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To: dangerbird

Don't forget, Pat lost a dear relative in a Nazi Concentration Camp. He fell out of the guard tower.


44 posted on 01/03/2007 7:51:55 AM PST by dfwgator
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To: kevkrom
Typical Buchanan crap... and he starts off with a factual error (go figure). Rumsfeld resigned prior to the election, but Bush held off the announcement until afterwards

Actually, yours is the party in error. Rumsfeld offered repeatedly to resign in 2004, and again in 2005. This time, the "offer" wasn't really his idea.

45 posted on 01/03/2007 7:55:38 AM PST by Paul Ross (Ronald Reagan-1987:"We are always willing to be trade partners but never trade patsies.")
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To: sure_fine
does Mr Rumsfeld know he was "fired" ?

Why don't you ask him?

46 posted on 01/03/2007 7:59:01 AM PST by Paul Ross (Ronald Reagan-1987:"We are always willing to be trade partners but never trade patsies.")
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To: Paul Ross

That is the liberal, socialist way. Equality of outcome, rather than equality of opportunity.


47 posted on 01/03/2007 8:27:41 AM PST by Redleg Duke (Heaven is home...I am just TDY here!)
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To: Paul Ross

Hey Paul,

You assume wrong.

Born and raised in Chicago area. Not a Bush lacky either.

Great-grandfather was a Republican state senator for Wisc. He is credited with the plan that kept Milwaukee in the black during the Depression. In other words, they had little debt.

Grandparents and parents were Conservatives. I am a Conservative.

I stand by my statement. You are entitled to disagree.

"campaign of personal destruction?" You sound like a lib.


48 posted on 01/03/2007 8:31:16 AM PST by allen08gop (America -- The Arsenal For Humanity)
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To: Paul Ross

Why don't you ask him?


49 posted on 01/03/2007 8:32:18 AM PST by allen08gop (America -- The Arsenal For Humanity)
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To: Popocatapetl
If you were to ask the World War II generation in the 1950s what enemy would strike America as its "next Pearl Harbor", how many if even allowed to guess 100 times, would suggest fanatical Muslims? Yet they were often the enemy of the British Empire, why shouldn't they threaten the Pax Americana?

Why were Muslims the enemy of the British Empire?

50 posted on 01/03/2007 8:48:16 AM PST by lucysmom
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To: Mase

"Do you understand the difference between debt and unfunded liabilities?"....

Of course I do...but for the purpose of this thread...the numbers and expectations of the Federal Gov'mt as defined by those numbers, define exactly for all of us Americans what the world expects of us...We have the luxury of some 4-5 trillion in immediate debt with the expectation of such further benefits only to the extent we will shoulder a variety of responsiblities and expectations the world has of us. Buchanan's atttitudes are suicidal in the face of all this...


51 posted on 01/03/2007 8:53:19 AM PST by mo
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To: A. Pole
Real democracy or real republic? Democracies are not lasting and they tend to be replaced by tyrannies.

I wonder about that everytime I hear Bush mention democracy in Iraq.

52 posted on 01/03/2007 8:57:41 AM PST by lucysmom
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To: mo
...the numbers and expectations of the Federal Gov'mt as defined by those numbers, define exactly for all of us Americans what the world expects of us...

Why would the rest of the world care if we dissolved social security thereby eliminating a large chunk of our unfunded liabilities? Our annual national debt is just 2% of GDP. This is lower than the 2.7% it has averaged for many decades. Our total debt to GDP is about 69%. This is much less than Japan's 170%.

I think the world expects us to be able to pay our debts which is why so much money continues to flow our way. I agree that PJB's attitudes are suicidal but the charts Hodges posted don't tell the whole story. He does this on purpose to stoke the fires of doom and gloom.

53 posted on 01/03/2007 9:15:43 AM PST by Mase (Save me from the people who would save me from myself!)
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To: A. Pole

The massive red bar on the right is deeply troubling...and that's using statistics from seven years ago. The disparity is probably even worse now, judging by the recent flare ups.


54 posted on 01/03/2007 12:23:32 PM PST by rabscuttle385 (Sic Semper Tyrannis * Allen for U.S. Senate in '08)
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To: dfwgator

Is that really true?


55 posted on 01/03/2007 12:35:51 PM PST by dangerbird
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To: A. Pole

We've traded new blood and smarts for cheap labor.


56 posted on 01/03/2007 1:49:34 PM PST by GOP_1900AD (Stomping on "PC," destroying the Left, and smoking out faux "conservatives" - Take Back The GOP!)
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To: allen08gop

He has been my neighbor many times in the past, just a few days at a time of course. He is very quiet and decent to have as a neighbor.


57 posted on 01/03/2007 1:52:05 PM PST by RightWhale
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To: RightWhale

I'm sure in that context he would be fine.

When a neighbor is in need, you help. His attitude towards other countries smacks of, "You are on your own."

The context is FDR's use of the term and how you help put out a fire and not let it burn.


58 posted on 01/03/2007 2:40:02 PM PST by allen08gop (America -- The Arsenal For Humanity)
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To: rabscuttle385
...please explain why everyone in the world STILL! wants so badly to come here that they will risk life, limb, and everything just to set foot on our shores?

Better social programs.

59 posted on 01/03/2007 2:44:44 PM PST by Last Dakotan
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To: rabscuttle385
"That deficit is denominated largely in U.S. dollars, which lose value to inflation. If the Chinese displace us, as Pat contends, their little stockpile will be devalued so quickly it won't be funny at all."

A long time before that, if we continue giving away the farm, the Chinese and a few other of our "friends" will force a switch away from the dollar as the base currency in world financial markets in favor of the Euro. It's not like China's sitting on a pile of greenbacks.

Then we're up the creek without a paddle.
60 posted on 01/03/2007 5:23:12 PM PST by outdriving (Diversity is a nice place to visit, but I wouldn't want to live there.)
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