The Abnormality of Unity
by
Paul Hein
by Paul Hein
DIGG THIS
In unity, as
we all know, there is strength. But strength for whom? Well, the
unifiers, of course. When a collection of squabbling states become
united under, say, a Bismarck, as in Germany of the latter part
of the 19th century, or in Italy, under Garibaldi, at
about the same time, those rulers gain the revenues, assets, and
services of the united states, and the strength that naturally accompanies
those acquisitions. History is, among other things, the story of
such acquisitions of strength. It tells the story of schemers and
plotters, such as Cavour, Mazzini, Garibaldi, Bismarck, or wars
– too numerous to list – and the rise and fall of empires. Unification
led, ultimately, to Hitler and Mussolini, whose activities are grist
for the historian’s mill.
But what of
the people themselves – the unified? History doesn’t deal with them,
but they are the raison d’être of the whole shebang. Why
struggle to become a ruler, without someone to rule? Without their
work, there is nothing worth fighting about. It is to gain their
(involuntary) servitude that plots are hatched, and wars fought.
What of these subjected peoples? Do they benefit from unification?
Maybe they do, and maybe not. The desire to consolidate power burns
so brightly in the bosom of every politician that it scarce matters
what becomes of the people brought into subjugation, except that
they continue to produce, and remain passive.
It is interesting
that this unification of diverse peoples, which comprises such a
major theme of history, has no counterpart in nature. I can look
out of my window and see dozens of trees: maples, oaks, ash, willows,
and others I cannot identify; but nature seems content to let them
remain separate entities. There is no ruler tree, no subject trees.
The hundreds of members of the rose family seem to be doing quite
well without the dominance of a ruler rose.
The subjugation
of people to the procession of rulers has traditionally been accomplished
by violence – the use of which is sanctioned by governments for
their own purposes. A simple ploy by which governments gain the
loyalty of their subjects is by assuring them that without government
protection, they will be seized and ruled by some other group with
a different language and different – and repellant, of course –
customs.
The picture
is different today. One might almost conclude that military skirmishes
that so fill our airwaves constitute a diversion, a distraction
from the real conflict, which is: who shall issue the money for
the unified world? Make no mistake: the intention to bring more
and more people under a single government’s control – the One World
Government – is the desire of ambitious men. If it is good to govern
50 states, why not 100? And it can be accomplished without firing
a shot, by manipulation of the currency. First it was the dollar
vs. the yen; the dollar won that battle. Now the dollar battles
the euro, and is doing badly. But the yuan has come on strong, and
may overwhelm both. Perhaps, in the background, the rupee is waiting
its turn. The winner will be the banking system whose fiat survives
longest.
The words of
President James A. Garfield shed light: "Whoever controls the
volume of money in any country is absolute master of all industry
and commerce." Master, in other words, of everyone, directly
or indirectly.
Have you heard
of the Amero? It has been proposed as a new currency for Canada,
the United States, and Mexico. Who made the proposal? Robert Pastor,
a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, and author of "Toward
A North American Community." The U.S. Congress would be replaced
– not by nothing, unfortunately!!! – but by something even worse:
a "North American Parliamentary Group." And who would
control the "volume of money" in this union? The creators
and issuers of the Amero. It would enter the ring to do battle with
the yuan and the euro. The winner would be "absolute master
of all industry and commerce" in most of the industrialized
world. The centralization of power would have taken a giant step
toward totality.
Reginald McKenna,
once Chancellor of the Exchequer of England, also sheds some light:
"Those who create and issue money and credit direct the policies
of government and hold in the hollow of their hands the destiny
of the people." The real rulers work behind the scenes. You
can’t vote for them; you don’t even know their names. That’s bad
enough when they are local, and at least theoretically influenced
by local opinion. It’s worse when they are national; it’s truly
horrific when they are international, distant, remote, and totally
unaware of your existence, much less concerned about it. The proposed
Amero is a step in that direction. Does anybody care? How about
those buffoons in Washington who are, theoretically, there to protect
our rights? Are they more readily influenced by you and me, or by
the creators of "money?" A rhetorical question!
December
2, 2006
Dr.
Hein [send
him mail] is a retired ophthalmologist in St. Louis,
and the author of All
Work & No Pay.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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