Ron Paul and the MSNBC Debate
by
Jacob G. Hornberger
by Jacob G. Hornberger
DIGG THIS
During the
recent MSNBC Republican presidential debate, Republican presidential
candidate Ron Paul made three profound points on U.S. foreign policy
that the American people would be wise to heed. Needless to say,
Pauls three points, being libertarian in nature, arent
likely to be favorably received within the Washington, D.C., establishment,
especially among lobbyists for the military-industrial complex.
Perhaps that is why, despite Paul's first-place finish in post-debate
polls conducted by MSNBC, ABCNews.com, and C-SPAN or maybe
because of those results the Washington Post used
its lead
editorial on Tuesday to specifically question Pauls participation
in the rest of the Republican presidential debates.
The first point
was that the Iraq War violated the traditional American policy of
foreign nonintervention that characterized our nation through most
of the first 125 years of its existence. What Paul was referring
to was summed up in the speech that John Quincy Adams delivered
to Congress on the 50th anniversary of the Fourth of July: that
America does not go abroad in search of monsters to destroy,
and that, if America were ever to embrace such a policy, the fundamental
maxims of her policy would insensibly change from liberty to force
and she would become the dictatress of the world.
What better
example of the validity of Adamss admonition than President
Bushs war on Iraq? On his own initiative and without the constitutionally
required congressional declaration of war, President Bush sent the
nation into war against Iraq in an attempt to destroy the monster
known as Saddam Hussein. In the process, the United States has become
a brutal occupying power that has brought not liberty but rather
death, destruction, torture, mayhem, and civil war to the Iraqi
people. Moreover, with its long-time foreign policy of embargoes,
sanctions, regime-change operations, kidnappings, rendition, torture,
detentions, invasions, occupations, and overseas prisons, in the
eyes of many people around the world, the United States has indeed
become the dictatress of the world.
The second
point that Paul mentioned was with respect to the declaration-of-war
requirement in the Constitution. Recognizing the historical propensity
of rulers, especially ones with standing armies at their disposal,
to start wars on their own initiative, the Framers separated the
power to wage war from the power to declare war. The idea was that
if the president failed to secure a declaration of war from Congress,
he would be precluded from waging the war, no matter how vital he
thought it was.
Unfortunately,
that constitutional requirement has long been ignored despite the
fact that the Constitution has never been amended to eliminate it.
It goes without saying that if President Bush had gone to Congress
to seek a declaration of war against Iraq, it is entirely possible
that Congress would have pierced through his WMD rationale for the
war and denied him a declaration of war, thereby enabling the nation
to avoid the quagmire in which it now finds itself.
The third point
that Paul made was with respect to government spending. Asked whether
he supported a repeal of the income tax, he did not hesitate to
respond in the affirmative, but he did not leave it there. He pointed
out that it is impossible to reduce or eliminate income taxes without
reducing or eliminating the programs that the tax revenues are funding,
e.g., the U.S. governments pro-empire, interventionist foreign
policy, of which the invasion and occupation of Iraq have been just
one part. Many years ago, Nobel Prize-winning economist Milton Friedman
made the same point when he stated that the true cost of government
was not the tax burden but rather the level of government spending.
A related point
that Paul emphasized during the debate was the insidious tax known
as inflation, a process by which public officials simply print the
money to fund their programs, and which ultimately is reflected
in rising prices. The beauty of inflation, from the standpoint of
public officials, is that most people dont realize that federal
spending is the culprit behind rising prices. Thus, when the price
of commodities such as oil and gas begin to rise, people just assume
that it is because of greedy people in the private sector rather
than because of federal spending on the rebuilding of Iraq and other
federal programs.
The three points
that Ron Paul made in the MSNBC debate hold a key to the liberty
and well-being of our nation. That is also why our Founding Fathers
considered them so vitally important.
May
10, 2007
Jacob
Hornberger [send him mail]
is founder and president of The Future
of Freedom Foundation. He will be among the 22 speakers at FFF’s
upcoming conference on June 14 in Reston, Virginia: “Restoring
the Constitution: Foreign Policy and Civil Liberties.”
Copyright
© 2007 Future of Freedom Foundation
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