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I
Advocate the Same Foreign Policy the Founding Fathers Would
by
Ron Paul
by Ron Paul
DIGG THIS
Published
on October 8, 2007, in the Manchester
Union-Leader.
Any response
to this
paper's Friday editorial on my foreign policy position must
rest on two fundamental assertions: first, that the Founding Fathers
were not isolationists; and second, that their political philosophy
the wisdom of the Constitution, the Declaration, and our
Revolution itself is not just a primitive cultural relic.
If I understand
the editors' concerns, I have not been accused of deviating from
the Founders' logic; if anything I have been accused of adhering
to it too strictly. The question, therefore, before readers and
soon voters is the same question I have asked for almost 20 years
in Congress: by what superior wisdom have we now declared Jefferson,
Washington, and Madison to be "unrealistic and dangerous"?
Why do we insist on throwing away their most considered warnings?
A non-interventionist
foreign policy is not an isolationist foreign policy. It is quite
the opposite. Under a Paul administration, the United States would
trade freely with any nation that seeks to engage with us. American
citizens would be encouraged to visit other countries and interact
with other peoples rather than be told by their own government that
certain countries are off limits to them.
American citizens
would be allowed to spend their hard-earned money wherever they
wish across the globe, not told that certain countries are under
embargo and thus off limits. An American trade policy would encourage
private American businesses to seek partners overseas and engage
them in trade. The hostility toward American citizens overseas in
the wake of our current foreign policy has actually made it difficult
if not dangerous for Americans to travel abroad. Is this not an
isolationist consequence from a policy of aggressive foreign interventionism?
It
is not we non-interventionists who are isolationsists. The real
isolationists are those who impose sanctions and embargoes on countries
and peoples across the globe because they disagree with the internal
and foreign policies of their leaders. The real isolationists are
those who choose to use force overseas to promote democracy, rather
than seek change through diplomacy, engagement, and by setting a
positive example.
I
do not believe that ideas have an expiration date, or that their
value can be gauged by their novelty. The test for new and old is
that of wisdom and experience, or as the editors wrote "historical
reality," which argues passionately now against the course
of anti-Constitutional interventionism.
A Paul administration
would see Americans engaged overseas like never before, in business
and cultural activities. But a Paul administration would never attempt
to export democracy or other values at the barrel of a gun, as we
have seen over and over again that this is a counterproductive approach
that actually leads the United States to be resented and more isolated
in the world.
See
the Ron Paul File
October
9, 2007
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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