This excellent, well written opposition to the NWO,
By Henry Lamb,
WorldNetDaily.com,
(taken from the web, Friday, October 01, 1999,)
while accurate, offers no reasonable solution (in fact
offers NO SOLUTION) to the primary problem that creates the necessity of the
NWO. That problem is of course the one of elimination of war in a world
that has nuclear weapons and other weapons of mass destruction. The main
philosophical emphasis of this critique regards the primacy of individual
freedom. While individual freedom is indeed important, as regards the
freedom of religion and the search for truth, there is a balance that
must be realized between those essential freedoms on the one
hand and espousal of a complete social anarchy which offers no protection
to the environment, no justice or opportunity for the socially disadvantaged,
and has a complete lack of universal concern for the needs and
brotherhood of mankind as a global whole.
In Opposition to Charter 99
An Essay
by Henry Lamb
1999 WorldNetDaily.com
In less than a year, the United Nations will convene a special Millennium
Assembly as a global summit on the future of the world. This event will
crown a decade of preparation to launch the new millennium on a new system
of global governance. The blueprint was published by the Commission on
Global Governance in 1995. Now, a Charter to achieve global governance has
been developed for presentation at the Millennium Assembly next September.
It will be published publicly on UN day, October 24th.
It is called The Charter for Global Democracy. It has already been signed
by influential leaders in 56 nations, and has the support of civil society
non-government organizations around the world. The document is, in
reality, a Charter for the abolition of individual freedom.
The first of 12 principles calls for the consolidation of all
international agencies under the direct authority of the United Nations.
The second principle calls for regulation by the UN of all transnational
corporations and financial institutions, requiring an "international code
of conduct" concerning the environment and labor standards.
Principle number 3 demands an independent source of revenue for the UN,
such as the "Tobin tax" and taxes on aircraft and shipping fuels, and
licensing the use of the global commons. The "global commons" is defined
to be "outer space, the atmosphere, non-territorial seas, and the related
environment that supports human life."
Number 4 would eliminate the veto power and permanent member status on the
Security Council. Number 5 would authorize a standing UN army. Number 6
would require UN registration of all arms and the reduction of all
national armies "as part of a multilateral global security system" under
the authority of the United Nations.
Principle number 7 would require individual and national compliance with
all UN "Human Rights" treaties and declarations. Number 8 would activate
the International Criminal Court, make the International Court of Justice
compulsory for all nations, and give individuals the right to petition the
courts to remedy social injustice.
Principle 9 calls for a new institution to establish economic and
environmental security by insuring "sustainable development." Number 10
calls for the establishment of an International Environmental Court.
Number 11 calls for a declaration that climate change is an essential
global security interest that requires the creation of a "high-level
action team" to allocate carbon emission based on equal per-capita rights.
Principle number 12 calls for the cancellation of all debt owed by the
poorest nations, global poverty reductions, and for "equitable sharing of
global resources," as allocated by the United Nations.
As preposterous as these ideas may sound to freedom-loving Americans, most
of the world considers them to be an improvement over their current
circumstance. The fuel that fires the global governance movement, however,
is not the desires of oppressed people, it is the money supplied by the
well-to-do elite who feel the need to "do something" to help the less
fortunate people of the world. The strategy for advancing the movement is
supplied by those who expect to control the machinery of global governance.
It is no coincidence that financial contributions in support of the
Charter for Global Democracy are to be made to the London office of United
Nations Association.
Dozens of documents, all promoting some form of world government, have
been circulating for most of this decade. All contain these same
principles. The Millennium Assembly will receive these documents and meld
them into the legal instruments required to modify the existing UN
Charter. It will take a year or two for the legal documents to be prepared
and adopted, and another year or two for ratification. The world is truly
standing at the threshold of world government.
Woodrow Wilson brought the world to the same threshold nearly 80 years
ago; the United States decided not to enter, and the League of Nations
collapsed. Once again, it is up to the United States to determine the
future of the world. If the United States embraces this Charter for Global
Democracy, the world will be subjected to global dominance by the United
Nations. If the United States opts out, the world may be spared centuries
of inevitable oppression.
There is no issue of greater importance in next year's election than where
each candidate stands on global governance and national sovereignty. So
far, this issue has not emerged in any national campaign.
The United States must prevent this catastrophe-in-the-making. Global
governance, as envisioned by the Commission on Global Governance and the
Charter for Global Democracy cannot succeed without the support of the
United States. The United States must walk away. For all practical
purposes, the next President, and the next Senate will make that decision.
By walking away from the UN's vision of global governance, we are not
turning our backs to the rest of the world. Our next President and
Congress should say no to global governance, and offer a better idea.
There is no better idea, nor higher aspiration, than individual freedom.
America pioneered that technology 200 years ago, and it is still the most
valuable asset we possess.
Freedom or democracy?
Freedom and democracy are not synonymous. In most of the world, the term
democracy means the right of citizens to participate in the process of
government. It is a right granted by the government, and controlled by the
government, and if exercised improperly, it is denied by the government.
Freedom, on the other hand, is the God-given right to govern one's self.
Freedom is the power to enter into voluntary agreements with other people
who have precisely the same freedom, to achieve objectives of mutual
benefit, as determined only by the parties to the agreement. Freedom is
the power to make the rules that govern those agreements. Freedom is the
power to create and control a system of general governance designed to
serve its creators. Freedom is the power to cheat, lie, and steal -- and
learn the consequences of those actions. Freedom is the power to
experiment, to invent, to help others -- and learn the consequences of
those actions. Freedom is the ultimate objective of human kind.
A system of global democracy, administered by the United Nations, would
turn the world away from its primary quest -- individual freedom. Poverty
cannot be eliminated by taking wealth from some and giving it to others.
The inevitable consequence of such action is the expansion of poverty, by
taking not only wealth, but the incentive to produce wealth as well.
The environment -- the global commons -- cannot be protected for long by
regulated preservation. It must be protected by those who use it to meet
their daily needs. Government ownership or control of the environment is
the most certain way to ensure its degradation through stagnation. People,
like virtually every other species on earth, should be free to use that
portion of the environment they can control in whatever way they choose.
If they abuse that environment, the environment will not sustain them. If
they cultivate and care for that environment, it will sustain them.
This is a fundamental law of nature that cannot be repealed by any
institution of government. In the long term, government attempts to manage
the environment become, in retrospect, examples of gross mismanagement.
Individuals, managing that portion of the planet they are able to control,
provide the surest way to achieve a healthy, vibrant environment for all.
Freedom is the power to gain control over a portion of the environment --
land ownership. Freedom is the power to defend that land, by whatever
means necessary, from those who have not learned the consequences of
cheating, lying, or stealing. Freedom is the power to use the resources
the land provides to create products and services others are willing to
buy. Freedom is the power to buy products and services others have produced.
These are the ideas for which the world hungers. These are the better
ideas America should offer the world. Because these ideas have produced
prosperity beyond the wildest dreams of the rest of the world, we should
happily share our freedom technology with the world.
Democracy can be imposed upon people by government; freedom cannot be
imposed. Freedom must be learned through experience. Sometimes the
experience is bloody, as it was in America, and always, it is painful, as
is the current learning experience in Russia. It is the price we must pay
for the benefits freedom bestows.
America should stop pouring its prosperity down the United Nations' drain.
Instead, it should help directly, any nation that wants its people to be
free. If given the choice, the people of every nation would choose
individual freedom over a system of UN handouts. The governments of those
nations, however, are not likely to embrace the possibility of
relinquishing power. Governments of every stripe around the world, are the
obstacles preventing individual freedom.
The people of the United States should first ensure their continued
freedom by limiting the power of the government through the people elected
to represent us. We should insist that America never relinquish one more
ounce of its national sovereignty, and begin to reclaim our national
sovereignty by disengaging from the labyrinth of UN treaties we have
embraced in recent years. We should insist that our national defense is
second to none, and never subject it to the command of any authority but
our own. We should never relinquish our right for individuals to own and
use land, nor should we allow our government to use our tax dollars to buy
the land which is our posterity's birthright. We should direct our
government to reestablish as its highest priority, the protection of
individual freedom for every American.
These ideas are repugnant to the promoters of global democracy under the
authority of the United Nations. These ideas are labeled as "jingoism."
These ideas are described as "extreme nationalism bordering on hatred of
non-nationals." The opposite is true. These ideas are offered to the rest
of the world because America demonstrates that these ideas can bring the
same kind of benefits to all nations that embrace them.
This is the message the United States should deliver to the United
Nations. The next President and the next Senate will deliver whatever
message we, the voters, send. If we, the United States, embrace the
Charter for Global Democracy and the world government it establishes,
America will be reduced to the lowest common denominator forced equity
demands. The power of individual freedom will be caged in history books
for generations. It could easily take centuries of gradual decline and
rising oppression before a new generation of founders cast off the scourge
of the UN-King and rediscover the truths upon which America's founders
built our great nation. We, the people, literally hold the future of the
world in our hands. The people we send to Washington as the result of our
next election will either embrace world government, or reject it. It is up
to us.
- - - - - - - - - -
Henry Lamb is the executive vice president of the Environmental
Conservation Organization and chairman of Sovereignty International.
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