mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-10-01 01:15:38 -04:00
141 lines
8.1 KiB
Plaintext
141 lines
8.1 KiB
Plaintext
<conspiracyFile><div>
|
|
BLUEPRINT FOR U.S. DICTATORSHIP PLACES INDIVIDUAL RIGHTS AT RISK
|
|
By Mike Blair
|
|
Exclusive to The SPOTLIGHT
|
|
Washington, DC -- During the Persian Gulf war and the military buildup
|
|
leading to it, President George Bush began using the term "New World
|
|
Order," often suggesting that the commitment of so-called multinational
|
|
forces involved in the military effort was the beginning of this alleged
|
|
worldwide utopia.
|
|
Supposedly using the vehicle of the United Nations, Bush's New World
|
|
Order would be the arbitrator of all world problems and the apparatus to
|
|
enforce globalist dictates through the use of armed forces combined from
|
|
the armies of member nations. The UN law would be, regardless of the
|
|
nationalist interests of individual countries, the final word.
|
|
Actually, even the mention of a New World Order would normally be
|
|
anathema to thinking Americans and, in particular, conservative political
|
|
leaders and civil libertarians.
|
|
SINISTER TECHNOLOGY
|
|
It is also surprising to many critics of the move toward one-world
|
|
government that Bush would even dare choose the term "New World Order" to
|
|
define his globalist schemes. However, most Americans alive today were
|
|
born after World War II, when propaganda of the so-called Allied powers
|
|
used the terms of "New Order" or "New World Order" to describe in a
|
|
sinister way the military efforts of Japan and, in particular, Germany
|
|
under Adolf Hitler.
|
|
Few, it seems, have taken the time to analyze just what Bush has in
|
|
mind for his New World Order, of which America is to become an integral
|
|
part, starting with supplying about <data type="percent" unit="%">90%</data> of the muscle, and young
|
|
lives, that tackled and defeated Iraqi strongman Saddam Hussein's Arab
|
|
legions.
|
|
However, patriotic Constitutional scholars know that Bush's New World
|
|
Order is the worst attack ever on America as a sovereign, independent and
|
|
free nation.
|
|
BEGAN WITH WILSON
|
|
Efforts to form a global government are certainly nothing new.
|
|
American political leaders, who were concerned with America first, were
|
|
able to overcome the internationalist, one-world government machinations of
|
|
President Woodrow Wilson following World War I. Wilson was prevented from
|
|
realizing his visions of a New World Order, through the League of Nations,
|
|
by a powerful Senate opposition, which refused to rubber-stamp for Wilson
|
|
U.S. membership in the world body.
|
|
A few decades later, however, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt,
|
|
near the end of World War II, was able to get his one-world plans under way
|
|
by laying the groundwork for today's United Nations, which was completed
|
|
under his successor, Harry S. Truman.
|
|
A few years later, that membership in an UN-mandated war in Korea cost
|
|
America 35000 young lives.
|
|
The problem that one-worlders have always encountered, of course, is
|
|
the U.S. Constitution, which has stood as a bulwark against any globalist
|
|
schemes.
|
|
Nevertheless, American presidents since Roosevelt have insidiously
|
|
chipped away at the great powers of the people, written into the
|
|
Constitution by America's immortal Founding Fathers, with the use of so-
|
|
called executive orders.
|
|
CAUSE FOR ALARM
|
|
Americans should be deeply alarmed that those presidents have signed a
|
|
series of executive orders (EOs) which, under the guise of any national
|
|
emergency declared by the president serving at the time, can virtually
|
|
suspend the Constitution and convert the nation into a virtual
|
|
dictatorship. Dissent, peaceful or otherwise, is eliminated.
|
|
Those backing efforts to circumvent the Constitution may have gotten
|
|
the idea from President Abraham Lincoln, whose use of various extraordinary
|
|
powers of his office -- which many Constitutional scholars still insist was
|
|
illegal -- suspended various civil rights to curb such problems as draft
|
|
riots during the Civil War.
|
|
In 1862, Congress enacted the Enrollment Act to allow the drafting of
|
|
young men for the Union Army. The act was rife with inequities, such as
|
|
the provision which allowed a man to pay $300 or hire a substitute to take
|
|
his place. This hated "Rich Man's Exemption," as it was called, angered
|
|
the average American of military age and in particular young Irish
|
|
immigrants in New York City.
|
|
A riot erupted in New York in 1863, and it resulted in Lincoln using
|
|
some extraordinary powers of his office to keep the Union from falling
|
|
apart from within.
|
|
But over the years, presidents have used these powers for purposes
|
|
never intended by the Founding Fathers.
|
|
INDIANS VICTIMIZED
|
|
President John Tyler used such powers in 1842 to round up Seminole
|
|
Indians in Georgia and Florida and force-march them -- men, women and
|
|
children -- to Arkansas. This was probably the first use of internment in
|
|
America to deal with unpopular minorities. It was not the last.
|
|
In 1886, the Geronimo Chiricahua Apache Indians surrendered to U.S.
|
|
troops in the West, were rounded up by order of President Grover Cleveland,
|
|
and shipped to internment in Florida and Alabama.
|
|
Earlier, during the War Between the States, Sioux Indians in
|
|
Minnesota, when there was a delay in paying them their yearly allowance,
|
|
began attacking nearby white settlements. Lincoln sent in a hastily raised
|
|
force of volunteers under Col. H. H. Sibley. Little Crow, leader of the
|
|
Kaposia band, was decisively defeated by the Union troops on September 23,
|
|
1862, and more than 2000 Sioux were taken captive, although Little Crow
|
|
himself and a few followers escaped.
|
|
Through the process of a military tribunal, sanctioned by Lincoln, 36
|
|
Sioux leaders were publicly hanged. Whether the Sioux executed were
|
|
innocent or guilty was apparently immaterial. The revolt was quelled, and
|
|
the Minnesota Sioux were all moved to reservations in Dakota.
|
|
These instances of the nation's executive branch taking extraordinary
|
|
measures to confine, or intern, American Indians are just a few of many
|
|
examples.
|
|
More recent examples of interning minorities by executive order
|
|
occurred during World War I and World War II.
|
|
During World War I, an unknown number of German-Americans were rounded
|
|
up by federal authorities and interned until after the war. In addition,
|
|
regardless of the First Amendment of the Constitution, which guarantees
|
|
freedom of speech and of the press. German-language newspapers, published
|
|
within German-American communities in the United States, were banned.
|
|
WW II INTERNMENTS
|
|
After the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, within
|
|
days the FBI rounded up tens of thousands of Japanese-Americans, guilty
|
|
only of being of Japanese ancestry, under the authority of an executive
|
|
order issued by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. The lists of those to
|
|
be apprehended had been drawn up months earlier, before the war.
|
|
Held in concentration camps, the perimeters guarded by U.S. soldiers
|
|
armed with machine guns, the mostly innocent and patriotic Japanese-
|
|
Americans were not released until after the war.
|
|
Congress has recently passed legislation extending the nation's
|
|
apologies to the Japanese-Americans and extending them compensation for
|
|
their years of confinement.
|
|
However, no apology or compensation has ever been extended to the more
|
|
than 8000 German-Americans who were confined in dozens of jails and camps
|
|
across the United States, also by order of Roosevelt.
|
|
Many were not released until 1947, a full two years after the end of
|
|
the war, in total violation of the Geneva Conventions.
|
|
"What happened to me and thousands of others is old history," said
|
|
Eberhard Fuhr of Cincinnati, who was interned at 17 years of age, "but the
|
|
next time it could be any other group, which is then not politically
|
|
correct, or out of favor for any other reason (SPOTLIGHT, May 20, 1991).
|
|
Fuhr's warning, of course, had already been proved correct just
|
|
several months earlier when, under orders of Bush, the FBI hounded
|
|
thousands of innocent Arab-Americans as the U.S. prepared for the Persian
|
|
Gulf conflict.
|
|
Only the efforts of a handful of irate U.S. Congressmen halted the
|
|
harassment but not until after a number of U.S. military bases were
|
|
selected as sites of internment camps for Arab-Americans and war
|
|
dissenters.
|
|
<div>
|
|
Reproduced with permission from a special supplement to _The Spotlight_,
|
|
May 25, 1992. This text may be freely reproduced provided acknowledgement
|
|
to The Spotlight appears, including this address:
|
|
The SPOTLIGHT
|
|
300 Independence Avenue, SE
|
|
Washington, DC 20003</conspiracyFile> |