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2007/12/30

Huckabee Exposed As NWO Puppet

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@ 10:26 AM (8 months, 10 days ago)

TRAITOR

Huckabee the phony fraud who gets his advice from traitors who want to give up our Constitution. A vote for Shmuckabee is a vote for the death of the USA.

Huckafraud Article

Mike Huckabee recently named Richard Haas (the President of the CFR) as his advisor on foreign policy. CNN's WOLF BLITZER asked "Who are your principal foreign policy advisers, Governor?" Mike Huckabee responded: "Well, I have a number of people from whom I get policy. I'm talking to Frank Gaffney, I talk to Richard Haas"

So what does Richard Haas believe in? Here's an article below which was written by Haas for the Tapei Times. It basically states the Bill of Rights and Constitution should be given up in favor of a cooperative world body run by elite consensus. Who needs individual rights in the techno-futuristic world police state? And you thought liberty was in jeopardy now? Just wait till you see what your children will have to deal with. Get activated folks, These police state freaks want to shape your future into a control grid enforced through the fear based reaction to state sponsored false flag terror.

State Sovereignty Must be Altered in Globalized Era

In the age of globalization, states should give up some sovereignty to world bodies in order to protect their own interests

By Richard Haass

Taipei Times - For 350 years, sovereignty -- the notion that states are the central actors on the world stage and that governments are essentially free to do what they want within their own territory but not within the territory of other states -- has provided the organizing principle of international relations. The time has come to rethink this notion.

The world's 190-plus states now co-exist with a larger number of powerful non-sovereign and at least partly (and often largely) independent actors, ranging from corporations to non-governmental organizations (NGOs), from terrorist groups to drug cartels, from regional and global institutions to banks and private equity funds. The sovereign state is influenced by them (for better and for worse) as much as it is able to influence them. The near monopoly of power once enjoyed by sovereign entities is being eroded.

As a result, new mechanisms are needed for regional and global governance that include actors other than states. This is not to argue that Microsoft, Amnesty International, or Goldman Sachs be given seats in the UN General Assembly, but it does mean including representatives of such organizations in regional and global deliberations when they have the capacity to affect whether and how regional and global challenges are met.

Less is more

Moreover, states must be prepared to cede some sovereignty to world bodies if the international system is to function. This is already taking place in the trade realm. Governments agree to accept the rulings of the WTO because on balance they benefit from an international trading order even if a particular decision requires that they alter a practice that is their sovereign right to carry out.

Some governments are prepared to give up elements of sovereignty to address the threat of global climate change. Under one such arrangement, the Kyoto Protocol, which runs through 2012, signatories agree to cap specific emissions. What is needed now is a successor arrangement in which a larger number of governments, including the US, China, and India, accept emissions limits or adopt common standards because they recognize that they would be worse off if no country did.

All of this suggests that sovereignty must be redefined if states are to cope with globalization. At its core, globalization entails the increasing volume, velocity, and importance of flows -- within and across borders -- of people, ideas, greenhouse gases, goods, dollars, drugs, viruses, e-mails, weapons and a good deal else, challenging one of sovereignty's fundamental principles: the ability to control what crosses borders in either direction. Sovereign states increasingly measure their vulnerability not to one another, but to forces beyond their control.

Globalization thus implies that sovereignty is not only becoming weaker in reality, but that it needs to become weaker. States would be wise to weaken sovereignty in order to protect themselves, because they cannot insulate themselves from what goes on elsewhere. Sovereignty is no longer a sanctuary.

This was demonstrated by the American and world reaction to terrorism. Afghanistan's Taliban government, which provided access and support to al-Qaeda, was removed from power. Similarly, the US' preventive war against an Iraq that ignored the UN and was thought to possess weapons of mass destruction showed that sovereignty no longer provides absolute protection.

Imagine how the world would react if some government were known to be planning to use or transfer a nuclear device or had already done so. Many would argue -- correctly -- that sovereignty provides no protection for that state.

Necessity may also lead to reducing or even eliminating sovereignty when a government, whether from a lack of capacity or conscious policy, is unable to provide for the basic needs of its citizens. This reflects not simply scruples, but a view that state failure and genocide can lead to destabilizing refugee flows and create openings for terrorists to take root.

The NATO intervention in Kosovo was an example where a number of governments chose to violate the sovereignty of another government (Serbia) to stop ethnic cleansing and genocide. By contrast, the mass killing in Rwanda a decade ago and now in Darfur, Sudan, demonstrate the high price of judging sovereignty to be supreme and thus doing little to prevent the slaughter of innocents.

Conditions needed

Our notion of sovereignty must therefore be conditional, even contractual, rather than absolute. If a state fails to live up to its side of the bargain by sponsoring terrorism, either transferring or using weapons of mass destruction, or conducting genocide, then it forfeits the normal benefits of sovereignty and opens itself up to attack, removal or occupation.

The diplomatic challenge for this era is to gain widespread support for principles of state conduct and a procedure for determining remedies when these principles are violated.

The goal should be to redefine sovereignty for the era of globalization, to find a balance between a world of fully sovereign states and an international system of either world government or anarchy.

The basic idea of sovereignty, which still provides a useful constraint on violence between states, needs to be preserved. But the concept needs to be adapted to a world in which the main challenges to order come from what global forces do to states and what governments do to their citizens rather than from what states do to one another.

Richard Haass is president of the Council on Foreign Relations and the author of The Opportunity: America's Moment to Alter History's Course.

Comment(s) »

  1. Don't vote for traitor Huckafraud the fake christian!

    See you tonight!

    Comment by Dugg— 2007/12/30 @ 12:25 PM — (Reply)

  2. Don't vote for traitor Huckafraud the fake christian!

    See you tonight!

    Comment by Dugg— 2007/12/30 @ 12:41 PM — (Reply)

  3. Don't vote for traitor Huckafraud the fake christian!

    See you tonight!

    Comment by Dugg— 2007/12/30 @ 12:41 PM — (Reply)

  4. Don't vote for traitor Huckafraud the fake christian!

    See you tonight!

    Comment by Dugg— 2007/12/30 @ 12:41 PM — (Reply)

  5. Ed, tries to repeat his comments over and over to knock off comments he doesnt want you to read.

    Comment by Dugg— 2007/12/30 @ 12:42 PM — (Reply)

  6. Actually you just repeated the exactly same comment three times. On the other hand, Ed does not repeat verbatim. Ed adds depth, not needless repetition. What's the deal with the accusations? No conspiracy here dude. You are simply mistaken.

    :smile:

    Comment by Ed— 2007/12/30 @ 01:50 PM — (Reply)

  7. Hey, Ed - Don't vote for Huckabee the fake Christian!

    Comment by Dugg— 2007/12/30 @ 04:30 PM — (Reply)

  8. I'm not a big Huckabee fan. I really don't like ANY of them. And Hillary even less.

    Comment by Ed— 2007/12/30 @ 04:52 PM — (Reply)

  9. You're a closet Obombu supporter - you've admitted as much. Are you even a conservative?

    Comment by Dugg— 2007/12/30 @ 05:07 PM — (Reply)

  10. It would make my day if Obama was the democrat nominee instead of Hillary. I think YOU'RE a closet Hillary fan.

    Comment by Ed— 2007/12/30 @ 05:20 PM — (Reply)

  11. No - I've made it clear I think she sucks - you, on the other hand, try and shoot down the champion of the constitution at every opportunity and instead admit admiration for Oprahma.

    Comment by Dugg— 2007/12/30 @ 06:28 PM — (Reply)

  12. Wait a second. The main thing I am interested in is "ANYBODY BUT HILLARY". I have absolutely nothing against RP. I liked Thompson early on, but he hasn't delivered. Neither you or I can vote in Iowa, New Hampshire and Nevada. By then we will know whether RP is still alive. I plan to support whatever Republican with perhaps the exception of Guiliani who by that time is looking like the winner. My doubts about RP being the frontrunner at that point make sense based on what I know. I like RP but I don't want to get caught up early and bummed out. My focus is on NO HILLARY.

    Comment by Ed— 2007/12/30 @ 06:42 PM — (Reply)

  13. Fair enough.

    Comment by Dugg— 2007/12/30 @ 07:07 PM — (Reply)

  14. Seriously, don't you find all of these poll results discouraing? It's not like ALL of them can be fixed.

    Comment by Ed— 2007/12/30 @ 07:36 PM — (Reply)

  15. The Mainstream media is controlled liars and has become nearly as irrelevant as reading newspapers or having a 6 o'clock world news. The internet is where the truths at.

    Comment by Dugg— 2007/12/30 @ 08:44 PM — (Reply)

  16. How does that jackass Keith Olbermann fit into this line of thinking?

    Comment by Ed— 2007/12/30 @ 08:54 PM — (Reply)

  17. There's always an exception to every rule. I've never heard him talk about RP - so the jury is still sorta out.

    Comment by Dugg— 2007/12/30 @ 09:03 PM — (Reply)

  18. That is as waffley as the fries at Chic Fil A. The only reason the jackass hasn't dissed RP is because the jackass thinks RP has zero chance. Therefore, based on your logic, that should make the jackass even more of a jackass.

    Comment by Ed— 2007/12/30 @ 09:26 PM — (Reply)

  19. I don't know - he might come out and endorse him - and confirm he's the only one on tv worth a dump.

    Comment by Dugg— 2007/12/30 @ 09:38 PM — (Reply)

  20. You're in denial. You know what I wrote is totally true. Admit it...Olbermann is a jackass. Hey...I have heard you on the RP deal.

    Comment by Ed— 2007/12/30 @ 09:40 PM — (Reply)

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