วันศุกร์ที่ 5 กันยายน พ.ศ. 2551





Executive Staff - Americans for a Free Republic
Nelson Hultberg is a freelance writer in Dallas, Texas, a graduate of Beloit College in Wisconsin, and the Executive Director of Americans for a Free Republic. His articles have appeared in publications such as The Dallas Morning News, Insight, The Freeman, Liberty, The Social Critic, and on numerous websites such as Free Market News, Financial Sense, Safe Haven and Gold-Eagle. He is the author of Why We Must Abolish The Income Tax And The IRS (1996), and Breaking the Demopublican Monopoly (2004). In addition he has just finished a book on political- philosophy titled, The Golden Mean: The Case for Libertarian Politics and Conservative Values. In 1998, he was featured along with Congressmen Bill Archer, Dick Armey, and Billy Tauzin in Texas Business magazine as one of Texas' leading tax reformers ("Texas Tea Party," May-June 1998).

Gerard Fitzgerald serves as the President of Americans for a Free Republic. He has enjoyed a highly prosperous career in the field of advertising for over 35 years in Las Vegas, Nevada. Semi-retired at present, he owned his own company (Domad, Inc.) for many years and served as the Director of Advertising for Argent Corporation's Stardust, Hacienda and Freemont Hotels. For 12 years in the late 70s and early 80s, he was the advertising director and close confidant of the famous entertainer Rodney Dangerfield. He handled "out of state promotions" for the state of Nevada throughout North America, and in 1994 he ran on the Republican Party ticket for the Nevada State Legislature. He started life as an ardent Republican, but gradually came to realize the corrupt nature of all politics that tries to run the American economy from Washington. He describes himself as a "Goldwater conservative without the bellicose foreign policy."

Alex Wallenwein serves as the National Chairman of Americans for a Free Republic. He is a freelance journalist out of Houston, Texas, with a B.A. degree in Economics from Florida Atlantic University in Boca Raton, FL (1986), and a Juris Doctorate from South Texas College of Law in Houston (1990). He practiced law in Houston from 1991 to 2002, and in 2003 launched his own publishing business and website, A1 Guide to Gold Investments.com. In 2007, he expanded his investment / financial business into the Small Business Goldmine, which is designed to give U.S. small business owners the opportunity to protect themselves from the current and mounting worldwide credit collapse and the decay of the U.S. dollar. Alex is a fervent advocate of free enterprise and writes a regular online newsletter, Euro vs Dollar Gold Monitor. His articles are carried on numerous Internet sites such as SafeHaven, Financial Sense, and 321 Gold.

Frank Baumgartner is the owner and CEO of Osiris Gold Inc. in Denver, Colorado and the Project Coordinator of Americans for a Free Republic. For all of his adult life, Mr. Baumgartner has been an exemplar of the entrepreneurial spirit that built this country, holding positions of ownership in several highly successful corporations, such as Phoenix Aviation Inc., XL Drilling Company Inc., and Jupiter Corporation. In 1965, he was a member of the famous Arnold Heim Geological Expedition to Greenland. He served in the 25th Division Army Artillery during WW II and was called back for the Korean War. A graduate of Clark University in 1950, he has been a history buff for many decades and is naturally alarmed with the direction of America under the influence of Demopublican political control.

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New show to take audiences through history of Angkor Wat's 'discovery'
Extravaganza to follow French explorer A.H. Mouhot on dreamlike journey through Khmer legends

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Photo Supplied
Organisers are ready to top last year’s lavish Angkor Wat multimedia spectacular with a new production at the end of this year.
IT'S been described as a cross between television historical-romance razzmatazz, mysticism and a traditional music-and-dance stage spectacular, and the promoters call it a "sensory odyssey through magnificent multimedia performances".

But whatever you call it, it was, in showbiz parlance, a smash hit when it debuted last year at Angkor Wat.

A new version of the show will run again during the coming peak tourism season. The lavish outdoor performance is called The Legend of Angkor Wat and subtitled "When History Comes to Life". It will run for six weeks, from December 5, 2008, to January 31, 2009, at an under-the-stars venue set up inside Angkor Wat itself. Performances will be held nightly except Sundays, Christmas Eve (December 24) and New Year's Eve (December 31).

While tickets are not cheap - $60 for standard and $80 for premium seats - sales through international agencies have already been brisk. In August more than 3,000 tickets were sold in Japan alone.

The outdoor venue has 100 VIP seats, 400 premium seats and 400 standards seats, and, if the season is sold out, the collective audience will total almost 50,000.

The show is organised by Siem Reap's Bayon CM Organizer Co Ltd, a joint venture with Bayon TV
General manager Ladda Patthanun Chaiprasert said the venture is put together with the cooperation of the Ministry of Tourism and the Ministry of Culture and Fine Arts.

All historic and cultural details of the show, the script and choreography were developed and supervised by Proeung Chhieng, vice rector and dean of the Faculty of Choreographic Arts, at Phnom Penh's Royal University of Fine Arts. A crew of over 120 helps stage the show which has a cast of 160.

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PETER OLSZEWSKI
Bayon CM Organizer general manager Ladda Patthanun Chaiprasert gets ready to put on a show.
The show has a storyline that criss-crosses in time, centering on the adventures of 19th-century French philologist and explorer Alexandre Henri Mouhot who is mistakenly credited for "discovering" the Angkor complex. While other foreigners had been aware of its existence, Mouhot's visit and his evocative writings popularised the temples in the West, and the rest is, as they say, history.

The Legends show plays with that history, beginning with Mouhot's arrival at Angkor in 1860. He lapses into unconsciousness and, in his dream state, a beautiful Apsara woman guides him back in time to the legendary beginning of Khmer civilisation, with the marriage of the daughter of the king of the nagas.

Subsequent scenes take Mouhot through the King Suryavarman II era, and then it gets even more weird: an exploration of the creation of Apsaras.

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As Muslim community grows, so do Kingdom's ties to Arab states

Over $700 million has been pledged to the nation over the last six months by land-hungry Arab nations, raising concern that their rising influence will radicalise Cambodian Muslims

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HENG CHIVOAN
Kuwaiti Prime Minister Sheikh Nasser Mohammed Al-Ahmed Al-Sabah during a state visit this year.
IN the last six months, more than US$700 million has been pledged to the Kingdom by oil-rich Gulf states, sparking concerns among Western diplomats that the vast investments could be used not just to kick start the agricultural sector, but also to radicalise Cambodia's small but increasingly significant Muslim population.

"There are some organisations here from the Middle East that are very radical and that are very intolerant, and they are trying very hard to change the attitude and the atmosphere of the Muslim population here in Cambodia," said outgoing American Ambassador Joseph Mussomeli in his farewell speech to reporters on August 25.

At a time when rising international commodity prices have given a new imperative to food security and made food export more lucrative, Cambodia, with its vast swaths of under-utilised farmland, is in a strong position to form relationships with cash-loaded but nonarable Arab nations.

In April, the emirate of Qatar said it would invest some $200 million in Cambodian farmland.

Last month, the Gulf state of Kuwait announced it would give Cambodia more than $500 million in soft loans and revealed plans to establish an embassy in Cambodia - which, were it to happen, would mark the first embassy from an Arab nation to open in Phnom Penh.

"Kuwait, of course, is a very wealthy country, so in ways it could be very helpful to Cambodia economically.... The one thing we all need to be careful about is what the money is going to," Mussomeli said.

Cambodian Muslims are "very open and tolerant of other countries", Mussomeli said, but he cautioned that as a very poor community they are vulnerable to being manipulated by groups offering money who "are much more rigid fundamentalists in their perspective and who certainly don't like foreigners or other religions".

Islamic ties
The recent series of high-level state visits from Kuwait and Qatar represent the newest round of contact from Arab countries.


COUNTRIES LIKE THE USA ARE UNHAPPY THAT CAMBODIA IS RECEIVING MONEY FROM KUWAIT.


Beginning in the early 1990s, money from Malaysia and the Middle East flowed into Cambodia's Muslim community, ostensibly to rejuvenate a minority community that had been devastated by the Khmer Rouge and needed to solidify its rightful place in Cambodian society, Cambodian Muslim leaders say.

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HENG CHIVOA
Kuwaiti Prime Minister Sheikh Nasser Mohammed Al-Ahmed Al-Sabah with Prime Minister Hun Sen.
The primary focus of the most recent state visits have been trade. Yet cultural ties are also at stake: Kuwait pledged some $5 million for Cambodian Islamic institutions, including renovating the dilapidated International Dubai Mosque near Boeung Kak lake.

Ahmad Yahya, a government adviser and president of the Cambodian Islamic Development Association, told the Post on Monday that the new facilities at the Boeung Kak mosque were necessary to accommodate the steadily growing Muslim community.

He described the prospect the having Arab embassies in Cambodia as being "symbolically very significant for our community here".

He added that the Muslim community in Cambodia "has just begun to grown up" and pointed to a series of recent gestures by Prime Minister Hun Sen as a sign that it is receiving the respect it deserves.

Within the last year, Hun Sen has called for a Muslim prayer room at the international airport, instructed educators to allow Muslim girls to wear a hijab in the classroom and granted Cham leaders an hour of free airtime for Cham language broadcasts on public radio - all of which Ahmad Yahya called a "big achievement for us".

In response to concerns by Western countries - particularly the US - over how the money will be used, he responded: "If the money goes to individuals and NGOs and no one monitors it, then maybe you have reason to be afraid; but the money is going to the Cambodian government, so why worry about it?"

Domestic recognition

Sith Ybrahim, a secretary of state at the Ministry of Religion, said in an August 28 interview with the Post that the good relationship Hun Sen has maintained with the Cham community has encouraged Islamic countries to give loans to Cambodia and that while "some countries like the USA are unhappy that Cambodia is receiving money from Kuwait, it doesn't affect the feelings of the Muslim people here".

"Some say the money can help make Cambodian Muslims radical, but it won't," he said.

Yet past cases have put an uncomfortable spotlight on Cambodia's Muslim community. In May 2003, police raided the al-Mukara Islamic school. Three foreign-born men as well as one Cambodian man and the Saudi charity that ran the institution were charged with international terrorism and accused of having links to Jemaah Islamiyah, or JI, the Southeast Asian affiliate of al-Qaeda most famous for the 2002 bombings in Bali, Indonesia, that killed more than 200.

It was later discovered that the head of JI, Riduan Isamuddin, had spent almost a year laying low in Cambodia. Another serious scare came in December 2003, when Thai Muslims living in Cambodia were arrested for allegedly plotting terrorist attacks on the US, British and Australian embassies in Phnom Penh.

In the post-September 11 world, Western authorities have continually raised concerns that Cambodia, with its record of poor law enforcement and easy cross-border access, is a vulnerable site for money laundering and purchasing arms, as well as other illicit activities that support terrorism.

Cambodian Chams
Most of Cambodia's 320,000 Muslims, as estimated in 2006 by Cham specialist, Norwegian Bjorn Blengsli, are ethnically Cham, whose practices have traditionally been moderate. But Blengsli has noted a rise of fundamentalism in the Cham community, in particular of Wahhabism, an austere form of Islam originating from Saudi Arabia that he said is now taught in more than half of the Cham community's religious schools.

"Economic ties between Cambodia and Arab countries will lead to more funding for Islamic organisations in Cambodia and, since they are often unhappy with the purity of Islam as it's practiced here, there will be increasing Arab influence on local Muslim practices," Blengsli said.

The penetration of Islamic missionaries, as well as development and educational organisations into Cambodia, is problematic because of the isolation some of these groups encourage, said Alberto Perez, a Cham researcher who is based in Phnom Penh.

"It's extremely difficult for new understanding of Islam brought from the Middle East to find expression in politics and mainstream public life [in Cambodia]," he said.

"The result is that greater Islamisation tends to result in greater separation from Khmer society - a bubble within which they can put Islam into social practice far away from Khmer influence."

While Hun Sen has publicly stated that Muslims must be accepted as an integral part of the country, Perez said many Khmers continue to imagine Muslims as a foreign group and are "suspicious of their intentions because of perceived connections between them and unwanted foreign influences".

But Sith Ybrahim feels that newly formed ties between Cambodia and Islamic countries, as well as the growing presence of Cambodian Muslims in high-ranking government positions, point to a clear trend: Islam has found firm ground in Cambodia.
He added that Cham leaders want to eliminate the stigma in Cambodia associated with their religion and rid them of the "shyness" they have about their identity.

"I'm proud to be Muslim and so should be all Muslims here," he said.

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Hitting the ground running
Arriving in Cambodia in March, Pascal Deyrolle became vice president of the nation's hotel association in July. He's moving fast to carry out some big plans

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PETER OLSZEWSKI
Pascal Deyrolle, general manager of La Residence d’Angkor and vice president of the Cambodian Hotel Association.
WATER conservation and cheaper energy costs in Siem Reap are at the head of the wish list of the new vice president of the Cambodia Hotel Association, Pascal Deyrolle.

Deyrolle is also general manager of Siem Reap's La Residence d'Angkor, and his rise has been rapid. He only arrived in Cambodia on March 19 from France, where he managed luxury canal barges.

Four months to the day after his arrival, he was elected to the vice presidency of the Cambodia Hotel Association, with Luu Meng, general manager of Phnom Penh's new Almond Hotel, as president.

Deyrolle is joined on the board by fellow Siem Reap hoteliers, the general managers of Raffles Grand D'Angkor, the Sofitel Phokeethra, and the Victoria Angkor. He also has the ear of the outgoing association president, Philip Set Kao of Borei Angkor Resort and Spa.

But while new to Siem Reap, Deyrolle is savvy to the looming issues of the day, particularly water conservation.

Water conservation

At the 17th technical meeting of the International Coordinating Committee of Angkor, held at the Sokha Hotel on June 4-5, there was agreement among the delegates to begin a push to persuade major Siem Reap hoteliers to contribute to measures to conserve the province's dwindling water supply. In particular, the delegates agreed, the hotels needed to be urged to spend the capital required to install water recycling plants.

Deyrolle has already begun meetings to address the issue.

"I'm talking to a company about dirty water recycling projects. I want to obtain figures about return on investment to see whether it's feasible for this hotel to have its own plant that can recycle water for gardening." he said.

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Boeung Kak lawyer fails to file appeal due to court tax
The legal battle against lake developers is dashed by the court’s demanding $39.5 million in taxes to accept residents' complaints

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HENG CHIVOAN
A Boeung Kak resident thumbprints a complaint on Tuesday.
THE lawyer representing Boeung Kak lake residents who are demanding market-price compensation for their land said Wednesday that he failed to lodge a case on their behalf with the Phnom Penh Municipal Court due to the court's demands that he pay a tax of millions of dollars.

"The tax payment is 50 percent of the money at stake in the lease agreement," said attorney Choung Choungy.

"The 99-year lease agreement between Shukaku Inc and Phnom Penh Municipality is worth over US$79 million. So the payment would have been about $39.5 million," he added.

"The demand is too high and is likely to close the way for us to bring the complaint to court," Choung Choungy said, adding that he will study the civil code to look for a loophole that will allow him to refile the documents.

A clerk at the court who met the lawyer in the morning said that, according to the law, the more money one demands, the less tax one needs to pay to lodge a complaint. "The tax is only one percent normally," the clerk said.

Lack of resolution
Also on Wednesday, representatives of Boeung Kak villagers, who marched on City Hall demanding a halt to the reclamation of the lake and fair compensation for their land met with Sok Sambath, district governor from the Daun Penh district office.

Protest leader Bun Navy told the Post that the three-hour-long meeting ended without a resolution to the residents' complaints.

"District officials in the meeting still want us to choose options offered by City Hall ," he added.

"Until now 700 families have volunteered to leave the area and decided to choose one of the two options - relocation or a cash sum," Mann Chhoeun, deputy governor of Phnom Penh, said. "The third option is for them to get houses in Boeung Kak after the area is developed."

Mann Chhoeun said that the development company has a set compensation policy requiring homeowners to give their thumbprint before being re-located or receiving money. "Homeowners must give their thumbprint to agree to the deal."

More than 30 families have torn down their homes without seeing any compensation. Protestors are also worried by rising water levels that have caused their houses to flood before they've agreed to receive compensation.

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Good sanitation celebrated
Students participate in a ceremony to mark world WASH day, which aims to highlight the importance of clean water, sanitation and good hygiene

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HENG CHIVOAN
School children celebrate world WASH day on Wednesday in Phnom Penh.
ABOUT 1,000 villagers and primary school students in Russey Keo district's Tuol Sangke commune attended a ceremony Wednesday celebrating Phnom Penh's first Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) day.

WASH day emphasised the importance of washing hands in order to prevent the spread of disease.

Mann Chhoeun, deputy governor of Phnom Penh, and Katherine Crawford, director of USAID's office of Public Health and Education, led the morning ceremony by engaging in a hand-washing display, before about 20 school children who joined in, eager to scrub their palms.

Chiek Ang, deputy director of the municipality's Environmental Department, explained the message behind WASH day.

Stay clean, stay healthy
"People must care about sanitation before eating and after using the toilet by washing their hands," he said. "If our hands are not clean, we can easily get diarrhoea."

Chiek Ang said people around the world would celebrate with a global WASH day on October 15, as a continued celebration of the UN's International Year of Sanitation.

Tuol Sangke commune would become the model for 76 other communes in Phnom Penh by leading the way in improving sanitation and the environment, Chiek Ang said. Toul Sangke commune chief Soy Kosal said at the opening of the campaign that the local authorities were concerned about environmental conditions in the commune.

"Liquid and solid waste affects people's lives in the commune," he said, adding that a lack of education and responsibility had made people unhealthy.

USAID's Crawford said she hoped the day's event would be "the first in a series of events in Phnom Penh, which is joining with the world to mark the International Year of Sanitation".

Mann Chhoeun said there would be educational banners on five main national roads connecting to the city.

"Pictures and words in banners educate people to the importance of clean environments for good health," he said.

"People should pack waste in plastic and dispose of it correctly," he said.

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Cambodia gets more urban
The Kingdom's second post-UNTAC census shows that overall, population growth is slowing but the percentage of the people living in cities is rising

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VANDY RATTANA
Census data being handed out to participants at a ceremony Wednesday.
Cambodia's population is fast approaching 14 million people, more than half of whom are women, according to preliminary results from the first general census to be conducted in a decade, which were released Wednesday.

The census, which was supported by the United Nations Population Fund and the Japan International Cooperation Agency, also found that population growth was slowing.

While Cambodia remains a largely rural country, more people were living in cities, the census found.

"According to the preliminary results, the population of Cambodia stood at 13,388,910 at midnight on March 3, 2008, consisting of 6,495,512 males and 6,893,398 females," said Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of the Interior Sar Kheng, who also chairs the National Census Committee.

"The provisional figures at the national level indicate that the total fertility rate and growth rate of the population has slowed down as predicted [due to rising prosperity and improved female literacy acting to reduce birth rates,]" he added at a ceremony to mark the release of the census.

The 2004 Cambodia Inter-censal Population Survey, which unlike the 2008 census did not take into account the institutionalised and the homeless, estimated the Kingdom's population to be 12,824,000, which broke down along gender lines to 6,197,000 males and 6,627,000 females.

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Opposition takes vote fight abroad
Overseas tour aims to bring international attention to fraud
THE Sam Rainsy Party and Human Rights Party have stepped up their opposition to the results of this year's national election, despite official results confirming the dominance of the ruling Cambodian People's Party.

Sam Rainsy and HRP head Kem Sokha departed on a whirlwind tour of Europe and North America Wednesday night in a bid to publicise their claims that the CPP engineered its landslide victory through the manipulation of voter lists prior to the July 27 poll.

"The poll did not represent the people's will, [and] we have the necessary documents and witnesses to substantiate our complaints," said Sam Rainsy at a pre-departure press conference at HRP headquarters.

"I believe that foreigners will not sell themselves to the CPP if we take clear documents to show them."

Kem Sokha said the fraud committed in 2008 went beyond the irregularities observed in 2003.

"In the 2003 election, the irregularities were not as great as now, especially since a large mass of voters was deleted from the lists," he told the Post, adding that the pair would speak to officials in Paris, Brussels, New York and Washington.

"I think the signatories of the [1991] Paris Peace Accords need to know that the election was not fair," he said.

Both parties have also confirmed they will proceed with their boycott of the swearing-in of the new National Assembly on September 24, but would join the Assembly the following day.

"Our members will not attend the swearing in of the National Assembly, but will instead be sworn in on September 25. We will not be sworn in with the two thief parties [CPP and Funcinpec]," said Sam Rainsy. "[We] will ask the King to be sworn in on the 25th."

But government spokesman Khieu Kanharith said neither tactic would have any effect on the validity of the election results.

"Even if they make their complaints to the EU and UN, it will not change the result," he said, predicting the opposition parties would drop their boycott threats for fear of losing seats.

"If they don't attend the first session of the NA, they will lose face," he said.

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Court suspends Preah Vihear land case
PHNOM Penh Municipal Court Judge Ke Sokhan on Wednesday suspended judgment against 16 people charged with illegally clearing a protected forest in Preah Vihear and using weapons against authorities who tried to forcibly evict them.

"We are suspending the trial because the complexities of the case require further consideration," a second judge, Nhean Sovann, told the court. "A new trial date has not yet been scheduled."

The charges stemmed from an incident in November 2007 during which armed civilians and military police, along with forestry officials, shot dead two people and detained 16 others accused of illegally clearing a protected forest outside Sra'em village in Preah Vihear.

Former deputy governor of Preah Vihear, Meas Savoeun, has denied accusations that he ordered villagers to clear the forest and used an illegal firearm during a standoff with police.

Man Chanthorn, whose wife was shot and killed by authorities during the standoff, said he received a letter of support from former King Norodom Sihanouk, who sought his freedom from prison, and pleaded to be released to care for his three children.

All defendants maintained their innocence and asked the court to dismiss the charges.

However, prosecutor Hing Bun Chea insisted the court uphold the law, and forestry officials requested the court impose a US$50,000 fine on each defendant.

Am Sam Ath, an adviser for the rights group Licadho, said the court has ignored the true criminals in the case by not focusing on those who killed the two villagers."Instead, they are trying to convict the victims."

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Union boss pushes PM to lower fuel prices
UNION activist Rong Chhun in a letter dated Wednesday lobbied Prime Minister Hun Sen to pressure petroleum companies to lower fuel prices to 4,000 riels per litre.

After a period of hikes, local fuel prices have stabilised at around 5,400 riel a litre, but have not decreased even as international crude prices dropped US$36 to around $110 per barrel from a record highs in mid-July.

"The petroleum companies can[not] reject an order from the prime minister," said Rong Chhun, the Cambodian Independent Teachers Association president. He said skyrocketing fuel prices have dealt a major blow to already cash-strapped civil servants.

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In Brief: School soon to have new buildings
Construction is proceeding on schedule for new classrooms at Wat Mon Thyean Primary School in Kok Russey Kang Cherng village, Dan Run commune, Sautr Nikom district, 35 kilometres from Siem Reap. The "incomplete" primary school only offers grades 1-4 in two run-down wooden classrooms. Students travel three or four kilometres further along high-traffic roads for grades 5-6, so many kids do not complete primary school. The new classrooms will enable the addition of grades 5 and 6 as well as a kindergarten and should help improve primary school completion rates. The project is an initiative of Schools for Children of Cambodia (SCC), a British-registered charity established in 2003. Work commenced on June 30 and is slated for completion on October 13. The contractor is PHV Construction Co Ltd. The US$61,000 cost was provided by the village community and SCC's private, international donors. A Ministry of Education, Youth and Sport contribution will pay salaries for teachers for the additional grades.

Putting a lid on rubbish dumping
Siem Reap's provincial Department of Environment is urging residents to stop randomly dumping rubbish. Department vehicles have been spreading the gospel via loudspeakers, focusing initially on the more scenic riverside districts, and deputy director Khoeurn Sokunvisith told the Post that the campaign has been effective. "There has been a lot of improvement, but there's still work to be done," he said. The campaign has pointed out the health benefits of ridding the streets of rubbish and informed people where rubbish can be placed to be collected. Unn Sophary

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วันพฤหัสบดีที่ 4 กันยายน พ.ศ. 2551

Freedom and Pax Americana
Nelson Hultberg
Jul 07, 2003

"Whom the gods wish to destroy, they first make mad," goes the ancient saying. If this is true, then our leaders in Washington are headed straight for the cuckoo's nest. There is a virulent, hubristic madness consuming our political elites in this first decade of the 21st century.

It manifests in the intrusiveness of the Nanny State, in the relentless debasement of our currency, in the manipulation of our markets, and in the outrageous taxes that sap the entrepreneurial vigor from our lives. But scariest of all, it manifests in the employment of unbridled power to remake the world's divergent cultures, religions, and systems into American democracy clones. Power, our Federal Government has -- political, bureaucratic, police, military, monetary, and taxing power. It has had such power in excessive amounts for over a century now, and it has grown quite ruthless in wielding it in order to pursue its goals. Its primary goal is HEGEMONY over other regions and countries, as well as over American citizens themselves.

This should not be surprising. This is what tyrannical governments have been doing for thousands of years. Since the days of the ancient Pharaohs, they have sought to control their neighbors as well as their own citizens, and they have justified their behavior by insisting that "peace and stability" were their aims. But power is their real aim. And sadly, individuals become ciphers in the process. This is what is unfolding once again, as it has countless times in the past.

Study the annals of man from the Sumerian kings, to Alexander the Great, to Frederick Barbarossa, to Napoleon, Stalin and the modern despots, and the major leitmotif of the entire panorama is PURSUIT OF POWER by governments over individual citizens. With the onset of the War on Terrorism, our Federal Government has now ratcheted up its drive for hegemony both domestically and worldwide. In September 2002, the Bush administration released its new National Security Strategy, which was a sweeping agenda to mount a retaliation against the terrorist threat from Islam. But it was also something else; it was the first implementation step for the vision of Pax Americana. This vision has its origin in the controversial 1992 Pentagon report by former under secretary of defense Paul Wolfowitz titled, "Defense Planning Guidance."

In it, he called on America in the post Cold War era to alter its foreign policy aims from merely defense of our nation to actively pursue a reshaping of the world -- in short, get involved in nation building whenever and wherever it would appear to benefit us. Now that we are the only superpower in the world, we must seize the opportunity to bend as many nations as possible to our will, to our values, to our form of democracy. Only in this way, can we truly promote "peace and stability" for ourselves and our allies. Only in this way can America heed the call to national greatness that falls on the shoulders of singular superpowers. The Wolfowitz doctrine has been refined and sophisticated during the past ten years by high level pundits of Washington such as Bill Kristol and Robert Kagan of the Project for a New American Century (PNAC).

The refined version now has numerous aggressive foreign policy goals for America to pursue. Reduced to its fundamentals, this doctrine is meant to make America into an imperialistic power and to be proud of it. It is defined by Kristol and Kagan as "benevolent global hegemony." One of the most important of the PNAC goals is the imposition of democracy upon as many nations as possible -- especially nations of the Middle East -- through both stick and carrot methodologies. If a nation can be bribed into democracy, all well and good; but if it can't be bribed, then it is to be bludgeoned. Democracy has become our new god, the raison d'etre, the salvation of our lives. It is now the curative for all the world's ills from war, to poverty, to cultural primitiveness.

Spread its healing principles to mankind, and we can build a heaven on earth. Such is the madness that now consumes our Federal Government. "Washington today is trying to turn everyone into Americans," writes Richard Maybury in his July issue of Early Warning Report. "No one makes any secret of the fact that Washington sees Iraq as a test case for [its imposition of democracy] plan. George Bush boasted about it in his February 26th speech. He intends to spread the American Way throughout Arab lands, to 'transform that vital region.'" Because the heathens lack democracy, they are prone to breed extremism and hatred, they war on their neighbors, and most importantly they wish to blow up people and buildings in America.

According to the Kristol-Wolfowitz PNAC model, terrorism has its roots in the non-democratic political ideologies of the Third World, especially in the theocracies of the Middle East. Thus, the first order of the new Pax Americana is to bring those we deem as heathens to democracy, to modernize the poor devils, and while we're at it teach them the beauties of a more materialistic culture. Since democracy is the summum bonum of our day, we have the duty to impose it upon those who are backward. The fact that the British felt the same call to duty in their imperialistic dreams of the 19th century goes ominously unnoticed by our punditry. What is the difference between the Kristol-Wolfowitz vision and the expansionist policies of Benjamin Disraeli and Queen Victoria in England of the 1870's that promoted war against the Afghans and the Zulus? British style colonization may not be the goal of the PNAC vision, but the curse of world hegemony is, just as it was in the days of Pax Britainia. History does not repeat precisely, but it does in general principle. And Washington is repeating the sins of the past while our pundits pusillanimously blank out. Our Federal Government has divorced itself from the true meaning and purpose of America in both its domestic and its foreign policies. It is to be feared as a despoiler among nations and men. It has crossed the Rubicon into imperial overreach. In an article in January of this year, I wrote that I saw the coming Iraqi war, whether it was to unfold horrifically or painlessly, as just the beginning of a whole series of Islamic-Washington clashes over the next 10 to 20 years. I stated that genuinely healthy economies are not spawned from protracted periods of war. And that this is what lies on America's horizon for a long time to come.

So better load up on gold and silver in whatever manner your risk tolerance allows. And spread the word about the hubris that is causing it all. That is what sane men do in times of upheaval. If the world wants to go insane, it has that prerogative. But the wiser heads of history always refuse to take part, and they always look to protect themselves from the insanity. I see no reason to change that view. In fact, the events unfolding since then have only reinforced my conviction that there is so much ignorance and arrogance ruling Washington today that only a catastrophic denouement that extends for years can rouse the intelligentsia from their madness.

Only through a cathartic crash of historic proportion can the necessary changes be brought about in our national perspective to restore freedom, sound money, and proper foreign policy. The Costs of Empire Trade and fiscal deficits are now exploding like Krakatoa and St Helens to pay for the delusions of our leaders. Years of prodigality that would make Louis XIV blush have gutted our national savings and sanity. Washington's welfare bureaucracy is today's Versailles Palace. Gold leases, swaps, deceit, and MANIPULATION are now the tools of Greenspan's Fed -- so terrified are his governors of the unmitigated horror awaiting the nation because of their 90-year experiment in dollar alchemy. Greenspan has become nothing but a gussied up Keynesian medicine man -- mixing interest rate tonics, Forex cathartics, bond purchase elixirs, and snake oil monetization into a putrid witch's brew to try and cast just the right spell over the economy to somehow turn fractional reserve dross into gold.

But the laws of nature are not to be conned. The Fed's credit money is still debt, and it will not move an economy already suffocating in debt. 'Sir' Alan sold out his youthful principles to ride around in the black limousines, and now he has only a shaman's bogus remedies with which to try and salvage his place in the history books. He gave up, with the sale of his principles, the only instrument that could save the nation -- gold.

His recondite speeches, so popular among the sycophants of Washington during the go-go nineties, are now seen for what they always were -- self-serving gobbledygook and mystification to further perpetrate the power of the Federal Government in our economic lives. The Federal Government's fiscal deficit will come in somewhere between $300 and $400 billion this year, while the trade deficit will exceed $500 billion. According to Bill Bonner, the estimates on what the Iraqi regime change will ultimately cost range anywhere from $27 billion to $1.92 trillion. With the Federal Government's track record for "honest statistical evaluation," what are the chances that its final bill is closer to the $1.92 trillion figure than the $27 billion figure? Pretty damn good, I would say. Does anyone with a semblence of a brain still think such gross fiscal insanity can be rectified with "monetary policy," that such debt will not have to be purged through an excruciating economic collapse? Sadly yes, there are those that do. They ride around Washington in black limousines and pour forth, to media lackeys and talk show barkers, the most disingenuous fallacies of our age.

To compound the problem of trade and fiscal deficits that Demopublican statism has brought us via its 30 year orgy of buying votes with paper dollars, we now add the cost of empire. Heathens are not converted cheaply. Our Iraqi venture is beginning to settle into the morass of guerrilla resistance a little more each week. And guerrilla resistance, as the Russians found out in Afghanistan, can go on indefinitely. Its like the irrationality of the stock market; it can stay predominate far longer than a nation's treasury can stay solvent. What glee our enemies must be experiencing at sight of obtuse Americans trying to fathom why the Shiites do not care to adopt our democracy and our Constitution. As Maybury points out, they have their own Constitution. It's the Koran, and it has ruled them for over a thousand years.

Yet Kristol-Wolfowitz, et al imagine that they can overturn 1400 years of metaphysical tradition with gung-ho American lectures. I have a bit of bad news for Kristol-Wolfowitz, et al. Change in a culture's metaphysical views takes place over centuries, not months and years. It moves like a glacier sliding across a continent. And it does not respond to the butt end of a rifle.

Yet the madness has already been launched and cannot be retracted now. So America will have to play this game out. It will be, in my opinion, a game that will cost us hundreds of billions of dollars and many lives lost literally on the battlefield of the Mideast cauldron, as well as untold lives lost morale-wise on the home front as our economy slouches toward bankruptcy and an Argentine future because of our government's ever-extending reach beyond its financial and spiritual supply lines. Because Keynes mesmerized our leaders in college, they do not grasp the critical role that savings play in creating productivity in a healthy society.

They believe that consumption is the engine of economic growth, and that paper money can ignite it forever. They thus do not understand why military expansion, such as we are now embarking upon, must ravage a nation whose people are in debt up to their eyebrows in the domestic arena. They do not understand that a nation devoid of savings (as America is now) has extended itself beyond its capacity to finance "global hegemony." They believe in the power of printed money as if it is actual wealth. The Keynesian virus has done this to them. Washington's original estimate was that a successful regime change would require the stationing of our troops in Iraq for 1-2 years. Then the estimate gradually became 4-5 years.

Now President Bush merely tells us that Americans face a "massive and long-term undertaking" in rebuilding Iraq. Has anybody in the media noticed how specific the estimates were to sell the Iraqi venture, and now how vague the estimates are to sell the idea of a protracted American occupation? Does anybody remember LBJ and Vietnam, Clinton and Bosnia? For god's sake, they're all the same -- these despicable Demopublicans! What is so aggravating today is to have to endure the dupes who buy into the establishment fiction that America has a "two-party" political system. Wake up Americans! We as a country are slowly evolving into a dictatorship. Both political parties -- Democrats and Republicans -- are at fault here.

Both parties have abandoned the principles of a free society, and have adopted the collectivist-arbitrary law approach that undergirds all the tyrannies of history. It matters not whether it's LBJ or Nixon, Carter or Reagan, Clinton or Bush. Both parties have become merely subdivisions of one party because they are the same in principle. They both promote a subtle brand of economic fascism -- equivalent to Mussolini's corporate-statism. The difference is that Republicans emphasize the foreign policy arena, while Democrats revel in the domestic arena. But they both spread Big Brother omnipresence once in power. This is what we in the libertarian/conservative movement (now led by Ron Paul and the Liberty Committee in Congress) have been preaching for 30 years, that both parties have been taken over by collectivism and arbitrary law.

But America was founded upon individualism and objective law -- in other words law that is the same for everyone, that is Constitutionally limited in its scope, that requires self-reliance. Yet we have slowly throughout the 20th century evolved into our present Demopublican system of law that is different for different people, i.e., arbitrary, and which foments ever-increasing dependence upon government. It is a political system that is based totally upon the conveyance of privileges to special groups.

Once such a system of law is taught by the intellectuals in the schools, and accepted by those who are subservient among the populace, then the rest is only a matter of time. A dictatorship will develop where once there was freedom throughout the land. It is this unleashing of "arbitrary law" that has led us to centralized government and rampant power lust, which has now led us to compulsive hegemony and Pax Americana. This is what has created the chutzpah to imagine that those we deem as heathens should be purified with "democracy," despite the fact that both their rights and the rights of American citizens are usurped in the process. Our establishment pundits, of course, are busy defaulting on their responsibility to remind the American people about such truths. This is their nature -- to blank out on all hard truths so as to continue to feed at the trough of Power. Attending palace dinners and courting the favor of Washington bigwigs is what excites our establishment media.

This obsession with hegemony is why we are still in Korea 50 years later. It is why we are still in Okinawa, still in Taiwan, still in Bosnia, still in Germany, still in NATO. It is why, as Richard Russell points out, we have major foreign bases in 36 countries and more than 260,000 troops stationed overseas with 50,000 military personnel on carriers constantly prowling the oceans. [With the Iraqi occupation, the 260,000 troops overseas are now in the neighborhood of 400,000.] All told, Russell reports, our military has more than 800 bases of various sizes around the world, including 60 major ones. There are 189 nations in the UN, and we have our military in 140 of them! [January 15, 2003]. A military presence of 400,000 troops dispersed to 140 of the 189 member nations of the UN! This certainly has to be defined as imperial overreach! This may not be the pursuit of empire in the conventional sense because we claim no territorial ambitions as Rome and England before us. But it is an insane over-extension beyond our supply lines; it is pure madness. We are now the world's Imperial Super Cop.

The implementation of such a role in the Middle East will require decades of occupation. Just think of that prospect -- our troops stationed in Iraq for decades! It cannot help but create virulent enmity among the rest of the Islamic world and spawn even more terrorist attacks upon our shores! Millions of Muslims throughout the Middle East will simply solidify further their conception of us as vile Crusaders come to dominate them once again. Over time, we will be seen as modern day Roman legions hanging around afterwards to subjugate them.

We will become as popular with the Arab street as the presence of toxic waste is in a community's water supply. All this to get rid of one tin-pot dictator? Great nations fall precisely because of this kind of blindness, this kind of ivory tower imbecility that the Kristols and Wolfowitzs of history always feel so eager to heap upon their fellow men. What Is to Come Because of This? Edward Gibbon wrote his History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire over two hundred years ago. At the end, he concluded that modern civilization was too complex to fall. He was most indubitably wrong. All civilizations are prone to falling because they are comprised of flawed humans who, because they possess but a tiny flash of existence, are driven to seek all manner of aberrancies to gratify their desires -- to live, drink and be merry for tomorrow brings one's demise.

Power lust is the most lethal of the aberrancies because it so often involves masses of humans, giant bureaucracies, wars, and warped visions. Will we in America be able to avoid Rome's path? Viewing the world from today's perspective, one would have to say the chances are not good that we will. Of course, this could change. History is not set in stone; it is the result of men's choices. If we were to experience a return to reason in the aftermath of the upcoming world breakdown, it is quite conceivable that out of the wreckage there would come a rebirth of freedom and sound money again. It won't be the result of our establishment thinkers, however.

It will come from the contrarians of the world -- thinkers such as Ludwig von Mises, Richard Weaver, Thomas Sowell, Murray Rothbard, Ayn Rand, Rose Wilder Lane, etc. One thing is certain; the new policy of Pax Americana will bring all Americans less and less freedom. This is already manifest in such legislative monstrosities as the USA Patriot Act.

What an insult to name a legislative bill that opens the door for Big Brother with a term immortalized by the Founding Fathers. But this is the pathological nature of our government in Washington. It must now use tyrannical "newspeak" to pass its bills. The USA Patriot Act is a giant step toward that Orwellian world awaiting us in the future. As Nancy Chang, Senior Litigation Attorney at the Center for Constitutional Rights, describes it, "the Act sacrifices our political freedoms in the name of national security...by consolidating vast new powers in the executive branch of government." 1) "The Act grants the executive branch unprecedented, and largely unchecked, surveillance powers, including the enhanced ability to track email and Internet usage, conduct sneak-and-peak searches, obtain sensitive personal records, monitor financial transactions, and conduct nationwide roving wiretaps." 2) "The Act permits law enforcement agencies to circumvent the Fourth Amendment's requirement of probable cause when conducting wiretaps and searches that have, as a 'significant purpose,' the gathering of foreign intelligence." 3) "The Act allows for the sharing of information between criminal and intelligence operations and thereby opens the door to resurgence of domestic spying by the Central Intelligence Agency." [cited by Jennifer Van Bergen, "What the Patriot Act Means for Americans," -- April 4, 2002] Big Brother is coming! And his omnipresence is being promoted by both Republicans and Democrats. Pax Americana is the straw that will break our economy's back. The debt load it heaps upon our already sated budgets will have to be monetized. Interest rates will reverse their present trend and begin a long-term rise. Large holdings of foreign capital will be repatriated. The Dow and the S&P will drift southward toward 3000 and 300 on the charts, even though the PPT will be hard at work trying to shore them up. Competitive currency devaluations will begin to spread around the world, as each nation scrambles to keep pace with America's weak dollar policy. Arabs will relentlessly dump dollars to counter American hegemony in their back yard, which will steadily drain foreign capital and cap any and all equity rallies.

Greenspan will be faced with the dreaded "deflation of assets" that he is so fervently trying to avoid with his bubble creation policies. The Fed will then have to face the rock-and-a-hard-spot choice that they have been avoiding for two years. They will have to resort to actually printing up money, rather than just jawboning about it. They will have to ignite inflationary prices. They will do this because it will be their only option. Will such Fed capitulation then bring on hyperinflation? According to Kondratieff theory, it would be almost inescapable. But this writer is just skeptical enough of formal theories about the future in a messy world to entertain doubts. There are far too many variables that flow in and out of the arena, that cannot be totally comprehended as to their impact, to state with certainty that deflation must result, and that hyperinflation must follow. All we can say is that the future will be one of SEVERE CRISIS.

Whether that crisis is deflationary or inflationary, or a combine of both, depends upon how Washington's cornered rats react to the dilemmas of the upcoming years, and what measures of response come from other nations. Men and nations have free will, and history has a way of interminably fooling its prophets. It's as inscrutable as a cat. One thing we can probably predict is that China will patiently sit in its cat bird seat and gladly accumulate all the gold that our bullion bank ignoramuses in New York keep dumping onto the market. China's historical respect for the metal was never quite obliterated by Keynesian doctrine as ours was here in the West. The rulers in Beijing wish to be a premier regional power at the very least, and perhaps even assume America's place as the world's reigning superpower.

They know that such dreams will come about only if they attain economic dynamism, and economic dynamism is tied irrevocably to a strong currency backed by gold. So they patiently accumulate, and watch with appreciation the American death dance on Wall Street and in Washington. Pax Americana is now official. It is openly proclaimed by powerful intellectuals and scholars in the establishment circles of Washington. It will guide both Republicans and Democrats alike in the upcoming years.

It will result in monstrous debt burdens and the gradual erosion of America as a superpower. It will bring us $1,000 gold, and maybe much higher. A great nation has taken a step toward historical oblivion. The path is not irreversible, but it will take a great awakening in this next decade to avert America's fall. The Keynesian chickens that FDR set loose are finally coming home to roost. The laws of nature that Jefferson and Madison so wisely built upon, and which we so ignorantly scorn, are still there behind the scenes working their magnetic hold over our decisions. They are eternal. If an American renaissance is to take place, it will come only from a restored respect for those immutable laws that the Founding Fathers understood so well.

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The Golden Mean
The Case for Libertarian Politics and Conservative Values

Introduction to The Golden Mean (pgs. 1-7) The prevailing sentiment on the political right today is that there can be no compromise between the forces of libertarianism and those of conservatism. Such an attempted mix is as Russell Kirk put it, "like advocating a union of fire and ice." Murray Rothbard's hard core libertarians conclude also that the two philosophical views are forever incompatible, and that there can never be a meeting ground where conservatives and libertarians will be able to coalesce. This is primarily because libertarians believe that the central dilemma of civilization is liberty and how to advance it, while conservatives believe that the central dilemma of civilization is order and how to preserve it. Moreover, many libertarians believe in the perfectibility of man, while conservatives see man as forever flawed in nature. Therefore, these two groups must go it alone, each fighting for the implementation of its specific worldview on its own.

This sentiment is greviously flawed, and it has led to our present ineffectuality in combating the statism so insidiously consuming the modern world. Neither of the two philosophies of libertarianism and conservatism can stand alone, nor would any clear thinking person wish them alone upon humanity. A purely conservative country would be a static despotism of traditionalist philosopher kings, and a purely libertarian country would be a cultural anarchy of moral primitives. One of the purposes of this book is to demonstrate that each philosophy only gains validity by adopting strains of the other. The error in this dispute is in misunderstanding what a union of the two really signifies. It doesn't mean that the political structure is going to be half-libertarian and half-conservative, or that we can somehow assimilate a do-your-own-thing philosophy into an objective moral realm. Indeed, this would be an attempt to produce the union of fire and ice that Kirk scorned. The union of libertarians and conservatives into a cohesive philosophy of "free-market conservatism" means that the political structure must be libertarian, and that the cultural value structure must be conservative, and that there is no other means to maintain a free, prosperous, ordered existence. Libertarian politics requires a conservative value structure in order to be workable, and a conservative value structure requires libertarian politics in order to be just. Each of these, devoid of the other, would wither and die with chaos the result in one instance and tyranny the result in the other.

What is meant by a "libertarian political structure" is that man was meant to be free. He possesses certain clear cut rights that are to be protected, rather than manipulated, by politicians. Therefore, his government must be objectively limited by a Constitution rather than arbitrarily determined by the dictates of an autocrat or the passions of the majority. What is meant by a "conservative value structure" is acceptance of the fact that there is an objective moral order in the universe, i.e., certain rights and wrongs in life that are applicable to all humans for all of time.

* * * *
An important part of this book is devoted also to unscrambling some of the illogic that has consumed the political right because of Ayn Rand. For the past 50 years, this philosopher-novelist has been a shining inspiration to millions of readers, yet a bombastic misanthrope to millions of others.

What I came to believe after reading through her works was that the woman had one fireball of a mind, but a mind that suffered more than a few misunderstandings about the kaleidoscope of complexities that comprises life. She thought titanically and wrote eloquently, but was so insulated in the moral-ideological ivory tower she created for herself that enormous gaps developed in her grasp of what makes up human existence.

Rand's philosophy of Objectivism still appeals to thousands of thinking men and women and is rallied to by new converts every year through her muscular, heroic novels. But what is damaging about the Rand phenomenon is the fact that libertarians, in their embrace of Rand's primary premises (several of which are flawed), have created a philosophical movement that cannot get successfully launched as it is presently constructed. They have built a rocket ship with a faulty engine that, upon every takeoff, propels them only a short distance into the sky and then plumets back to earth.

I will explain in this book the major weaknesses in Rand's ethical thinking that have prohibited libertarianism from becoming a counterveiling force to statism. And I will also show how to restructure the libertarian ship to give it the strength to truly take flight. Because I disagree with Rand's ethical ideas, however, doesn't mean I consider her to be a waste of time. Far from it; there is much of benefit to learn from her works -- e.g., her understanding of individual rights and how they are being destroyed, her identification of altruism (in its sacrificial form) as the moral fount of tyranny, her formulation of the "sanction of the victim" and the "hatred of the good for being the good," her insistence that ideology is the prime mover of history, etc.

But one must read her for her wisdom and dismiss her folly, which requires a certain perspective that comes from experience in life. Rand had incredibly trenchant things to say to us about capitalism, tyranny, individualism, the entrepreneur, the powers of reason and morality, the need for heroism, etc. But she floundered with the primary goal of her writing -- her attempt to launch a new egoistic ethical system for man. To the extent that libertarians and objectivists embrace her "new ethical system," they undercut the real strength of capitalism as a way of life. If America and capitalism are to be saved for future centuries, it will not be on the iconoclastic wings of egoism, but upon a new rendition of the ancient wisdom that has guided man ethically for thousands of years.
* * * *

Just as libertarians are going to have to make some radical changes in their overall philosophy, so too are those who deem themselves conservatives. Sadly over the last few decades, there has solidified in the minds of many prominent conservatives a disasterous way of thinking. They have come to believe that by accepting the ideology of the welfare state and merely arguing for a more prudent implementation of its goals, that we can stem the tide of statism. On the contrary, such an approach ushers in tyranny, rather than stems the tide of it. In order to counteract the disease of statism, one must go to the root causes of the disease, which means one must challenge its moral and philosophical premises.

Too many conservatives today are not concerned with such a challenge. They are more concerned with scholarly acceptance in their own time than adherence to principle for all of time. They have become "media-darling" conservatives. They fear that since statism is the fashion of the age, to challenge the moral foundation of the welfare state would place them outside the circle of socially approved intellectuality and thus render them ineffective. But what they fail to see is that it is always contrarian intellectuals who most dramatically shape history. From Socrates, to Erasmus, to Galileo, to Adam Smith, to Thomas Jefferson, to Ludwig von Mises, to Richard Weaver, truth and freedom have never been defended by compromising with the forces of statism that exist in one's time.

Too many today have convinced themselves that by fighting statism's degree rather than its essence, they can somehow stop its ever increasing suffocation of the individual. The lures of "celebrity" and "social approval" have consumed their integrity of thought. They want too much to be revered by the political grafters who wield power, as if recognition conveyed by usurpers is somehow honor.

In the end, there is no hope for freedom if men of the mind are not willing to truly stand for freedom, to make of themselves Gibraltar-like representatives of its attributes no matter what level of rejection, calumny and injustice is heaped upon them. This is the true role of the intellectual in history, his only role -- to stand intransigently for truth and its concomitant of freedom, even in face of a vast social herd of academic pedants, poseurs, and media clowns stampeding the other way.

The disease of collectivist-liberalism has only one antidote -- restoration of a strictly limited government that treats all citizens objectively -- which can be brought about onlyif we as a country abandon the fundamental premises of modern day liberalism. This book will identify such premises and formulate the only effective strategy to challenge them. If conservatism is to be a movement of freedom and justice, its leaders must cease defaulting on their responsibility to put forth this challenge.

* * * *

A growing body of dissenting thought in America today agrees with the above perspective. This book is an attempt to crystalize such a view, by resurrecting trampled on truths long forgotten but vital to the freedom and dignity of men. It is a composite of five essays dealing with Aristotle's famous Law of the Mean (i.e., Golden Mean), and how it applies to the great questions of politics, economics and ethics.

Practically everyone is familiar with the concept of a Golden Mean in at least a rudimentary sense, for we have all been taught from earliest childhood about the virtue of balance and the evil of extremism in our daily lives. Yet even if we were never taught its truth, I believe some men would still intuitively gravitate to the wisdom it affords, utilizing it as the basis of their judgment of what should be taking place around them -- for it is one of the natural lodestars of life that rule our existence.

It is this writer's belief that most of the tyranny, degradation and chaos, that has overwhelmed so many people throughout the world during the past 100 years, can be attributed to the fact that we have moved steadily away from the Golden Mean in the most important regions of our lives. What I will do in this book is to explain such a moving away, how it has distorted our freedom, our ideals and our moral beliefs -- and why we as a people must restore such a mean to our way of life again.

The premises that will be examined are as follows: There exists in the natural scheme of life a great ideal of "right action" -- which in the political arena is where both liberty and order reside. In essence these two values are not antagonists but complements, which can and must be equally integrated into a country's socio-political system. One need not be sacrificed to the other; in actual fact they cannot exist without the other. And most importantly, there is a body of definable principles that will lead to a society that is both virtuous and free.

In other words, there is a natural law that permeates existence, "an order in the universe which human reason can discover and according to which the human will must act so that it can attune itself to the universal harmony....We do not make this law, but are made to live within it." [George P. Grant, Philosophy In A Mass Age, 1960, p. 41, emphasis added.]

The Aristotelian mean is one of the manifestations of this "natural law" that permeates the universe. For us as individuals and a society to go against this law is to incur tragedy and bring down upon our lives ruinous consequences. This is the great dilemma of modern times. We must once again come to grips with Francis Bacon's observation that, "Nature, to be commanded, must be obeyed." There are eternal truths to which we must learn to conform.

* * * *

One cautionary note: The book's general theme flows from crucial points validated in Chapter One, so naturally the first chapter must be read carefully and thoroughly. Also it is important to read the chapters in the order that they appear. Do not skip around. Each chapter builds upon the previous chapter and will not make complete sense without first encountering what came before. I can't emphasize this strongly enough. The power and validity of the book's general theme will be apparent only if the chapters are read in order.

I am quite aware of the reservations held by many as to the usefulness of Aristotle's doctrine of the mean to meaningfully analyze life's various phenomena. It is said that such a concept is "relative;" it is a form of "circular reasoning;" and it avoids adherence to principle in favor of the "middle-of-the-road." On the contrary, everyone of these claims are demonstrably false and will be explained as we proceed.

What I will show throughout the book is that the concept of the mean is fundamentally misunderstood by its antagonists, which has led to a warped and incongruous philosophy among those who are attempting to defend the ramparts of freedom.

What I will also show is that, because Aristotle concentrated on the micro level of personal virtues rather than the macro level of political systems, he was able to formulate only part of the mean's applicability, and therefore only tapped into part of its significance. This book will expand Aristotle's formulation to the macro level of life.

It is very important to understand that, contrary to the presumptions of modern intellectuals, the doctrine of the mean is universal rather than relative. Aristotle held it to be so for the micro level, and I will demonstrate that it is equally so for the macro level.

In other words, the doctrine of the mean is a valid concept to help decipher both the personal and the collective "good" for humanity for all times and all places. It is a fixed, philosophical North Star that can be used to direct our lives and our societies toward the ideal. This is not a paltry issue that we as citizens can ignore; all who think must come to know its ideological primacy. Whether there are universal moral truths, or whether all is relative, is the ultimate issue of our existence. It is upon this point that everything of importance, everything that is sane and humane in life -- the fate of freedom and civilization themselves -- rests. So we must come to understand before anything else why there are things called "moral truths," and how we are to realize them. Only then can we arrive at how our government and our social institutions should be constructed. A crucial key to understanding this is to delve into Aristotle's Golden Mean. While there is much in Aristotle's worldview that is indefensible to us today, the doctrine of the mean is one of the immutable verities of mind and man. It is a most powerful idea with far more importance for our lives than we have heretofore realized.

This eternal, rational "mean" lies between the disparate and debasing socio-political extremes that men are forever prone to chasing after. It is transcendent to the temporalities of human desires. It is tied in with the natural laws that have been instilled into existence, and it is our job as humans to discover it, to define it in the idiom of our day, and then attempt to live up to it.

* * * *

All men, possessed of character and strength of will, want to be free; they all desire to have order in their lives; they all hope to find happiness; and they all wish to know truth. What is necessary is for Americans to once again teach to their young the proper manner of reasoning that will lead to the achievement of such values.

With her sustaining spirit so ravaged over this past century by false truths and scholastic illusions, America now has no idea of the level upon which life could and ought to be lived. One thinks of the sturdy and serenely noble ethic adhered to in the aftermath of our Founding and throughout the 19th century -- the heroic self-reliance, stout hearted love, and family solidarity that living used to be about.

There was an awe about existence before the bitch-goddess of egalitarianism invaded the sanctum of our ideals and the leviathan of government usurped our freedoms. Life was momentous and meaningful. Men and women had reverence for liberty. Their priorities were in order, for they produced before they consumed. Truth was there to decipher from Nature and pay heed to, not paste over with relativized morals and arid technical jargon.

There was a color and gallantry and joy that filled the days of one's life before egalitarianism and Big Government. Anguish and grueling hardship too. But a man at least knew he had stood up to the anguish and hardship on the steel of his own merits, and in so doing, earned a sense of honor. Life was manly for men before bureaucracy's drab mandarins eroded the vigor of their hopes. And because it was, men thought highly of themselves; and because they did, there was love between man and woman that formed a rock of granite beneath the fearsome vicissitudes they faced.

There is no such love today because there is no crucible of valor from which men and women can forge it. There is only the incessant clamor for more government entitlements pilfered from the pockets of one's neighbors through the taxman; only the bleak emptiness of a stifling materialism shored up by its demon gods of consumption and power, with its dismal world of obnoxious bureaucrats dictating the ecstacy out of living.

It is hoped that what is written here will help to restore the lofty crucible that life once was, and from which the gallant men and women of our past drew their sustenance.


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