April 14, 2005
A PROPHET IN HIS OWN COUNTRY
Loudly, With a Big Stick (David Brooks, New York Times, April 14th, 2005)
From the start, the U.N. has had two rival missions. Some people saw it as a place where sovereign nations could work together to solve problems. But other people saw it as the beginnings of a world government.This world government dream crashed on the rocks of reality, but as Jeremy Rabkin of Cornell has observed, the federalist idea has been replaced by a squishier but equally pervasive concept: the dream of "global governance."
The people who talk about global governance begin with the same premises as the world government types: the belief that a world of separate nations, living by the law of the jungle, will inevitably be a violent world. Instead, these people believe, some supranational authority should be set up to settle international disputes by rule of law.
They know we're not close to a global version of the European superstate. So they are content to champion creeping institutions like the International Criminal Court. They treat U.N. General Assembly resolutions as an emerging body of international law. They seek to foment a social atmosphere in which positions taken by multilateral organizations are deemed to have more "legitimacy" than positions taken by democratic nations.
John Bolton is just the guy to explain why this vaporous global-governance notion is a dangerous illusion, and that we Americans, like most other peoples, will never accept it.
We'll never accept it, first, because it is undemocratic. It is impossible to set up legitimate global authorities because there is no global democracy, no sense of common peoplehood and trust. So multilateral organizations can never look like legislatures, with open debate, up or down votes and the losers accepting majority decisions.
Instead, they look like meetings of unelected elites, of technocrats who make decisions in secret and who rely upon intentionally impenetrable language, who settle differences through arcane fudges. Americans, like most peoples, will never surrender even a bit of their national democracy for the sake of multilateral technocracy.
Second, we will never accept global governance because it inevitably devolves into corruption. The panoply of U.N. scandals flows from a single source: the lack of democratic accountability. These supranational organizations exist in their own insular, self-indulgent aerie.
We will never accept global governance, third, because we love our Constitution and will never grant any other law supremacy over it. Like most peoples (Europeans are the exception), we will never allow transnational organizations to overrule our own laws, regulations and precedents. We think our Constitution is superior to the sloppy authority granted to, say, the International Criminal Court.
Fourth, we understand that these mushy international organizations liberate the barbaric and handcuff the civilized. Bodies like the U.N. can toss hapless resolutions at the Milosevics, the Saddams or the butchers of Darfur, but they can do nothing to restrain them. Meanwhile, the forces of decency can be paralyzed as they wait for "the international community."
Fifth, we know that when push comes to shove, all the grand talk about international norms is often just a cover for opposing the global elite's bêtes noires of the moment - usually the U.S. or Israel. We will never grant legitimacy to forums that are so often manipulated for partisan ends.
Succinct, pithy and on the mark. Let’s buy this gentleman a decaffeinated coffee.
Posted by Peter Burnet at April 14, 2005 8:03 PMBusted link?
Posted by: ghostcat at April 14, 2005 8:08 PMThinking of Joe Kennedy and the SEC paradigm?
Posted by: Rick T. at April 14, 2005 8:16 PMTo Brooks' point: The Europeans support the idea of giving over sovergnty to the U.N. because with three of the five votes on the Security Council, they feel as though they can basically game the results on the big issues. If Bush were to get his way and expand the Security Council to include Japan, India and Brazil, you may see Europoean enthusiasm for the U.N. cool a great deal, just as support for the EU in France has been waining with all those annoying little Eastern European nations wanting their own say-so in the continent's policy making system.
Posted by: John at April 14, 2005 9:36 PMWhat is a better use for the land in Manhattan between 42d and 50th along the East River, the UN or a new stadium for the Jets? The answer is obvious.
Posted by: bart at April 14, 2005 10:23 PMToo far from the subway Bart . . . unless they finally build that 2nd avenue line.
Posted by: Jim in Chicago at April 14, 2005 11:30 PMJohn: The Security Council doesn't operate like a democracy. You can either vote yes or no, or abstain. If one of the five permanent members votes no, it's a veto. Hence, though the veto is rarely invoked by anyone, we are never outvoted in the Security Council if we don't want to be.
Also, I'm not sure that the U.S. really wants any additional members on the Security Council.
Posted by: Seven Machos at April 14, 2005 11:44 PMJim Stay in Chicago. They can add a station on the number 7.
Posted by: Robert Schwartz at April 15, 2005 1:13 AMU.N. Calls for Combating 'Defamation' of Islam Tue Apr 12, 2005, By Stephanie Nebehay
GENEVA (Reuters) - The United Nations Commission on Human Rights called on Tuesday for combating defamation of religions, especially Islam, and condemned discrimination against Muslims in the West's war on terrorism.
The 53-member state forum adopted a resolution, presented by Pakistan on behalf of the Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC), deploring the intensification of a "campaign of defamation" against Muslims following the Sept. 11 attacks in the United States.
Western countries, including the United States and European Union (EU), voted against the text, calling it unbalanced for failing to address problems suffered by other religious groups.
The OIC resolution was adopted by a vote of 31 countries in favor and 16 against, with five abstentions and one delegation absent, Indonesia's ambassador Makarim Wibisono, who chairs the annual six-week session, announced after the public vote.
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In a recent report, the U.N. special investigator on racism, Doudou Diene, cited examples including "Islamophobic violence" after the murder last November of Dutch film director Theo Van Gogh, and an "alarming number of expulsions of imams" in Europe.
Delegations from Cuba and China, which has been accused by rights activists of repressing its own Muslim Uighur minority, were among the countries to take the floor during the debate to back the OIC resolution.
"Islam has been the subject of very deep campaign of defamation. All you have to do is look at the films which have come out of Hollywood the last few years," said Cuba's delegate, Rodolfo Reyes Rodriguez.
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Posted by: Robert Schwartz at April 15, 2005 1:18 AM"Islam has been the subject of very deep campaign of defamation. All you have to do is look at the films which have come out of Hollywood the last few years."
There were movies defaming Islam and I missed them?! Crud.
Posted by: Timothy at April 15, 2005 10:37 AM