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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
36 w

America Was Never Isolationist
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America Was Never Isolationist

Politics America Was Never Isolationist  Fareed Zakaria’s “America First” is a lazy exercise in the abuse of history. Credit: image via Shutterstock Recurring fears of isolationism are a fixture of American politics. Such anxieties bubble to the surface once a generation as an American electorate challenges the inherited wisdom of a postwar status quo. Whether it be the late 1950s, early 1970s, early 1990s, or the present, American “isolationism” always seems to be on the rise, and thus, establishment media commentators and politicos feel obliged to fight back against it. In the current war against the “i-word,” Fareed Zakaria recently devoted a 45-minute CNN special to the subject of American “isolationism,” its history, and its implications on the forthcoming 2024 presidential race.  The documentary has three significant problems. First, it is primarily based on an inaccurate accounting of the past, one which holds that the United States was a disinterested geopolitical actor before the horrors of the Second World War. Second, Zakaria often downplays the costs of the American global order and seeks to assure the viewer that they were—and are—worth the price, suggesting that American prosperity relies on global leadership. Finally, he warns of the dangers of returning to a mythical “isolationist” past compared to the destructive interventionism he terms “internationalist.”  First, the history. In his retelling of the run-up to the Second World War, Zakaria portrays the United States as a geopolitically disinterested power. He does not mention the U.S. government’s imperial footprint in the Pacific. Zakaria breezes through the mechanics of America’s incremental entry into the First World War, presenting the United States as a reluctant belligerent in Europe’s total war. In truth, by 1916, the United States, while officially neutral, was supporting the Allies with both financial and material aid. When, as Zakaria tells it, “Germany ramped up its aggression with an all-out attack on American ships,” those ships were carrying American arms and ammunition to Germany’s enemies.   Thus, American involvement in the war and the imperial competition that preceded it remains largely underexamined, with critical questions remaining unasked, such as whether it was in America’s best interest to enter the war at all.  Zakaria similarly implies that the American ostrich act of the interwar period was responsible for the rise of the Axis, particularly Nazi military aggression. Echoing a common but regularly debunked claim, Zakaria charges that, after the Great War, “the United States had returned to its isolationist roots with a vengeance.” While the U.S. maintained protective tariffs, U.S. exports actually expanded in the 1920s. Geopolitically, the U.S. remained an imperial power in the Pacific as well as Latin America, participated in arms-control agreements, and organized assistance to feed the starving people of a war-torn Europe. As the late political scientist Bear F. Braumoeller noted, “the characterization of America as isolationist in the interwar period is simply wrong.”  One is treated to a similarly simplistic interpretation of the immediate origins of the Second World War and America’s entry into it. Throughout his treatment of the late interwar period, Zakaria places fault for German expansionism at the feet of a reluctant United States, asserting that “Hitler knew America would do nothing to stop the great German war machine.” Absent from his account are structural forces like the Great Depression, the complicated relationship between Stalin and Hitler (which helped usher in the war), and the lack of decisive action on the part of France and Great Britain, two powers that arguably possessed the means but lacked the will to enforce peace in Europe. Zakaria’s account is not unusual, but rather a standard hawkish narrative that the rise of Hitler and the horrors that ensued were America’s fault.   Zakaria’s cartoonish history persists into his narrative of the early Cold War. During that era, Zakaria’s villain is the arch-isolationist Senator Robert A. Taft (R-OH), who fought against the political outsider, Second World War hero, and committed internationalist General Dwight D. Eisenhower. Yet Taft was no “isolationist.” As a young lawyer and senator, Taft believed in the utility of international law, so long as it was enforced by a responsible Congress that looked after American sovereignty. And, while Taft largely toed the noninterventionist line on the eve of America’s entry into the Second World War, he was less rigid in his foreign policy views by the late 1940s. During the early Cold War, Taft supported some activist foreign policy measures but opposed others, a direction that sought to maintain American freedom of maneuver, one that prioritized strategic aims in East Asia over those in Western Europe while building a military capable of hemispheric deterrence.   The real political divide between Taft and Eisenhower was concerned not with isolation versus engagement but with the contours of a postwar world, an order about which Eisenhower himself displayed great concern at home and abroad. In his coverage of this moment, much like his account of the present, Zakaria presents us with a false choice between a relapse into a mythic and benighted “isolationist” past or a vaguely defined “internationalist” future.  In arguing that the mantle of leadership comes cheaply, Zakaria rightly notes that the toll of the “brushfire wars” of the Cold War and the post–Cold War era was an order of magnitude smaller than the catastrophes of the World Wars. Yet the costs of such wars were hidden by radical advances in military medicine, which increased the ratio of wounded to killed in action, and by the luxury of owning the world’s reserve currency. Activist foreign policies are lubricated when the government can pay the cost in treasure by putting it on the credit card and pay the toll in blood by squeezing it out of increasingly small pockets of an all-volunteer and largely generational martial caste.  What is most striking is that Zakaria largely misses the cause of the resurgence of an “America First” ideology: a recognition of the costs of empire. While some members of the America First movement of the 1930s and its later iterations were motivated by bigotry, most were animated by a desire to preserve liberal domestic order and freedom of maneuver on the global stage.  On the domestic front, the America Firsters, informed by the antecedents of the 19th-century populist movements, believed that dramatic increases in military spending benefited the few at the expense of the many. They similarly recognized, informed by their experience during the Great War, that global power came at the cost of civil liberties in the form of the Sedition Act, increased policing power, and violent private mobs. Lastly, they believed that entry into the Great War and the potential signing of the Versailles Treaty hooked their country to the imperial desires of the Old World. The total costs were just too much to bear for a country that saw itself as a republican nation set apart from the bickering powers of Europe.  None of these issues have been or can be resolved, as they are persistent tradeoffs at the core of the country’s activist foreign policy. “Isolationism” is ever-present because U.S. foreign policy relies on the resources of the American people, through the shedding of their blood and the expropriation of their treasure. As in the past, their reluctance provides policymakers feedback on their assessment whether the game is worth the candle, and whether they are willing to pay the costs.  If the United States is to maneuver through this period of global turmoil with its institutions intact and some measure of global influence, its leadership class needs to adapt the nation’s foreign policy aims in light of domestic constraints and recognize the limits of its own power. Zakaria uses a simplistic model of the past as an instrument to guide the future. In doing so, he does violence both to history and to the future. The post America Was Never Isolationist appeared first on The American Conservative.
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36 w

Javier Milei Abolishes the Argentine IRS
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Javier Milei Abolishes the Argentine IRS

Foreign Affairs Javier Milei Abolishes the Argentine IRS The Argentine president will reorganize the Federal Administration of Public Revenue into a new agency and reduce its head count by a third. Argentina’s President Javier Milei announced Monday that he would shutter the Federal Administration of Public Revenue (AFIP), the Argentine equivalent to the U.S. Internal Revenue Service. The institution will be replaced by the Agency of Customs Collection and Control (ARCA), with a new structure reorganized to increase the efficiency of customs and tax administration. As part of the restructuring, the government will eliminate 34 percent of the current AFIP workforce, which it estimates will save the nation some $6.5 million annually. In addition to cutting staff positions, the government will also adjust the salary structure for the new agency. This includes dramatically reducing the salaries of top officials in the tax bureaucracy, whose pay has ballooned far higher than most positions in the Argentine government. The director of AFIP was receiving a salary equivalent to more than $365,000 a year, an astronomical figure in the South American nation. The new director of Arca will receive a salary equivalent to that of government ministers, approximately $50,000 annually—a cost reduction of more than 86 percent.  Also to be eliminated is the system of incentives known as the “account ranking,” in which a certain proportion of tax revenues is distributed among the employees of the administration to reward the effective collection of taxes. The arrangement made AFIP employees some of the best-paid in the government, but also provoked resentment from citizens and contributed to its large budgetary footprint. The reform also has a political angle. The president’s statement notes that the reform will “eliminate 3,155 agents who entered AFIP in an irregular manner during the previous Kirchnerist government, totaling 15 percent of the current staff. This step is indispensable for dismantling the unnecessary bureaucracy which has obstructed the economic and commercial liberty of Argentinians.” The government believes that the purging of Peronists from the tax administration will result in an institution that is much more responsive to leadership and more supportive of the economic priorities of Milei’s administration, which has made the reduction and rationalization of the Argentine tax code a key point of its political program. The restructuring is also a strike at rival politician Sergio Massa, a dissident Peronist leader in Argentina who was Milei’s opponent in the runoff for the Argentine presidency in 2023 after Milei unexpectedly prevailed over Patricia Bullrich, the candidate of former president Mauricio Macri’s mainstream conservative party Propósito Republicano. Elements of Massa’s Peronist coalition quietly assisted the new libertarian party by supplying much-needed technical expertise in a ploy to weaken and divide the opposition. When Milei accomplished his shock triumph over first the mainstream Argentine conservatives and then Massa’s own Peronist coalition, some of Massa’s allies ended up in the new libertarian government by what probably seemed to both sides a perverse chance. AFIP was one of the principal power bases of Massa’s Peronist allies in the government. Now that the libertarians have had the chance to accumulate experience in governing and acquire a significantly larger pool of allies and accomplices to draw from, Milei is apparently taking the opportunity to eliminate this liability and strengthen the hand of elements more inclined to cooperate with him and support his political objectives in the long term. The move signals growing political self-confidence in the libertarian sector of Argentine politics, which was hampered in its early days by a lack of organization and manpower that made it difficult to effectively contest elections and fill the various offices of government necessary to administer the state. However, Milei and his political allies—especially his chief political advisor, Santiago Caputo—have proven adept at co-opting and absorbing allies and partners into the new bloc, including Milei’s former opponent for the presidency, Patricia Bullrich, who now serves as the minister for national security and is one of the president’s most faithful allies. Power, too, has its benefits, and with the libertarians having proven themselves on the national stage, they will have a much wider pool of potential candidates and a stronger party structure to draw on for the upcoming legislative elections. Milei’s announcement of the dissolution of AFIP and its reorganization into ARCA was greeted with a broadly positive response from the public. AFIP has never been popular among Argentines—an unsurprising fact for a tax agency—and its demise was received with celebration. In Congress, the opposition was also largely supportive of the change, recognizing the need for a more streamlined and efficient service to manage state revenues. Nevertheless, some legislators proposed that the savings from the reform should be put to use for other priorities, including funding Argentine universities. (A prior proposal to increase state funding for universities was vetoed by Milei earlier this month.) The government has declined to consider such a move, with Federico Sturzenegger, Minister for Deregulation and State Transformation, saying “that possibility is not in play.” The post Javier Milei Abolishes the Argentine IRS appeared first on The American Conservative.
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36 w

Time for Mature German-American Burden-Sharing
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Time for Mature German-American Burden-Sharing

Foreign Affairs Time for Mature German-American Burden-Sharing The real special relationship in Europe is with Germany. Credit: Vladislav Gajic Ross Douthat of the New York Times scored an interview with two of the top foreign policy brains in the potential next Trump administration. Their thematic similarity on Europe issues, and especially on the question of Germany, was striking.  Here’s Robert O’Brien:  We’ve got 50,000 troops in Germany. What are they doing there? They’re not on the front lines against Russia. What President Trump wanted to do was move half the troops out of Germany. The plan was to move half of them to Poland, to deter the Russians, and take the other half and move them to the Aleutian Islands, Guam, Hawaii, California. Move them into the Pacific to deter the Chinese. And you know who opposed it? The Germans. Angela Merkel called up like she was a mayor, complaining that car dealerships and pubs were going to have to close if we pulled that many troops out of Germany. Elbridge Colby agreed:  Germany alone is a larger economy than Russia. Germany could, essentially, by itself, solve the Russian conventional threat. In 1988, West Germany could put 12 active divisions in the field. You said the Germans couldn’t police the Red Sea. Well, the Italians and the Spanish and the Greeks and the Turks and the Brits and the French, with their naval forces, they could actually take a much more significant role. Why aren’t they? This is the problem. Our alliance system is much larger economically than the foes we face. This is interesting. On the same day the interview was published, POLITICO reported that it is the U.S. and Germany who are jointly slow-rolling Ukrainian accession to NATO (and the EU). At the risk of simplification, one can argue that, while the U.S. and Germany are vocal about stopping the talks of Ukrainian membership in NATO, others—such as Slovakia, Hungary, and even a host of liberal Euro states like Belgium, Spain, Slovenia, Denmark, and the Netherlands—are also opposed to Ukrainian accession, but are happy to hide behind Berlin and Washington. The push in favor of Ukraine is from the Poles and the Balts, the most hawkish European powers.  Germany’s Chancellor Olaf Scholz, for all his rhetoric, sounded very similar to Trump and Orban. Scholz told reporters during President Biden’s visit to Berlin last week, “We are making sure that NATO does not become a party to the war, so that this war does not turn into a much greater catastrophe.” This seemingly paradoxical nature of the relationship belies an important reality: The most important, real special relationship in Europe is between the U.S. and Germany, not Britain or France, despite all floral rhetoric to the contrary. Once one understands that, it is easy to understand the fraught nature of the relationship as well. Germany was the prime challenger to European status quo twice in the last century, and there was a strong anti-British, anti-intervention trend in American conservatism. Yet the threat of a consolidated Europe under one flag and one army was enough to compel the American governing elite to twice drag their country into conflict, despite the wishes of a significant portion of their countrymen—still a matter of considerable historical debate amid returning anti-interventionism in America.  Ultimately, as Hans Morgenthau noted, it was Germany, the most powerful, industrialized, and sophisticated country, that was the prize of the Second World War. To let Germany fall under adversarial hegemonic control  would have changed the balance of power of the region permanently. The U.S. divided Germany and initiated the Berlin airlift, but looked the other way in Hungary and Czechoslovakia. This was partially due to Soviet power and deterrence, but also the idea that central and eastern Europe simply isn’t very important real estate when it comes to industry, economy, or manpower, particularly as concerns American hegemony. Admitting that would of course implicitly discredit the founding narrative of the postwar order, that the Second World War was a war over values and norms rather than geography; nevertheless, it is true. The reason the U.S. rehabilitated Germany, helped reindustrialize it, and rearmed it—such that by 1989, West Germany alone could field 12 divisions to stare down the 3rd Shock Army of the USSR—is that Germany was and remains the most important piece of territory on the European continent.  Of course the idea that German statecraft has become “weak” is a folly. Germany has no need to spend more on defense if American troops are guarding its eastern frontiers, and the really relevant frontier itself has moved thousands of miles to the east, thanks to NATO expansion. The reason for German military atrophy is American presence. Moving American troops from Germany to Poland essentially decreases the chance of Germany (or West Europe) ever spending more. Freeriding on America doesn’t demonstrate German weakness, but German prudence, just as German opposition to the Iraq quagmire displayed its foresight.  In light of that, it is perhaps time to renew a new security architecture which re-centers Germany to her rightful place in the European balance. As Lord Lansdowne wrote over a hundred years back, Germany deserves a place among the great commercial and military powers in continental Europe. Unfortunately, that will not happen so long as the American military is there behind the glass in case of a fire. A better option is to shift some burden, such as in the domains of logistics, infantry, and armor, to Europe and especially to Germany, while maintaining the naval and nuclear presence that guarantees American preponderance in the European balance. This will arrest America’s overstretch and march towards insolvency. To have better burden sharing in Europe, the U.S. must treat Germany as an equal power and help it rearm.  The post Time for Mature German-American Burden-Sharing appeared first on The American Conservative.
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36 w

Video of the Day: Trump Does Full Three Hours With Joe Rogan
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Video of the Day: Trump Does Full Three Hours With Joe Rogan

The following article, Video of the Day: Trump Does Full Three Hours With Joe Rogan, was first published on Conservative Firing Line. On Friday, former President Donald Trump sat down with Joe Rogan and stayed for the full three hour podcast! Here’s the video: Trump just wrapped a 3+ hour podcast with Joe Rogan, after flying to TX to deliver a speech on the migrant crime epidemic, now getting ready to head to a packed nighttime rally … Continue reading Video of the Day: Trump Does Full Three Hours With Joe Rogan ...
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
36 w

? SPEED COMPARISON - HYPERSONIC Missiles ? (VIDEO OF THE DAY!!)
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? SPEED COMPARISON - HYPERSONIC Missiles ? (VIDEO OF THE DAY!!)

SPEED COMPARISON 3D | Missiles (AWESOME VIDEO!!! VIDEO OF THE DAY!!) ? UTL COMMENT:- This is a Video comparing the phenomenal Speed of Missiles! The faster ones would be hypersonic! No talking just CGI animated videos. Not a fan of war however the speeds of these missiles are INCREDIBLE!!! Now...if only such technology could be used for peaceful purposes..... With thanks to:- https://www.youtube.com/@REDSIDEofficial ⭐PATREON "Exlusive Content & Posts" / rside ⭐SUBSCRIBE: @REDSIDEofficial ? TURN ON NOTIFICATIONS, and be the first to watch every video! ► Music: 1-Savfk - The Power ‪@SavfkMusic‬ ► DISCLAIMER: This Video is based on: Public Data, Google Search, Surveys, Discussions and Comments. And some of the information can be close to Wrong degree. ?THE INNOVATIONS OF HUMANKIND ► https://a.co/d/aQechWN #redside #missile #rocket #speed #comparison #360vr ► Follow my Social Networks TIKTOK: / red.side INSTAGRAM: / redsidenft
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
36 w

BREAKING: BILL GATES TO FACE TRIAL! - Indicted Over Vaccine Deaths In The Netherlands! - What Now?
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BREAKING: BILL GATES TO FACE TRIAL! - Indicted Over Vaccine Deaths In The Netherlands! - What Now?

Josh Sigurdson reports on the breaking news that Bill Gates has been indicted by a Dutch court for misleading the public about "Covid vaccines" leading to countless deaths. While the case begun in 2023, Bill Gates has since refused to show up or respond to court filings against him which have also been brought against Pfizer's Albert Bourla, Mark Rutte and others. Now, the Dutch court has notified Bill Gates that his claims that he court doesn't have jurisdiction over him are wrong and he has been formally instructed to appear in this trial case. Bill Gates as we have reported in the past has been indicted in places like India over the Covid injections as well, though nothing came of it thus far despite the Bombay High Court issuing a notice to him. Arno van Kessel and Peter Stassen are representing seven claimants who say they have been injured by the Covid vaccines. Of course, with hundreds of studies and government statistics pointing to millions of deaths following the vaccine rollout, there is no shock that there's pushback. Of course many vaccine manufacturers have been deemed "immune" to lawsuits over the vaccines, but this is starting to get overturned in more places as deaths pile up. Albert Bourla was previously sued and lost over misleading the public about Covid vaccines but only faced a monetary punishment. Bill Gates continues alongside the CDC, Big Pharma and Facebook to fund "influencers" to promote vaccines to children. Yes, it's pure evil. But... Will Bill Gates actually face justice in this life? That is yet to be seen. Most are complacent with the attack we've seen against humanity in the past years. While this case is certainly big, we must understand that the way we destroy the beast is to reject it and stop depending on it when it comes to money, food, electricity, housing and convenience in general. This is a war on humanity and they either want us dead or they want us enslaved to a technocratic grid where we may as well be dead. Prepare yourselves today. Stay tuned for more from WAM! GET HEIRLOOM SEEDS & NON GMO SURVIVAL FOOD HERE: https://heavensharvest.com/ USE Code WAM to save 5%! GET FREEZE DRIED BEEF HERE: https://wambeef.com/ Use Code WAMBEEF to save 25%! 10+ Year Shelf life & All Natural! GET TICKETS TO ANARCHAPULCO HERE: https://anarchapulco.com/ Save money by using code WAM GET YOUR WAV WATCH HERE: https://buy.wavwatch.com/WAM Use Code WAM to save $100 and purchase amazing healing frequency technology! BUY GOLD HERE: https://firstnationalbullion.com/schedule-consult/ GET YOUR APRICOT SEEDS at the life-saving Richardson Nutritional Center HERE: https://rncstore.com/r?id=bg8qc1 GET YOUR FREEDOM KELLY KETTLE KIT HERE: https://patriotprepared.com/shop/freedom-kettle/ Use Code WAM and enjoy many solutions for the outdoors in the face of the impending reset! HELP SUPPORT US AS WE DOCUMENT HISTORY HERE: https://gogetfunding.com/help-wam-cover-history/ PayPal: ancientwonderstelevision@gmail.com FIND OUR Coin
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36 w

What About Rape and Abortion?
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What About Rape and Abortion?

What About Rape and Abortion?
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36 w

Is Gen. John Kelly Really as 'Dumb,' As Trump Says?
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Is Gen. John Kelly Really as 'Dumb,' As Trump Says?

Is Gen. John Kelly Really as 'Dumb,' As Trump Says?
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Conservative Voices
36 w

Why Native Americans Are Turning to the America First Movement
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Why Native Americans Are Turning to the America First Movement

Why Native Americans Are Turning to the America First Movement
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36 w

Tren de Aragua Gains Foothold in US As Biden Fiddles
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Tren de Aragua Gains Foothold in US As Biden Fiddles

Tren de Aragua Gains Foothold in US As Biden Fiddles
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