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March 10, 2006,
8:13 a.m. While American leaders have been preoccupied with sectarian strife in Iraq, the rising threat from Iran, the controversy over having the United Arab Emirates run U.S. port facilities, and plummeting public confidence in both parties, another ominous danger has been gathering: international schemes for “innovative sources of financing” a euphemism for global taxes.
No less insidious will be the effect on our sovereignty. Advocates of such international tax schemes make no secret of their ambition to redistribute wealth and to advance their longstanding goal of world government. The brazenness and ambitions of the globotaxers has been laid bare by Cliff Kincaid, the president of America’s Survival, Inc. and a contributor to War Footing: Ten Steps America Must Take to Prevail in the War for the Free World. Thanks to his new report entitled “UN Boss Kofi Annan Hails ‘Courage’ of France and Other Nations Pushing Global Taxes; UN Report Proposes $200 Billion in International Revenue,” every U.S. politician from President Bush on down has been put on notice: All other things being equal, we are about to be taxed without representation a prospect that produced a revolution in this land once before and that must be met with no-less-determined American opposition today. Highlights of Kincaid’s report on the “special international conference” held where else? in Paris from February 28 - March 1 include the following:
As Kincaid’s report makes clear, the next steps in advancing the globotaxers’ agenda is likely to be this summer’s G-8 summit meeting chaired by Russia, and the two preparatory meetings this spring to be attended by each governments’ senior finance ministry “sherpas.” Last year, these meetings produced language that began to compromise the United States’ historic opposition to international taxes. Given the uses to which the United Nations can reasonably be expected to put any tax-levying authority it secures including freeing itself from the constraints associated with its historic reliance on member contributions and, most especially, the American contributions that have provided roughly 25 percent of the U.N.’s budget it is absolutely imperative that the Bush Administration and the Congress adamantly oppose any globotaxes and, if necessary, reject their application to American citizens and enterprises. Frank J. Gaffney, Jr., is president of the Center for Security Policy and a contributor to NRO. He blogs at www.WarFooting.com. * * * YOU’RE NOT A SUBSCRIBER TO NATIONAL REVIEW? Sign up right now! It’s easy: Subscribe to National Review here, or to the digital version of the magazine here. You can even order a subscription as a gift: print or digital! |
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