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September
25, 2007
The
Pro-Death Foreign Policy of Pro-Life
Activists
by Gary North, Ph.D.
Contrary
to the media, most American fundamentalists are not
opposed to the legalization of abortion. Few of
them have ever picketed an abortion clinic. The
only way to persuade a majority of fundamentalists
to picket an abortion clinic would be to spread a
rumor that after each abortion, the abortionist
gives a glass of beer to the woman to calm her
nerves.
Still, a small minority of fundamentalists
provide the picketers and activists for the
anti-abortion movement, along with a small minority
of activist Catholics.
On the question of the Iraq war, the core voter
bloc of the Republican Party is both evangelical
and pro-war. The Republicans refuse to break away
from this group. Until these voters switch to
anti-war, the Republican Party will remain
paralyzed. The fact is, this voter base is
committed to imposing lethal force on Iraq until
the counter-insurgency ceases to fight. Yet they
know this will never happen. Their view of Islam
tells them it will never happen. So, they are
committed for the long haul, which means until the
Rapture into heaven removes them from this world.
They are die-hards.
The other die-hards are the neoconservatives.
They also are committed to staying the course in
Iraq forever. The two groups reinforce each other.
The neocons provide the position papers. The
fundamentalists provide the votes.
STRANGE BEDFELLOWS
Politics makes strange bedfellows, the slogan
says. This is surely true of the Iraq war: pro,
con, and neocon.
What percentage of neoconservatives has ever
picketed an abortion clinic? Approximately the same
percentage of fundamentalists who have marched in
an anti-Iraq War demonstration.
Neocons are not interested in saving babies.
Fundamentalists are not interested in stopping
Middle East wars in progress.
Then what binds them together today? A bumper
sticker slogan: Save Israel.
There are two issues here, the moral and the
judicial. In this case, they are the same issue.
The issue of the Iraq war is the issue of foreign
policy in general. One question, above all, divides
Americans. "What is the basis, moral and judicial,
for one nation's launching a pre-emptive first
strike against another nation?" While the word
covenant is rarely used with respect to this
question, it is the fundamental issue.
We can see it played out in the career of one
Congressman.
RON PAUL'S COVENANTAL POLITICS
Ron Paul is a gynecologist who opposes abortion.
He is also a Congressman who opposes the Iraq
war.
He is opposed by all neocons and most
fundamentalists. Why? Because he opposes committing
American money or American troops to saving
Israel.
He believes that countries should defend
themselves. Countries are not like unborn infants.
They can speak and act on their own behalf. They
can establish defenses. He thinks there is no
legitimate reason for people in one country to go
to war to defend people in another country unless,
as in the case of Belgium in 1914, another country
is being invaded because it provides a convenient
pathway for troops marching toward the first
country.
He is opposed to treaties that commit the United
States to military action on behalf of other
countries. He is opposed to the United Nations
Organization.
Ron Paul understands and honors a fundamental
biblical principle that fundamentalists say they
believe but really don't: without a legally binding
joint covenant based on a common confession, an
individual has no lawful authority to use violence
against another person. Conclusion: if I have not
agreed in principle to live under a common
political covenant with you, then your battles are
not mine, and my battles are not yours. The Bible
is clear on this point.
- He that passeth by, and meddleth with
strife belonging not to him, is like one that
taketh a dog by the ears (Proverbs
26:17),
During the Vietnam war, there was an anti-war
poster with this verse on it, which featured a
photo
of President Johnson lifting up his beagle by its
ears.
The same principle applies to nations. Ask a
fundamentalist if he believes in the United Nations
Organization, and he will probably say no. Why?
Because he instinctively recognizes that the UN is
based on a common covenant among nations even
though they hold different views of God, man, law,
sanctions, and time. There is no confessional basis
for such a governmental organization. Prior to
1991, the fundamentalist had in mind the Soviet
Union and its satellite nations. Today, he has in
mind Islamic nations. His instincts are correct.
They rest on this biblical judicial principle:
- Thou shalt make no covenant with them,
nor with their gods (Exodus 23:32).
But then comes the question of the State of
Israel. At this point, say most fundamentalists,
all such biblical restraints on national covenants
supposedly disappear. The fundamentalist assures us
that the United States has a moral, legal, and
therefore covenantal obligation to use American tax
money to pay the government of the State of Israel.
The United States also has a similar obligation to
support the State of Israel in all of its disputes
with its regional opponents.
In short, what the Bible says about meddling and
what it says about illegitimate covenants is
ignored. Why? Because of Old Testament prophecies
that supposedly place the interests of the modern
State of Israel above prohibitions and warnings in
the Old Testament against meddling, meaning
violence, both personal and national.
THE ALLIANCE
The neoconservatives do not embrace
fundamentalism's view of the Bible or its official,
though conveniently ignored, doctrine of national
covenants. They surely do not embrace the
fundamentalists' view of Bible prophecy, which
teaches that the Jews of Israel will be surrounded
by the military forces of the antichrist, and
two-thirds
of them will be slaughtered. This will happen a
few years after all Christians have been raptured
into heaven. But the neoconservatives do embrace
the fundamentalists' view of siding
with the State of Israel on most matters, with
the possible exception of Israeli nationals spying
on the United States in the United States.
So, we see this extraordinary alliance between
secular neoconservatives and fundamentalists. It
has led the United States into two wars with Iraq.
It may lead this nation into a war with Iran. The
swing voters within the voter base of the
Republican Party promote a foreign policy of
killing Muslims, including hundreds of thousands of
civilians, whenever these Muslims are perceived as
a potential military threat against the State of
Israel.
Beginning on September 11, 2001, pre-war,
pro-war pundits asked: "Why do they hate us?" They
no longer need to ask.
CONCLUSION
My recommendation to neoconservatives: picket
abortion clinics. My recommendation to
fundamentalists: march in anti-war protests. My
recommendation to the State of Israel: don't count
on U.S. government dollars or the U.S. military to
reduce your costs of government indefinitely. There
comes a time to sell short. Now is such a time.
Gary
North Archive
Dr.
Gary North earned a Ph.D. in history and is one of
America's keenest economic analysts and
commentators. He supports the Austrian school of
economics and is a previous assistant to
libertarian congressman Dr. Ron Paul. Visit his
website at http://garynorth.com.
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