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Entangling Alliances are a con

Climate Protocols: The ultimate entangling alliance

hat tip to Teresa Platt for sharing this article

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I was trying to show in the talk I gave in Japan, which James Corbett elaborated on, that Americans and other planetary citizens have been played with and cheated for over 30 years regarding our legal and financial responsibilities to jump through various hoops regarding climate change (and the quiet part they never say, that is part and parcel of the climate change plan, deindustrialization). We can only meet the arbitrary climate goals if we give up industrialization, our way of life and our (already falling for 5 decades) standard of living.

But in fact, we have no legal obligation to do any of this. Our government leaders have sold us a pig in a poke, playing us for marks in a 3 card Monty scheme. We have no obligation to stop using fossil fuels, deplete lithium for electric vehicle batteries, kill whales with expensive offshore windmills. (By the way, has anyone heard how the windmills fared against Helene and Milton?) No US officials voted for any of this. The Paris agreement was signed by Obama in China, never ratified by any member of Congress. Trump removed us from the Paris agreement, Biden reinstituted it, but the 2015 Paris climate agreement with its 1.5 degree temperature ceiling was never ratified. It claims authority from the 1992 UN Framework on Climate Change. Like the Pandemic Treaty hopes to accomplish: claiming that future agreements will be binding due to the existence of earlier agreements. Officials pretend we are bound by it and these other agreements, when in fact, we are not. Here is what Greg Walcher has to say:

Oct 11, 2024

By GREG WALCHER

https://www.gjsentinel.com/opinion/columns/climate-protocols-the-ultimate-entangling-alliance/article_9ab60010-873a-11ef-83a0-1bb863d6ddc1.html

The “doctrine of unstable alliances” in George Washington’s “Farewell Address” underpinned U.S. foreign policy for decades and is still considered wise, though mostly ignored.

“The great rule of conduct for us, in regard to foreign nations, is in extending our commercial relations, to have with them as little political connection as possible,” Washington wrote. “It is our true policy to steer clear of permanent alliances with any portion of the foreign world.” Even the opposing party under President Thomas Jefferson continued to rely on that wisdom. He explained an “essential principle of our government,” in his inaugural address: “peace, commerce and honest friendship with all nations, entangling alliances with none.”

What a long way we have come, not only subjecting ourselves to hundreds of international agreements, treaties and multinational authorities, but now using them to impose legal requirements on American citizens that Congress would never vote for.

America’s founders felt strongly about the dangers of foreign alliances, and made such agreements very difficult, requiring treaties to be approved by a two-thirds supermajority of the Senate. Unfortunately, they neglected to define what constitutes a treaty, so the requirement has been worth less than the parchment it was written on from the start. Presidents since John Adams have been making and unmaking deals with foreign governments ever since. Especially since World War II, much of U.S. foreign policy, and a vast body of “international law” has been based on multinational agreements, most of them never ratified by the Senate.

One exception is the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, negotiated in 1992 at a conference in Rio de Janeiro and ratified by the Senate. It seemed fairly innocuous at first, nations of the world establishing a voluntary working relationship under which details about reducing greenhouse gas emissions would be worked out later by a “Conference of the Parties” at future meetings. Every UN member country has signed it.

The agreement said emission reductions would be voluntary, and it promised to protect taxpayers everywhere by providing that “policies and measures to deal with climate change should be cost-effective so as to ensure global benefits at the lowest possible cost.” Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen now calls it “the single greatest economic opportunity of the twenty-first century” that the world will spend $78 trillion on climate change policies.

Annual meetings that followed Rio de Janeiro have resulted in a steady string of onerous emission reduction targets and mandatory financial burdens, not one of which has been submitted to the Senate for its approval. Not one of which are supported by a majority of Americans, and not one of which could have been enacted by Congress.

The 1997 Kyoto Protocol committed the U.S. to a 7% reduction in emissions, below 1990 levels, by 2012. Far from ratifying it, the Senate passed the “Byrd-Hagel resolution” 95-0 before the Kyoto meeting, warning President Clinton not to sign it. He never sent it to the Senate for ratification, and President Bush later repudiated it. Other agreements were reached in Bonn in 2001, Doha in 2012, Paris in 2015 and Glasgow in 2021.

Under those agreements, presidents have committed the U.S. to international requirements they call “binding” — subsidizing other nations, reducing U.S. emissions 80% below 2005 levels by 2050, even eliminating America’s use of coal. President Obama committed to the Paris Agreement as an “executive action,” not a treaty, and never submitted it to the Senate. Thus, Trump was able to withdraw from it, and Biden to rejoin it, both without the consent of the Senate. These agreements are additions to the 1992 treaty, which was ratified by the Senate. Can amendments change its voluntary goals to legally binding requirements that supersede federal law, without approval of the Senate?

Congress and federal courts acknowledge both treaties and “executive agreements,” but the latter are poorly defined. At least some precedents, Senate resolutions and State Department manuals suggest such agreements might require Senate ratification if they: involve commitments or risks affecting the nation as a whole; affect state laws; might require legislation to implement; or impose major policy changes upon which there is no congressional direction. These climate agreements meet all those criteria.

They literally require fundamental changes in the American economy, culture and way of life, not by the will of the people through their elected representatives, but at the will of foreign powers and international committees nobody ever voted for. Whether legal or not, the larger point is that these agreements are the definition of “entangling alliances.”

Greg Walcher is president of the Natural Resources Group and author of “Smoking Them Out: The Theft of the Environment and How to Take it Back.” He is a Western Slope native. Email him at gregwalcher@gmail.com.

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© 2024 Meryl Nass
548 Market Street PMB 72296, San Francisco, CA 94104
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