Remember those old photos during World War II: Churchill, Stalin, Roosevelt, like master of the Universe?

January 28, 2010 - 11:12 pm 3 Comments

Remember those old photographs taken during World War II, with Churchill, Stalin, and Roosevelt, plus selected others, posing as masters of the universe? The victors were meeting to carve up Europe, divide the spoils, plan the future, map out a plan for our lives.
Of course they created a political and economic disaster, which is what happens when mere mortals come to believe themselves to be gods.
But there is something about those photographs that continues to inspire political leaders all over the world. They are forever cobbling together grand summits to negotiate important things on a global scale. If there are no issues, they invent them. The supreme goal: to appear in the history books. And the power and money that come in the meantime isn’t a bad thing either.
And so we are represented at the G-8 meeting by Bush the Great, who this time decided two things, both of which are going to cost you plenty.
First, America has decided, meaning Bush on your behalf, to forge ahead with a twenty-five-year-old idea of a missile defense system to protect against incoming nukes. In the talks on this issue, Bush assured us that "there will be a serious set of strategic decisions" to make, and surely he is the right one to make them!
But wait a minute. Wasn’t that idea a Cold War relic that never really went anywhere? The original plan was to move away from the "mutually assured destruction" of the US-Russian nuclear stand-off. Memory jog: our governments had originally planned to "protect" us by promising to retaliate against an oncoming nuclear bomb by launching a bomb against the other guys. That way if tens of millions of people died, at least the survivors would have the consolation of knowing that tens of millions of people in another country had died too.
To end such a ghastly policy was a good idea. But to replace it with a defensive strategy had its own problems. For one thing, it is enormously provocative for a nuclear power to build a defense against nuclear weapons. Consider which is more alarming: a guy pointing an assault weapon at you or a guy in bullet-proof armor pointing an assault weapon at you. The Russians in the 1980s were precisely right to be frightened by the idea of a US missile defense system. It suggested that the US believed it could survive an attack and might be more tempted to launch one.
Whether any of these high-flying gadgets would actually work is another question. A look at the record of government technology in light of NASA does not inspire confidence. But the key thing was the price tag of tens of billions. Truly the military-industrial machine is a harsh mistress, and demands a constant flow of cash.
What does any of this have to do with now? Bush is open to reviving the idea of a missile defense but get this: in cooperation with Russia! Putin was the first to suggest it. He wants the two governments to get together and put a nuclear defense system in Kazakhstan. But wait a minute. If the two great enemies are linking up to build a defense, don’t they need an enemy? Yes, they do and one can always be conjured up. So why not make it Iran? And so they did. And surely in the days ahead we will be reminded of how Russia, after all, was our heroic ally in World War Two.
But the idea that Iran, which has no nuclear bombs at all, is a threat on the scale to challenge both the United States and Russia is utterly implausible on its face. It is a case of a lion vs. a flea. What’s more, if there is a drive in Iran to get nuclear weapons, there is no doubt that the push is not offensive but defensive. After the US exterminated Iraqi civilization, does anyone doubt that Iran has good reason to worry, and a national interest in protecting itself?
Now we move on to the next great idea that Bush had at the G-8 summit. He agreed in principle to discuss reducing US CO2 emissions in the spirit of Kyoto. The whole world cheered. And the left wing in the United States was gratified, even if its spokesmen said that Bush didn’t go far enough.
The trouble with all this talk of emissions reduction is that it takes place at too many levels of abstraction. A century ago, the great economic challenge was industrialization, since everyone understood that industry was the future. Governments took the idea too far, and forced industrialization prevailed from the US to Russia.
And today? The elites desire exactly the opposite: deindustrialization of the most prosperous place on the planet. And of course they want to do this by force.
And let no one doubt that this is precisely what they have in mind for us. They want to take away our cars, barbecue grills, and leaf blowers, and curb the ability of producers to develop and transport their products. Lower emissions means nothing less than a lower standard of living for you and me — and this despite any proof that doing so would make the slightest bit of difference in global temperature trends.
On the margin, more regulations on the use of fossil fuels would also cartelize industry, making it more difficult for smaller players to compete, and raising the price of fuel ever higher. There are some people who might win from the deal: the largest companies and the government. But for the rest of us, this is nothing short of disaster.
(By the way, if Bush really wants to curb emissions, I can think of no better way to start than by ending the gas-guzzling Iraq War.)
What can we say about the Left that has made this its cause célèbre? American leftism once claimed to favor liberty, power to the people, and the disempowerment of elites. Today, they stand and cheer as a horde of power-mongering phonies gather in far-flung estates and plot the future of the world economy. So this is what leftism has come down to: the hope that world dictators will successfully conspire to wreck our standard of living.
Between the right’s love for military socialism and the left’s love of forced de-industrialization, together with the perpetual menace of politicians’ clamor to make history, the cause of liberty needs even more ardent defenders.
L.VON MISES
WAY

that goes to show you that the masters of the universe are not the ones that claim they are and try to make the universe their own, all them men did what they did to make the universe work for THEM and ONLY THEM.

it is the ones that go the extra mile to make universe alot better for future masters, that will take their work and make it alot better for the ones coming up for generations

3 Responses to “Remember those old photos during World War II: Churchill, Stalin, Roosevelt, like master of the Universe?”

  1. Jeffrey M Says:

    that goes to show you that the masters of the universe are not the ones that claim they are and try to make the universe their own, all them men did what they did to make the universe work for THEM and ONLY THEM.

    it is the ones that go the extra mile to make universe alot better for future masters, that will take their work and make it alot better for the ones coming up for generations
    References :

  2. ritefielder14 Says:

    Wait, Iran is not an enemy of Russia.

    Russia is actually friends with Iran. They are supplying Iran with nuclear secrets. They are supplying them with materials to make the bomb.

    America has the right to put up that defense system. Russia has been slipping back to its communist ways.

    Over 14 journalists have been killed in Russia since the year 2000…since Putin came into power. The US knows that Russia is going to be a huge threat…that is why the US needs a missile defense system.

    Oh, one more thing, we may have a Kevlar vest but Russia just announced that they have built an ICBM that is capable of penetrating any missile defense system. So, it would be like a man with a gun wearing a Kevlar vest and the other man is pointing a 50cal at him. That 50cal would rip right through that Kevlar.

    I’d rather have a little defense than no defense at all.
    References :

  3. Kobaincito Says:

    You failed to mention that the Missile Shield is not a shield at all since in 25 years of development there has not been an instance to prove it works. As far as i understand it, it is so easily overwhelmed that its strategic potential for defense is minimal. Truth is, the US wants to be able to target any country in the world at any time.
    SO that Russia is right in feeling threatened, because if it can be immediately attacked by the US, it means it can never do anything to upset the US.
    I don’t want to make this comment too long because i agree with you on many points. Except your attacks on right and left make me think you are not very aware of the difference. You even called right wingers socialists. The truth is that there has not been an active left or right wing in US politics since the depression. (the possible exceptions are the McCarthy and McGovern campaigns in 68 and 72 and the student and black power movements)
    Not to say i am a big fan of the left right dichotomy. Personally i hold a melange of ideas stemming from pan-latinamerican nationalism, marxism, libertarianism and have a limited trust for free markets. I disagree with most everyone.
    The one thing that i agree with you and that leads me to believe you cannot be centrist, is your contempt for the elite. It leads me to believe that you have the same fervent passion for democracy that i hold, and therefore the same hatred for the present misuse of the democratic title.
    Problem is, to defeat those who master us we must unite. There is already a growing coalition of libertarians and socialists under the banner of Progressivism. Do you suppose that it is sufficient to criticize everyone without doing anything about it?
    One more thing. US living standards are high due to imperialist practices. Your standard of living is held up by war. If you defend it, you are defending the masters. It has little to do with global warming and much to do with sharing this world with all of us. Be a global partner or an enemy, no middle point.
    References :

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