I listened to the whole thing and I agree with most of it including his pointing out that they don't endorse any candidates and that Trump has a lot of issues. One thing that always strikes me about the old timer Liberty types is how their perspective is defined by national sovereignty. I believe the reasoning goes like this: nationalism>globalism, our Constitution will then take it to the individual from there. I think this is a mischaracterization of the situation stemming from outdated knowledge. First off the Constitution failed and though I will continue to fight for it, I don't believe we are getting it back. The globalism has moved past national boundaries and global economic monetary control long ago, they are fighting for minds now. It is the communication that they seek to compromise and control now. I am an optimist though, I believe like McAfee that the Internet has empowered us as cryptocurrencies will go where global fiat currency can't and the Internet will empower global nations of ideas to wage communication warfare with those that wish to box us in and control us.
Contemporary knowledge is best, huh?
Outdated?
Newer is not necessarily better.
Do you disagree with my characterization of the issue? Or do you just not like new things?
I took it as your general overview of everything, which you then used in this (JBS) circumstance.![]()
I agree we should continue to fight for and follow the Constitution. This includes protecting our borders and does not include things like the UN or NATO. What I'm saying is that it's a terrible place to moore the Liberty blimp because we need to be more flexible and ahead of them who have already moved well past our borders. With a communications platform like the Internet, it allows us to subvert their power and build a global coalition for Liberty, yes democratizing it by taking it straight to the people, but not through a democratic government or force at all. We already have plenty of overseas Liberty allies and I don't see a boarder between us. I see a collective unity through respecting individual rights, open and honest communication and trade. True individual sovereignty>nationalism
It's the attempt to subvert the states to be part of one overarching country all over again, so we have one country instead of a lot of individual ones in a federation - an issue a number of people on here don't understand any better then they do what direct democracy is.
In a world government, there will be zero places you can move to get away from it. Power will be complete, in one tranny.
So your saying instead of using technology to outsmart and outtrade our global masters we should get government to setup a protectionist economy and isolate ourselves from those that would do business with us?
This isn't the forum member pic thread, erowe. Go post it there.
http://www.donaldjtrump.com/media/donald-trump-america-needs-fair-trade-not-free-tradeDuring an interview with 60 Minutes, GOP frontrunner Donald Trump was questioned about the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), calling it a “disaster” and saying America needs “fair trade,” not “free trade.”
http://www.donaldjtrump.com/media/c...mentions-scott-walker-paul-ryan-in-janesville“Wisconsin has lost 15,000 jobs to Mexico since NAFTA,” Trump charged about the North American Free Trade Agreement. “Kasich…he voted for NAFTA.”
http://www.donaldjtrump.com/media/trump-well-make-america-great-againHe said it wasn’t that long ago when the country had millions and millions decent wage manufacturing jobs that have now fled overseas due to bad trade deals like NAFTA.
https://www.donaldjtrump.com/press-...-announces-southwest-virginia-leadership-teamHorrible trade deals such as NAFTA, which Mr. Trump has consistently opposed, have shipped manufacturing jobs overseas, and crippled the area economically.
Since NAFTA, CAFTA and all the rest, are being used to bring down our country, yes, anything he can do to, at minimum, make the trading rules the same for the U.S. as their trading partner and to reject any additional ones, like TPP, IS sticking a log in the spokes of the global establishment.So while Trump may be opposed to NAFTA in its current form, he is saying nothing that would threaten the global establishment.
I understand that. My point is that it's a major stretch to take Trump's position on the trade deals and spin it that he is threatening the global establishment, even if that happens to a degree.Trump has said many times that a problem with NAFTA, et al., is that the trading criteria are not equal on both sides.