| | Foreign Policy
Prior to World War Two, the British Empire, for the most part, shielded America from the tyrannies of Eurasia. It had long been British policy to prevent Eurasia from falling under the control of a single aggressor or coalition of aggressors. The United States, meanwhile, upheld the Monroe Doctrine against all threats, British or otherwise. Once we entered World War Two, there was a dramatic expansion in our policy. At first we reinforced British policy toward Eurasia. Soon thereafter we found ourselves to be the indispensible power that would prevent Eurasia from falling under the boot of an aggressor or a combination of aggressors.
Of late, we have unnecessarily complicated our foreign policy. There is the wilfull gutting of the Monroe Doctrine, on account of the advancement of a North American Union. There is our commercial build up of Communist China. The United Nations, which would one day eclipse our power, receives support from Washington. And there is our wrongheaded effort to bring democracy to the Persian Gulf, especially in Iraq.
Let us restore a foreign policy that serves the national interest. Stop the North American Union. Have nothing to do with the UN as long as it promotes treaties that impair our sovereignty and nurtures "world citizens" at the expense of American patriotism. End the transfer of sensitive technology to Beijing. Simplify our task in the Persian Gulf: maintain the balance of power in the region, nothing more. Finally, we must impede the combining of the Russian Federation, Communist China, Iran, Venezuela and other disgruntled oil producing powers. On this last point, it is vital to uphold the dollar bloc through fairness, above all, by backstopping the dollar with increasing wealth (increasing industrial production and decreasing debt creation) and therefore providing increasing value for Muslim oil. Routine geopolitical maneuver--the detaching of individual powers from the anti-American combination--should take care of the rest.
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