Do as I Say, Not as I Do This is the general attitude of the - TopicsExpress



          

Do as I Say, Not as I Do This is the general attitude of the U.S. government towards the financial conduct of Americans, certain operative assumptions that are now in use from top-ranking officials, right down through the millions of tedious bureaucratic paper shufflers. Here are just a few: 1) You are guilty until you prove your innocence; the attitude of the Internal Revenue Service, and almost every other regulatory agency; 2) You have no right to personal or financial privacy; the government has the right to know everything about you thanks to the 2001 PATRIOT Act; 3) Any attempt to save on taxes is viewed as tax evasion, not legal tax avoidance; 4) You have no right to offshore financial or banking privacy; thanks to FATCA — Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act; 5) You may have a right to expatriation in theory, but the exit tax will confiscate much of what you own if you leave, just as the Jews who escaped from Nazi Germany. And here are some of the current illegal and unconstitutional actions of our government: 1) Detention: National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) allows indefinite detention of U.S. citizens without charges. 2) Warrantless searches: the president can order warrantless surveillance, force companies and organizations to turn over information on citizens’ finances, communications and associations; the FBI uses “national security letters” signed by an FBI agent not by a judge. 3) Secrecy: the government uses secret legal arguments to support secret court proceedings using secret evidence. 4) U.S. military now acts as domestic police; militarization of local police SWAT teams. Aerial police spy drones are now in routine use with 30,000 authorized by Congress by 2020. 5) War crimes: federal courts are denied the power to investigate or prosecute crimes under Nuremberg principles of international law. 6) Continual monitoring: President Obama claims he can use GPS devices to monitor every move of targeted citizens without securing a court order or review. Never Let a Good Crisis Go to Waste As in the days after the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001, in the future when the U.S. economy collapses, a panicked U.S. Congress may go along with even more radical plans, just as the PATRIOT Act became law and was signed by President George W. Bush — and President Obama, as the list above shows, has gone much further than Bush in destroying our liberties. It was Rahm Emanuel, at the time president-elect Obama’s appointed Chief of Staff, on November 21, 2008, who told the Wall Street Journal: “You never want a serious crisis to go to waste. And what I mean by that is an opportunity to do things you think you could not do before.” Interestingly, Emanuel’s words came only weeks after German Interior Minister Wolfgang Schäuble warned in a Der Spiegel magazine interview that the 2008 global financial crisis would have political repercussions, noting that Adolf Hitler rose to power following the 1929 Wall Street crash. “We learned from the worldwide economic crisis of the 1920s and 1930s that an economic crisis can result in an incredible threat for all of society. The consequence of that depression was Adolf Hitler and, indirectly, World War II and Auschwitz.” Have we learned nothing at all from history
Posted on: Tue, 08 Jul 2014 05:39:16 +0000

Trending Topics



Recently Viewed Topics




© 2015