CHAPTER 6
Treaties and Treason
I say the same as to the opinion of those who consider the grant of
the treaty-making power as boundless. If it is, then we have no
Constitution.1 • Thomas Jefferson,
September 1803
Treaties make international law
and also they make domestic law. Under our Constitution, treaties
become the supreme law of the land.... [T]reaty law can override the
Constitution. Treaties, for example, ... can cut across the rights
given the people by their constitutional Bill of Rights.2
• Secretary of State John Foster Dulles,
April 11, 1952
[A]fter all,
the UN Charter is the law of the land....3
• George L. Sherry (CFR),
The United Nations Reborn, 1990
The main political obstacle to the new world order envisioned by the
one-world schemers has been, and remains, the Constitution of the
United States of America. Unique in both its foundational principles
and structure, the constitutional system established by America’s
Founding Fathers — abused though it may be by decades of sustained
assault on the one hand and neglect on the other — continues to
stymie the architects of totalitarian global government.
From their own experience, and from an acquaintance with history,
the Americans of 1776 and 1787 well understood that the dangers to
liberty from an unrestrained government were, more often than not,
far greater than the threat of tyranny from a conquering foreign
power. The limitations placed on government by the designers of our
founding document, therefore, served as formidable bulwarks against
the dangerous centralization of power in the national government;
those limitations also rendered any transfers of constitutional
powers of governance to an international government virtually
impossible.
One of 20th century America’s most passionate defenders of liberty
against the encroachments of omnipotent government was Frank
Chodorov, editor of The Freeman. Writing in 1955, in a special issue
devoted to exposing and opposing “One Worldism and the United
Nations,” he noted:
Government is the monopoly of coercion. Its function is to prevent
individuals from using violence or other coercive methods on one
another, so that the business of Society — the exchange of goods,
services and ideas — may be carried on in safety and tranquility.
Its contribution to social progress, though necessary, is purely
negative. In this country, tradition and the Constitution hold that
the function of government is to protect the individual in the
enjoyment of those rights which inhere in him by virtue of
existence, and which are the gifts of the Creator. And in the
beginning, before tradition and the spirit of the Constitution were
perverted, Americans took for granted that government had no other
competence.4
“But the hard fact,” said Chodorov, “is that this monopoly of
coercion is vested in humans — of which government is necessarily
composed — and that these humans are no different in make-up from
those they are called upon to coerce.”5
That is indeed a hard fact
that no amount of wishful thinking or high-flown rhetoric about
global brotherhood can change. It was the recognition of just such
hard realities as these that prompted Thomas Jefferson to issue his
famous dictum: “In questions of power let no more be heard of
confidence in man, but bind him down from mischief by the chains of
the constitution.”6 The failure of peoples to keep government
rigidly contained have time after time tragically proven the wisdom
of Jefferson’s admonition.
Chodorov agreed and noted:
Thus in time the agency established for the purpose of protecting
Society becomes its master.
This tendency of government to expand upon its power and its
prerogatives is inherent in it simply because it is composed of
men.... Therefore, the concern of Society, particularly in the last
few centuries, has been to find some way to keep government within
bounds. Thus came constitutionalism. Thus came the idea that to
safeguard freedom — from government, of course — it is necessary to
keep government small, so that it can be subject to constant
surveillance, and poor, so that it cannot get out of hand.7
Chodorov
was confirming what the founders believed, that government itself
must be made subject to “the rule of law.” The American republic, as
a result, in its earlier years, could proudly claim to be “a
government of laws, not of men.”
Another champion of freedom, John
F. McManus, more recently offered the following observation about
the unique foundation of American constitutionalism:
The underlying premise of the American system is the thunderous
assertion in the Declaration of Independence that “all men ... are
endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights.” Because
they are endowed with rights, the Declaration reasons, men have the
power to protect their rights collectively. In other words, they
have the power to form a government. The government they create is
to have as its sole purpose the protection of the God-given rights
of the individual. Government is not to be the distributor of
wealth, the regulator of the law-abiding citizenry, or the ruler of
the people.8
Unfortunately, there are in our midst today many
powerful individuals and organizations who find such personal
freedom, and the principles of governance that make it possible,
totally repugnant. For both personal freedom and limitations on
government power obstruct their plans to create a “new world order”
for the planet.
CFR Versus the Constitution
To the Council on Foreign Relations, for example, our exquisite
system with its checks and balances and separation of powers, which
has earned the plaudits of renowned political observers worldwide,
erects impenetrable obstacles that “militate against the development
of responsible government.” In one of its very early and revealing
reports, Survey of American Relations (1928), we find the Council
lamenting:
The Roman republic and the Hanoverian monarchy described by
Montesquieu and Blackstone were both governments of separation of
powers maintained by checks and balances. Both were forced to
achieve unity by the increase of international complications.
One went the way of executive sovereignty; the other that of
parliamentary sovereignty. The difficulties in the way of either
such development in the United States are obvious. While presidents
have sometimes acted like dictators in brief emergencies, an
intensive reaction of congressional control has always followed. The
jealous control of the purse by Congress is a check which would
inevitably curb an ambitious president if the electorate’s
opposition to a third term should wane. Furthermore, the physical
separation of the cabinet from Congress, the comparative equality of
power of the two houses, rendering each a check upon the other, the
“states’ rights” sentiment which prevents a gradual subordination of
the Senate, and the position of the Supreme Court as final
interpreter of the constitutional separation of powers — all these
militate against the development of responsible government.9
[Emphasis added]
The Council was, at this point, still struggling mightily against
the triumphant “isolationism” that had ruined the internationalists’
“first try at world order,” the League of Nations. It was the one-worlders’
failure to secure the constitutionally required two-thirds majority
in the Senate necessary for ratification of all treaties that doomed
the League. Thus, the 1928 Council report stressed at length the
need to remove this constitutional obstacle to “responsible
government.” The CFR report stated:
The seriousness of the situation is increased by the apparent
rigidity of the Senate’s attitude. Charles Cheney Hyde, former
solicitor of the Department of State, believes that “Any
constructive proposal designed to make a successful appeal to those
possessed of the treaty making power of the United States must reckon
with the following conditions: first, that this nation has a passion
for independence; secondly, that it will not agree to be drawn into
a war between other states; and, thirdly, that it will not delegate
to any outside body the right to determine what is the nature of a
controversy or how it ought to be adjusted. These are facts.”
From
this Professor Hyde assumes that the United States must limit her
participation in international organization accordingly. Others have
argued from the same premises that the Constitution must be amended
to eliminate the two-thirds rule in the Senate.10 The Council report
made clear its support for the elimination of this vital restraint
on executive power.
The 1928 report argued:
Substitution of a majority of both houses for two-thirds of the
Senate in treaty ratification would accord with the practice of most
continental European governments. It would obviate the complaints of
the House and eliminate the ever-present possibility of inability to
execute a treaty, valid at international law, because of the refusal
of the House to agree to appropriations or necessary legislation.
This would seem reasonable, in view of the constitutional provision
that treaties are the supreme law of the land, and on this score was
suggested in the Federal convention of 1787.
It would also render
deadlocks less frequent, because one political party is much more
likely to control a majority of both houses than two-thirds of the
Senate.... In any case, the desirability of preventing deadlocks
when treaties are as necessary as legislation should overrule these
objections.11
The two-thirds requirement “exceeds the need for a
check on administrative usurpation,” said the Council’s Survey. “...
Such a division of powers,” it held, far from providing needed
protection, “... has too often resulted in weakness, muddle, and
delay, sometimes even in the paralysis of one of the most vital
functions of modern government.”12
It is certain that the CFR
hand-wringers would have found little if any sympathy among this
nation’s founders for their interpretation of “the most vital
functions of modern government.”
More than half a century later, the Establishment’s brain trusters
are still venting their spleen over the aggravation the Constitution
continues to cause them. In his The Power to Lead (1984), Professor
James MacGregor Burns stated:
“Let us face reality. The framers [of
the U.S. Constitution] have simply been too shrewd for us. They have
outwitted us. They designed separated institutions that cannot be
unified by mechanical linkages, frail bridges, tinkering. If we are
to ‘turn the founders upside down’ — to put together what they put
asunder — we must directly confront the constitutional structure
they erected.”13
Professor Burns has served as co-director of Project ’87 and as a
board member of the Committee on the Constitutional System (CCS),
two of the Establishment’s most important agencies working to
radically change the Constitution. Both organizations, heavily
larded with CFR members, are ready with proposals that would
drastically alter our system of government should a constitutional
convention be called. Most Americans are completely unaware that our
nation is dangerously close to completing the process to convene a
constitutional convention.14
Professor Charles Hardin, a CCS
founder, has written in the Committee’s important 1985 book of
essays, Reforming American Government, that the Senate,
“should be
deprived of its power to approve treaties and presidential
nominations.”15
Moreover, Hardin believes: “The ideal is to create
conditions so that the conduct of government itself will be ruled
largely by conventions rather than by fixed laws.”16 (Emphasis
added)
The one-worlders have failed thus far to effect the “major surgery”
on the Constitution advocated by Hardin, Burns, et al.,17 but they
continue undeterred on their subversive course. Since the Constitu’s
amendment process was purposefully made difficult by the framers so
as to protect against the very tampering and aggrandizement the
internationalists propose, their primary strategy to create “world
order,” as we have seen, has involved revising the Constitution
“piece by piece” by means of “treaty law.” This gigantic fraud has
been perpetrated against the American people by CFR Insiders working
in concert with the media, academe, and the federal executive,
legislative, and judicial branches during much of this century.
It is highly doubtful that the UN Charter would have been ratified
by the U.S., or by many other countries for that matter, without
inclusion of Article 2, Paragraph 7, which provides:
Nothing contained in the present Charter shall authorize the United
Nations to intervene in matters which are essentially within the
domestic jurisdiction of any state or shall require the Members to
submit such matters to settlement under the present Charter....18
The wording and meaning seem clear enough: Membership in the UN, as
indicated by acceptance of the Charter, in no way constitutes
surrender of control over domestic affairs to the world
organization. As successful as the CFR’s internationalist propaganda
campaign was in selling the UN idea in 1945, it would have failed if
there had been any admission that the real intent was to allow other
nations and international bureaucrats to meddle in and dictate
policies concerning our internal affairs. However, what the UN
provides with one hand it takes with the other.
Article 2, Paragraph
7 of the UN Charter also states:
“... but this principle shall not
prejudice the application of enforcement measures under Chapter
VII.”
This wording could well be used by UN officials to authorize
intervention by the organization in the domestic affairs of a member
nation. So, even though the first portion of Paragraph 7 would seem
to prohibit any such meddling, the final portion could be construed
as a loophole that would allow such intervention.
Many other UN documents contain ambiguous wording of this type.
Should the UN ever decide to act contrary to its own clear
prohibitions, internationalist legal scholars will focus on
whichever portion of the ambiguous wording suits their fancy.
Indeed, almost before the ink on the Charter had dried, a
well-orchestrated campaign was underway to undercut and reverse the
meaning of Article 2, Paragraph 7. In 1946, William G. Carr, a
consultant for the United States delegation at the San Francisco
Conference, wrote in his book One World In the Making:
Under modern conditions, few acts of a nation affect only its own
people.... It seems clear that no nation which signs this [UN]
Charter can justly maintain that any of its acts are its own
business, or within its own domestic jurisdiction, if the Security
Council says that these acts are a threat to the peace.19 [Emphasis
added]
Soon thereafter, this same theme was being transmitted via many
respected sources. The April 1949 American Bar Association Journal,
for instance, carried an article by UN staff member Moses Moskowitz
contending that ... once a matter has become, in one way or another,
the subject of regulation by the United Nations, be it by resolution
of the General Assembly or by convention between member states at
the insistence of the United Nations, that subject ceases to be a
matter being “essentially within the domestic jurisdiction of the
Member States.” As a matter of fact, such a position represents the
official view of the United Nations, as well as of the member states
that have voted in favor of the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights.20
Such incredibly arrogant advocacy of the usurpation of sovereign
national powers should have met with immediate rebuke from American
officials. Instead, it was embraced as our nation’s official
position with President Harry S Truman’s claim in 1950 that “There
is now no longer any real difference between domestic and foreign
affairs.”21
In like manner, President Dwight Eisenhower subsequently declared:
“For us indeed there are no longer ‘foreign affairs’ and ‘foreign
policy.’ Since such affairs belong to and affect the entire world,
they are essentially local affairs for every nation, including our
own.”22
Dulles and Treaty Law
It was Eisenhower’s Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, however,
who touched off heated national debate about the issue with his
highly controversial speech before the regional meeting of the
American Bar Association at Louisville, Kentucky in 1952. In his
formal address, Dulles asserted:
Treaties make international law and also they make domestic law.
Under our Constitution, treaties become the supreme law of the land.
They are, indeed, more supreme than ordinary laws for congressional
laws are invalid if they do not conform to the Constitution, whereas
treaty law can override the Constitution. Treaties, for example, can
take powers away from the Congress and give them to the President;
they can take powers from the States and give them to the Federal
Government or to some international body, and they can cut across
the rights given the people by their constitutional Bill of
Rights.23
Dulles was grossly misinterpreting the Constitution on
several very important points. In fact, his dissertation was an
outright assault on the basic premises of our constitutional system.
It would behoove us at this point to see what the Constitution, “the
supreme law of the land,” has to say about treaties and the treaty
power. In the Constitution we find:
Article II, Sec. 2: “[The President] shall have Power, by and with
the Advice and Consent of the Senate, to make Treaties, provided
two-thirds of the Senators present concur....” Article III, Sec. 2:
“The judicial Power shall extend to all Cases, in Law and Equity,
arising under this Constitution, the Laws of the United States, and
Treaties made, or which shall be made, under their Authority....”
Article VI: “This Constitution, and the Laws of the United States
which shall be made in Pursuance thereof; and all Treaties made, or
which shall be made, under the Authority of the United States, shall
be the supreme Law of the Land; and the Judges in every State shall
be bound thereby, any Thing in the Constitution or Laws of any State
to the Contrary notwithstanding.”
John F. McManus, writing in The New American, commented on an
important distinction regarding the wording of Article VI that is
rarely mentioned. “It must be carefully noted,” he observed, “that,
within the body of the Constitution itself, the founders frequently
referred to the document they had crafted as ‘this’ Constitution. At
the close of the above passage, they referred to ‘the’ Constitution,
and what they meant was that no state constitution or state law
shall stand above the U.S. Constitution. There is no justification
for holding that the document empowers the makers of treaties to
undo the Constitution itself.”24
According to Dulles, Moskowitz, and
modern Supreme Court interpretations, however, Article VI amounts to
an unlimited grant of power through which the President and
two-thirds of a quorum of the Senate may do virtually anything.
President Eisenhower, Secretary Dulles, and their internationalist
cohorts even went so far as to claim that the real danger to the
Constitution came not from an expansive interpretation of the treaty
power, but from attempts to explicitly and unequivocally guarantee
that “treaty law” would not be able to override the Constitution.25
A close examination of the Constitution’s wording and the “original
intent” of the framers, however, make abundantly clear that the
position espoused by McManus is far more in tune with what was
intended in our founding document than the opinion taken by Dulles, Moskowitz, et al. James Madison, who was the secretary of the
Philadelphia Convention, the principal author of the Constitution,
and has justly been called “the Father of the Constitution,” said of
the scope of the treaty power:
I do not conceive that power is given to the President and the
Senate to dismember the empire, or alienate any great, essential
right. I do not think the whole legislative authority have this
power. The exercise of the power must be consistent with the object
of the delegation.26
In 1801, the year he began his presidency,
Thomas Jefferson published his authoritative reference work, A
Manual of Parliamentary Practice, which went through many printings
and became a standard handbook used in both the House and Senate. In
that book, Jefferson declared of treaty power:
1. It is admitted that it must concern the foreign nation, party to
the contract, or it would be a mere nullity res inter alias [sic]
acta. 2. By the general power to make treaties, the Constitution
must have intended to comprehend only those objects which are
usually regulated by treaty, and cannot be otherwise regulated. 3.
It must have meant to except out of those the rights reserved to the
states; for surely the President and Senate cannot do by treaty what
the whole government is interdicted from doing in any way.27
This is not only sound legal opinion; it is plain, common sense. If
the Bill of Rights and the whole Constitution were to have any
lasting force and meaning, it could not have been intended that they
could be completely undone by means of treaty.* Or as Jefferson
rightly observed:
“I say the same as to the opinion of those who
consider the grant of the treaty-making power as boundless. If it
is, then we have no Constitution.”28
Alexander Hamilton, one of the most forceful of the Federalists and
one who often clashed with Jefferson, nevertheless agreed with his
distinguished adversary on this important point. Hamilton wrote:
The only constitutional exception to the power of making treaties
is, that it shall not change the Constitution.... On natural
principles, a treaty, which should manifestly betray or sacrifice
primary interests of the state, would be null.29
“A treaty cannot be
made,” Hamilton maintained, “which alters the Constitution of the
country or which infringes any express exceptions to the power of
the Constitution of the United States.”30
Until recent times, this
was also the opinion of the vast majority of legal scholars and the
federal judiciary. Supreme Court Justice Joseph Story, for instance,
expressed the view commonly held by 19th century jurists when he
opined:
[T]hough the power is thus general and unrestricted, it is not to be
so construed as to destroy the fundamental laws of the state. A
power given by the Constitution cannot be construed to authorize a
destruction of other powers given in the same instrument.... A
treaty to change the organization of the Government, or to
annihilate its sovereignty, to overturn its republican form, or to
deprive it of its constitutional powers, would be void; because it
would destroy, what it was designed merely to fulfill, the will of
the people.31
Justice Stephen J. Field’s dictum in the 1890 case of Geofroy v. Riggs buttressed Story’s opinion. It stated:
That the treaty power of the United States extends to all proper
subjects of negotiation between our government and the governments
of other nations, is clear.... It would not be contended that it
extends so far as to authorize what the Constitution forbids, or a
change in the character of the government or in that of one of the
States, or a cession of any portion of the territory of the latter,
without its consent.32
In New Orleans vs. United States (1836), the
Supreme Court held:
The government of the United States, as was well observed in the
argument, is one of limited powers. It can exercise authority over
no subjects except those which have been delegated to it. Congress
cannot, by legislation, enlarge the federal jurisdiction, nor can it
be enlarged under the treaty-making power.33 [Emphasis added]
One of
the most dedicated and articulate defenders of this view of the
subordination of treaties to the Constitution was Frank Holman, past
president of the American Bar Association. Beginning in 1948 with
his first speech on the danger of “treaty law” given at the State
Bar of California, he launched a nationwide educational effort to
marshal opposition to this dangerous encroachment.
“The doctrine
that the treaty power is unlimited and omnipotent and may be used to
override the Constitution and the Bill of Rights,” said Holman, “...
is a doctrine of recent origin and largely derived from Missouri vs.
Holland.”34 (Emphasis in original)
Concurring with Holman, constitutional scholar Roger MacBride
maintained that the Supreme Court’s 1920 Missouri decision “ushered
in a new era of treaty jurisprudence”35 by holding that a treaty
does supersede the Constitution.
Treaty Traps Proliferating
Through the misuse of the treaty-making provision, the one-worlders
have taken huge strides in their effort to “turn the founders upside
down.” It is of paramount importance, therefore, that Americans
exercise special vigilance concerning all treaties. Unfortunately,
we find just the opposite to be the case; the American public
appears to be totally oblivious to the flood of treaties intended to
sweep away our constitutional protections.
There was no fanfare, no opposition, and scant media coverage, for
example, when the United Nations International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights sailed through the Senate on April 2, 1992 on an
unrecorded vote. There was none of the intense, emotional public
debate that attended the Panama Canal Treaty ratification a few
years earlier, but the Civil and Political Rights Covenant
(hereafter CP Covenant) represents a far greater danger to our
constitutional system and to the rights of every American citizen.
During hearings on the treaty conducted by the Senate Committee on
Foreign Relations, Senator Jesse Helms was the only member to
register opposition. “Now this Senator and every other Member of
Congress has taken an oath of office to protect and defend the
Constitution of the United States,” the North Carolina solon
reminded his colleagues. “And that means we should be fully
committed to the rights of the individual, which are enshrined in
our Constitution. And we should be committed to the protection of
these individual rights. We cannot keep the commitment if we agree
to the terms of this covenant.”36
Why the conflict?
Because, said
Helms, the “covenant calls into question the right of freedom of
speech, and freedom of the press, and just punishments — they are
clearly constitutional, and even the Federal/State structure of our
legal system. Now any agreement that undercuts these rights is an
attack on human rights, not a safeguarding of human rights. This
covenant, in sum, is a step backward into authoritarianism....”37
Serious charges. But they were summarily dismissed by the more
“sophisticated,” internationally minded members of the committee as
the paranoid ravings of a hopeless super-nationalist. The serious
flaws in the Covenant, however, are obvious and by no means
inconsequential. In wording typical of that found in the
constitutions of communist states, the Covenant acknowledges various
rights of individuals, then negates those rights with all manner of
conditions. Article 14, for example, states “everyone shall be
entitled to a fair and public hearing....” Sound similar to the U.S.
Constitution’s guarantee “to a speedy and public trial”?
Ah, but the
article then declares:
“The Press and the public may be excluded from all or part of a
trial for reasons of morals, public order....”38
It, in essence,
provides legitimacy for secret trials, a hallmark of despotism
throughout history.
The enormous contrast between our Bill of Rights and the UN’s
so-called “human rights” conventions should be evident to anyone
willing to compare the documents. Article I of the U.S. Bill of
Rights, for example, declares without qualification,
“Congress shall
make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting
the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech or of
the press....”
By way of contrast, Article 18 of the CP Covenant states, in part,
“Everyone shall have the right to
freedom of thought, conscience and religion.” But then it goes on to
assert: “... Freedom to manifest
one’s religion or beliefs may be subject only to such limitations as
are prescribed by law and are
necessary....”39
Likewise, Article 21 purports to guarantee the right of peaceful
assembly, but then permits the state to
limit this right for “national security or public safety, public
order, ... the protection of public health or morals....”40 What
dictator couldn’t drive a tank through that opening? So it goes with
the UN’s treatment of all rights we take for granted under our
Constitution. The Bush Administration, seeking to blunt criticism of
these glaring defects, came up with five reservations, five
understandings, four declarations, and numerous explanations
(filling 18 pages) that it attached to the treaty. Declaration
Number 2 shows the weakness of Mr. Bush’s commitment to rights:
“[I]t is the view of the United States that States Party to the
Covenant should wherever possible refrain from imposing any
restrictions or limitations on the exercise of the rights recognized
and protected by the Covenant, even when such restrictions and
limitations are permissible under the terms of the Covenant.”41 Read
it again: “should wherever possible refrain.” Translation: “Please
use your dictatorial powers sparingly — if you can help it.”
As Senator Helms noted: “Many countries controlled by totalitarian
governments have signed on to this covenant, laughing all the way
back to the garage.” He also said,
“I have no doubt that these
countries will not acknowledge our reservations, but they will use
U.S. ratification to make false charges of violations of the
covenant. Mark my words, that is precisely what will happen. Meanwhile, they will use the serious weaknesses of this covenant to
justify their own cruel regimes.”42
It is not only foreign dictators
who put little store in the power of reservations and declarations.
The State Department’s claim, for instance, that its Declaration
Number 1 makes the treaty “non-selfexecuting” (that is, it “will not
create a cause of private action in U.S. courts”) is rejected by
many treaty proponents here in the United States. The International
Human Rights Law Group stated:
“It is not clear that such a
declaration would be binding on the judiciary. Scholars and court
decisions support the view that the issue whether a treaty is
self-executing or not is one of construction by the courts.”43
Abraham Katz, president of the United States Council for
International Business, concurred, stating to the Senate committee:
There are, however, no precise rules for determining whether a
treaty is self executing and, consequently, there is no certain
method for making this determination. Indeed the courts frequently
disagree....
[S]ome federal courts may not feel bound by such a Senate
declaration attached to the resolution of ratification and might
nevertheless treat the ratification as being self executing....44
The World Court
When the U.S. Constitution and the rights of American citizens
conflict with treaties and UN covenants, as is likely to happen with
increasing frequency, there are certain to be many politicians,
“legal experts,” and judges who will hold that American national
interests, individual rights, and domestic law must yield to the
higher purposes of “world order” and “the rule of law.” In the
interests of expediting this process, Establishment Insiders have
been trying for decades to expand the jurisdiction and authority of
the International Court of Justice (more commonly known as the World
Court).45
This makes all the more alarming the recently renewed
campaign simultaneously to strengthen the Court and entangle the
U.S. in a welter of new treaties.
Writing in the Summer 1992 issue of the CFR’s Foreign Affairs,
Representative Jim Leach (R-IA)
declared:
“Since one of the most effective antidotes to the
irrationality of ancient enmity is the swift
justice of the law, a turn (or in the case of the United States,
return) to the compulsory jurisdiction of the World Court would
appear to be one of the most appropriate and achievable objectives
of the decades ahead.”
Although the U.S. automatically became a member of the World Court
in 1945 when the Senate ratified the UN Charter, we were not bound
to accept its compulsory jurisdiction. The Senate resolution
recognizing the Court’s compulsory jurisdiction excepted those
“disputes with regard to matters which are essentially within the
domestic jurisdiction of the United States.” That was not enough to
satisfy many Americans who rightly asked: “But who will define
‘domestic jurisdiction?’” It was apparent that if the definition
were left up to the UN or its World Court to decide, there would be
very little if any “domestic jurisdiction.”
To assuage these fears, Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman
Tom Connally (D-TX), who favored the resolution, proposed the
addition of these eight words: “as determined by the United States
of America.” These eight words comprise what is known as the
Connally Reservation.46 And, as author G. Edward Griffin has pointed
out, these words “are all that stand between us and complete legal
subjection to the whims of fifteen or nine or five or even two men
[of the World Court] whose legal backgrounds and personal ideologies
may be strongly antipathetic to the free world in general and to the
United States in particular.”47 Even that scant protection, however,
may soon disappear — by outright repeal or by “overriding”
agreements, treaties or court rulings — unless a significant portion
of the American public can be roused to a robust, determined
opposition to this treachery.
The deluge of treaties now in various stages of readiness and
preparation — regarding the “environment” (see Chapter 7),
“children’s rights” (see Chapter 8), “peace and disarmament” (see
Chapters 1 and 2), and a host of other issues — has the capability
of utterly destroying our Republic if they are approved.
But it is not treaties alone that constitute this threat; the U.S.
Department of State includes the following in its “sources of
international law making”: “treaties, executive agreements,
legislation, ... testimony and statements before Congressional and
international bodies....”48 The period of 1990-99 has been declared
by the United Nations General Assembly to be “the United Nations
Decade of International Law.”49 As such, it being used to propel
additional assaults on national sovereignty.
Americans must face up to the reality that our heritage of freedom
under the “rule of law” of the Constitution is being replaced
piecemeal by the tyrannical “rule of men” under the Charter of the
United Nations. We must decide now, while there is yet time, which
future we will choose for ourselves and our posterity.
It is worth noting that the legal status of the United Nations
Charter itself is, or should be, very much in question. Speaking
before the House of Representatives in 1954, Congressman Usher L.
Burdick of North Dakota noted that although ratified as a treaty,
the UN Charter could not legally be considered as such. Rep. Burdick
charged:
“The first move was made at San Francisco, where many
nations met, drew up a charter, and submitted that charter to the
Senate for approval as a treaty. This document had none of the
earmarks of a treaty, because the Supreme Court of the United States
has held in many cases that a treaty is an agreement made between
nations, to do or not to do particular things. In the case of the
Charter of the United Nations, it was not an agreement between
nations. It was an agreement made by the agents of several
governments, and there is no contention from any quarter that the
United Nations at
that time was a nation with which we could make a treaty, but
intended to make it an integral power at
the first opportunity. How these forces for evil planned to make the
United Nations a nation is clear
now, since they propose at this time to build a world government by
simply amending the Charter of the
United Nations.”
(Congressional Record, April 28, 1954)
Congressman Burdick was standing on firm ground. For as Hamilton
pointed out in essay No. 75 of The
Federalist Papers regarding the power of making treaties:
“Its
objects are CONTRACTS with foreign
nations which have the force of law, but derive it from the
obligations of good faith. They are not rules
prescribed by the sovereign to the subject, but agreements between
sovereign and sovereign.” (Emphasis
added)
Notes
1. Thomas Jefferson in letter to Wilson C. Nicholas, Monticello,
September 1803, quoted by John P.
Foley (ed.), The Jeffersonian Cyclopedia (New York: Funk & Wagnalls,
1900), p. 190. 2. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, “Treatymaking and National
Unity,” an address delivered at the
regional meeting of the American Bar Association, Louisville, KY,
April 11, 1952, as recorded in
Treaties and Executive Agreements, Hearings on S. J. Res. 1 & S. J.
Res. 43; Feb., Mar., & Apr. 1953,
Y4.J89/2:T71/2, p. 862. 3. George L. Sherry, The United Nations Reborn: Conflict Control in
the Post-Cold War World, Council
on Foreign Relations Critical Issues series (New York, 1990), p. 8.
4. Frank Chodorov, “One Worldism,” The Freeman, March 1955, p. 335.
5. Ibid. 6. Thomas Jefferson, quoted by Lewis C. Henry (ed.), Best Quotations
for all Occasions (Greenwich,
CT: Fawcett Publications, 1964), p. 45. 7. Chodorv, p. 335. 8. John F. McManus,”Examining the Rule of Law,” The John Birch
Society Bulletin (Appleton, WI:
June 1991), p. 4. 9. Charles P. Howland, Survey of American Foreign Relations 1928,
published for the Council on
Foreign Relations (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1928), p. 88.
10. Ibid., p.111. 11. Ibid., pp. 111-12. 12 Ibid., p. 286.
13. James MacGregor Burns, The Power To Lead (New York, Simon &
Schuster, 1984), as reprinted in
Donald L. Robinson (ed.), Reforming American Government: The
Bicentennial Papers of the Committee
on the Constitutional System, (Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1985),
p. 160.
14. See, for example: Don Fotheringham, “The Con-Con Network,” The
New American, February 10,
1992. 15. Charles Hardin, “Toward a New Constitution (1974),” in Donald L.
Robinson (ed.), Reforming
American Government: The Bicentennial Papers of the Committee on the
Constitutional System,
(Boulder, CO: Westview Press, Inc., 1985), p. 150. 16. Ibid., p. 149.
17. Ibid. 18. Charter of the United Nations and Statute of the International
Court of Justice (Lake Success, NY:
The United Nations, Department of Public Information, 1950), p. 5.
19. William G. Carr, One World In the Making: The United Nations
(Boston: Ginn and Company,
1946), p.45, quoted by Robert W. Lee, The United Nations Conspiracy
(Appleton, WI: Western Islands,
1981), p. 120. 20. Moses Moskowitz, “Is the U.N.’s Bill of Human Rights Dangerous?
A Reply to President Holman,”
American Bar Association Journal, Vol. 35, April 1949, p. 285. 21. Foreword by President Truman, Foreign Affairs Policy, Series 26,
Department of State publication
#3972, September 1952, quoted by G. Edward Griffin, The Fearful
Master: A Second Look At The
United Nations (Appleton, WI: Western Islands, 1964), p. 186. 22. President Dwight Eisenhower, speech at St. John’s College,
Anapolis Maryland, May 22, 1959,
quoted by Griffin, p. 186. 23. Dulles, loc. cit. 24. John F. McManus, “Treaties versus the Constitution,” The New
American, July 27, 1992, p. 44. 25. Frank E. Holman, Story of the “Bricker” Amendment (New York:
Committe for Constitutional
Government, Inc., 1954), p. 23. 26. James Madison, quoted by Jonathan Elliot, The Debates in the
Several State Conventions on the
Adoption of the Federal Constitution (originally published in 1830;
republished 1937, J. B. Lippincott),
Vol. 3, p. 514. 27. Thomas Jefferson, A Manual of Parliamentary Practice (New York:
Clark & Maynard, 1873), p.110, quoted by Roger Lea MacBride,
MacBride, Treaties Versus the Constitution (Caldwell, ID: The Caxton
Printers, Ltd., 1956), pp. 37-38. 28. Thomas Jefferson in letter to Wilson C. Nicholas, Monticello,
September 1803, quoted by John P.
Foley (ed.), The Jeffersonian Cyclopedia (New York: Funk & Wagnalls,
1900), p. 190. 29. Richard B. Morris (ed.), Alexander Hamilton and the Founding of
the Nation (New York: The Dial
Press, 1957), p. 203. 30. Hamilton’s Works, Volume 4, p. 342, quoted by Holman, Story of
the “Bricker” Amendment, p. 28. 31. Supreme Court Justice Story, quoted by MacBride, p. 35.
32. Justice Stephen J. Field, quoted in J. C. Bancroft Davis
(reporter), United States Reports, Volume
133: Cases Adjudged in The Supreme Court at October Term, 1889 (New
York and Albany: Banks &
Brothers, 1890), pp. 266-67. 33. Stephen K. Williams, LLD. (ed.), Cases Argued and Decided in the
Supreme Court of the United
States: 9, 10, 11, 12 Peters, Book 9, Lawyers’ Edition (Rochester,
NY: The Lawyers Co-operative
Publishing Co., 1888), p. 735 (Peters 10, p. 662). 34. Holman, p. 28.
35. MacBride, p. 51. 36. Senator Jesse Helms in “International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights,” hearing before the
Committee on Foreign Relations, United States Senate, November 21,
1991 (Washington: U.S.
Government Printing Office, 1992), p. 2. 37. Ibid. 38. The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights in The
International Bill of Human Rights:
Fact Sheet No. 2 (United Nations, November 1989), p. 32. 39. Ibid., p. 33.
40. Ibid., p. 34. 41. Congressional Record, April 2, 1992, pp. S 4783-84.
42. Helms, p. 2. 43. Statement of International Human Rights Law Group in
“International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights,” Hearing before the Committee on Foreign
Relations, United States Senate, November
21, 1991 (Washington: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1992), p.
130. 44. Statement of the U.S. Council for International Business, by
Abraham Katz President, in
“International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights,” Hearing
before the Committee on Foreign
Relations, United States Senate, November 21, 1991 (Washington: U.S.
Government Printing Office,
1992), p. 180. 45. See, for example: Robert W. Lee, “Restraining the World Court,”
The New American, September 7,
1992, pp. 17-18. 46. Griffin, p. 188. 47. Ibid. Note further: There are 15 justices on the World Court. In
accordance with Article 25 of the
Statute of the International Court of Justice, “A quorum of nine
judges shall suffice to constitute the
Court” to conduct business. Since a majority of the nine can render
judgments, this means that five
justices can decide a case. Article 26 states: “The Court may from
time to time form one or more
chambers, composed of three or more judges as the Court may
determine, for dealing with particular
categories of cases....” In such cases, decisions can be rendered by
as few as two judges. See Statute of
the International Court of Justice in Review of the United Nations
Charter: A Collection of Documents
by the Subcommittee on the United Nations Charter of the U.S. Senate
Committee on Foreign Relations.
(Washington: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1954). 48. Digest of United States Practice in International Law 1973,
quoted by Ernest S. Easterly III, “The
Rule of Law and the New World Order,” pre-publication draft, p. 10.
49. “1990s declared UN Decade of International Law,” UN Chronicle,
March 1990, p. 77.
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