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Show Page 6 The Utah Independent June 23, 1977 The Paper That Dares To Take A Stand The Paper That Dares To Take A Stand RILATERAL CO jVl IM INTRODUCTORY A Korean armistice was arranged in July of 1953. This released the Red Chinese from further deployment of troops and armaments in Northeastern Asia, giving Mao Tse-tun- g an opportunity to cooperate more fully with Ho in their efforts to extend Communist control over all of Southeast Asia. Just eight months later-- in March of 1954-t- he French strong point at Dieri Bien Phu was under siege and its outer defenses were crumbling. Hoping for active. American aid, the French chief of staff. General Ely, flew to Washington to confer with Secretary of State John Foster Dulles. It seems that Dulles was willing, but not without at least the vocal support of Britain. He proposed a united action policy" which he described in these terms: "If Britain would join the U.S. and France would agree to stand firm... 'the three Western states could combine with friendly Asian nations to oppose Communist forces ion the ground just as the UN stepped in against the North Korean aggression in 1950. . . and if the Ch inese Communists intervene openly, their staging bases in south China (will) be destroyed by US air power.' President Eisenhower agreed, but his calls to Churchill and Eden found the British govChi-mi- nh ernment unwilling to go along with the plan. As an alternative course Dulles then established the Regional Organization known as SEATO (South East Asia Treaty Organization composed of the United States, Britain. France, Australia, New Zealand,-Pakistan- , Thailand and the Philippines;). SEATO also proved ineffective. But for some time, the United States tottered "on the brink of war" and' from that time onward Dulles policies and actions toward Communism were known as "Brinkmanship," that is, bringing the United States to the brink of war" without actually failing over the edge into.'military conflict. Ten years later, however, m August of 1954, a concocted event in the Bay of Tonkin did lead to active participation, of the United States in the Vietnamese War and to the first war the United States ever iost" (the Korean conflict was-a- nd remains- -a stale- mate) . Jimmy Carter and Zbigniew Brzez inski seem to be adopting the policy of brinkmanship first pursued by Eisenhower and Dulles; they are leading the United States to the brink of war." This time, however, the adversary is not Communist China, but Soviet . Russia. CARTERS NEW WORLD ORDER This heading is borrowed from U.S. News & World Report of June 6, 1977. The magazine staffers obtained an exclusive .interview with Jimmy Carter, concluding that The President Talks Tough" in regard to Korea, Africa, the Mideast, the Panama Canal, and the Soviet Union. Hence our conclusion: he is engaging in brinkmanship. And, in 1977 this can be far more dangerous than it was in 1954. The USN&WR editors affirm that Carters chief aim is to build "a new world order" and that he has chosen Human as his theme song. However, they Rights" say that his foreign policy is already running into poten- tially serious complications. on at least four fronts: I) The Mideast, because' of the election of Israelis Likud Party, which is opposed to giving back any of the land which has been taken by force from the Palestinians; 2) Korea, because of military and hard-lin- e congressional opposition to Carters withdrawal order; 3) The nuclear proliferation policy which contributes to the alleged energy shortage and which is considered unfair by both France and West .Germany; and 4) Carters insistence upon normalizing relations with Castros Cuba, whose "human rights" makes a mockery of Carters sup- - posed moral In and often-state- d commitment to values." something of a separate opinion," the chief editor takes issue-f- or newsmagazine's the wrong reasons with Carters attitude toward South Africa. Wrote editor Stone, and we are quoting only the parts of his editorial which we can approve: the course In of our interview with Presi- dent Carter in the Oval Office this past week, we asked him whether Andrew Young spoke for him on African policy. His reply was a Yes' that was delivered a bit tartly and tinged with a hint of impatience with the question. The President turned aside any suggestion that the U.S. may be moving too think the hastily. In fact, he emphasized, progress has been too slow.' I all due respect to the President, we must disagree when it comes to the matter With of South Africa. ... If we Americans presume to tell the Afrikaners what to do, we should ask ourselves exactly what it is we are demanding; we should recognize the consequences; we should form some idea of how it can be done; and for our own sake we should acknowledge, at least in our minds, why we are putting our spoon into this in- digestible stew. ..." Editor Stones suggestions our South African policy should be about applied to every one of Carter's foreign policy forays. And it should be noted, too, that when we speak of Carters foreign policy" we are oversimplifying. After all, Jimmy Carter is but a puppet president, he is the programmed product of the Trilateral Commission which created him, and we must recognize that Jimmy Carter is little more than the Charlie McCarthy to David Rockefellers Edgar Bergen. In our opinion. So, let us ask ourselves: what are the Tri- lateral ists aims; what are they demanding of us; how are they carrying out their program; and what are the consequences to us if they succeed? lets Now, If Carter is to carry out analyze: the socializing welfare programs he has promised in the next four years guaranteed annual wage, nationalized medical care, social security that is really secure, etc.-- he must have an additional 30 to 40 billion dollars every year. This in spite of the fact that Carter has promised to balance the federal budget by 1981; and this he really intends to do because that is the one thing that could cause him to be if federal elections are still in vogue in 1980. Now, there once was a time when this balancing act might have been accomplished simply by asking the Federal Reserve to sign the necessary papers. that would turn on the presses, and oodles of greenback money substitute would be fed like trading re-elect- ed, stamps into the economy. However, there is a monetary disease called inflation. Also, there is an international market where even a substitute dollar must have some semblance of value, else the whole worlds monetary structure would crumble; and the International Bankers aren't ready for that. L.T. Pattersons Strategy Letter for May offers this explanation: As of November, 1971, when Nixon took the gold window in hand and slammed it shut, and since currencies have been untied and freely floating, the Tr lateral sts really dont have the freedom to expand their spending and ther economies that you might suppose . . . Heres the story 48 hours after the inauguration, V.P. Mondale was sent around the world... he carried a message from the Carter Adi i - ministration (particularly to Japan and Germany) to expand their spending and their economies ... and to debase their currencies. Had Germany and Japan agreed to this, the energy program might never have been introduced since this would have allowed a dramatic expansion of U.S. federal deficits, along with countries whose currencies are the primary threat to the Dollar ... Fortu-natel- y for all of us, the Germans and the Japanese adamantly rebuffed Mondale and refused to go along with a worldwide currency debasement. If Germany and Japan refuse to inflate and depreciate their currency the Trilateral ists are thwarted in their efforts to expand federal deficits. Reason: It is now no longer possible to expand federal deficits in quantum jumps of tens of billions of dollars per year without causing a dramatic run on the dollar ... and possibly bringing on a worldwide crisis of one type or another, causing a run on gold (and) thwarting their planning for the takeover of the American private sector economy (unquote; accent as in original) Defeated in this attempt to gain gigantic sources of new revenue, the Trilateralists that new way is sought a new way-a- nd called an energy crisis! As Ronald Reagan had the courage to say, there is no shortage of energy, there is a surplus of government. However, there is an energy crisis , because the Trilateralists need billions of dollars to balance the and the budget'. complete corporate socialist state they are building, and this new tax plan would do the job! ... So, when Mondale failed in his first mission, an otherwise discredited CIA came out with a "new shocking report regarding world and then came the television reserves; puppet show" to frighten and shame the Nation into yielding control of its free enterprise economy into the hands of an Energy Tsar. As L.T. Patterson commented: It was a shrewdly designed television extravaganza to snare decent, trusting American citizens who have been caught up by the obvious moral appeal of greater frugality -- and less extravagance in automobiles and lifestyles ... The stated goals of driving smaller cars, and driving less, will trap the solid middle class into grudging support of the program, and with the cooperation of the financial press, public sentiment may be sufficient to allow Congress to pass most of the (energy) program. Goal is total control. It is, in fact, Socialism as now practiced in England, and which has brought that country to its knees. The result of the energy program will be intrusion of the federal government into every facet of our lives and the total control of every facet of the energy industry, thereby creating a Fascist State!" There is a catch to this plan, however: just as in the plot to depreciate money, the cooperation of other Nations is required. That is what the recently concluded North-Sout- h Conference" was all about. And that conference was declared a total failure,"The Nations of the world-bo- th developed and to approve the developing Nations-refus- ed ... ... "energy package" that the Trilateralists offered them. This means that, without help from other countries, the energy crisis becomes far less critical in the eyes of everyone. And that brings up the possibility of the action of last resort" which is called war. When the sub rosa government of the world wants to initiate a "new thing and is then prevented from doing so by the visible the traditional recourse is to start .a war! Ergo, "The President Talks Tough" says the front cover of a national gbv-ernmen- newsmagazine; and stories intended to voke war scare are released: is followed by a story about how Soviet missiles might be destroyed on their launching pads. This is supplemented by a story with an even bigger and blacker headline: "Pentagon Debunks Report of Soviet Ray Gun"! There is an introduction to this article that reads: The report last month was chilling: the Soviet Union is close to being able to destroy U.S. missiles with a beam of charged particles. But instead of using the article's effect to pry more weapons research money from Congress, the Pentagon is mounting a campaign to discredit what it terms an inaccurate scare story." However, the attempt to debunk becomes in itself a scare story. The buildup of tension in Rhodesia and in South Africa could lead to a limited war. The election of a hard-lin- e government in Israeli creates a classical setting for war. The South Korean story merely begins with the dismissal of a General; the real story is yet to be told. In addition to these and other potential locations for a limited nuclear or grass roots war, there are some very strange goings-o- n in regard to that Independently Communist State of Yugoslavia. During the presidential debates last fall, Carter spoke of possible American action short of armed intervention" if Tito died and the Soviet Union invaded. On March 31, Tito told his armed forces to be prepared for attack from abroad. On May 5, a Washington Star columnist commented that we should look to Yugoslavia for the next crisis. high-ener- On May 20, Walter Mondale visited Belgrade and spoke to Tito, who celebrated his 85th birthday and his 40th year of independence from both the Eastern and Western bloc of nations. Mondale brought word that !"ito was to receive a nuclear power reactor, a $700 million development courtesy of the Export-Impo- rt -- Bank and private banks." Yugoslavia is a hot spot; World War started i.n the Balkans, and at least theoretically, Yugoslavia is neutral territory" and an apt I June 23, 1977 The Utah Independent Page 7 MEN UVll WORK OVERSEAS!! Georges Berthoin European Chairman Gerard C. Smith North American Chairman Egidio Orton a European Deputy Chairman Hanns W. Maull European Secretary sincerely hope that we are totally wrong, but the Trilateralists have been twice thwarted; and if the visible governments dont continue to thwart the sub rosa government, nations could be talked into going to war; and with so many Trilateralists in key positions in our visible government, a return to brinkmanship" is way of stating our present danger. DON BELL REPORTS Weekly, emphasizing the Christian American point of view. $24 per year. Extra copies to subscribers: IOC each; to others: 25C each. Address orders: DON BELL REPORTS, P.O.Box 2223 Palm Beach, Florida 33480 The major hardship produced by the drought this year will involve the watering of lawns and gardens. So to keep yours healthy, learn all you can about how to use water outside efficiently. ts, in.. the water running? You use about 10 gallons of water that way, and "Carter Orders Missiles Tipped With Bigger only a Haifa gallon if you turn it oif Nuclear Warheads," screams a headline that while you brush. Takeshi Watanabe Japanese Chairman ALL OCCUPATIONS Nobuhiko Ushiba Japanese Deputy Chairman Charles B. Heck Tadashi Yamamoto Japanese Secretary North American Secretary 7i LChaiman CM-- ChM w Sol .Chaikin, President International Ladies Garment workers Union William S. Cohen, House of Representatives T' Pax son Kal-tsh Levy & Coleman, former Secretary ol Trans- Construction Sales Engineering Transportation Oil Medical Teaching Refining AirSecretarial Accounting Manufacturing craft, etc., etc., $800.00 to $5,000.00 per month. - portation rSri6? Unsify Lloyd Cutler, Cutler & Pickering John C. Danforth. United States Senate Kmmett Dedmon, Field Enterprises, Inc Louis Desrocbers. McCuaig & Desrochers, monton Wilmer, ' Ed- Peter Dobell, Parliamentary Centre A for 8 ffairs and Foreign Trade, Edmonton Foreign Hedley Donovan. f, Time, Inc Editor-in-Chie- Foleyff oise of Representatives George S. Franklin. Coordinator, The Trilateral Commission; former executive director, Council on Foreign Relations Donald M. Fraser, House of Hilliam A. Hewitt, Deere & Representatives Company Alan Hoc kin, Toronto-Dominio- n Bank cjssr Thoms,L' proeor' ecoo'- Hughes, President, Carnegie - tindow-mi- m International Peace Robert S. Ingersoll. University of Chicago, mer Deputy Secretary of State for- Edgar F. Kaiser, Jr., Kaiser Resources, Ltd Micheal Kirby, Public Utilities, Nova Scotia 1Lane 1 I f r, AFL-CI- O Kirkland, Secretary-TreasureA. former Henry Kissinger, Secretary of State Sol. M. Linnwitz, Coudcrt Brothers Broco K. MacLaury, President Brookings Inst. (Maude Masson, economics professor, Laval U Paul W. McCracken. Professor, Michigan U. Arjay Miller, Dean, Stanford University Eft L. Morgan, Caterpillar Tractor Company Kenneth I). Naden, National Council of Farmer 1 Cooperatives Lucy Wilson Benson, Under Secretary of State for Security Assistance W. Michael Blumenthal, Secretary of the Treasury Robert R. Bowie, Deputy Director of Intelligence lor National Estimates Harold Brown, Secretary of Defense Zbigniew Brzezinski, Assistant to the President lor National Security Allans Jimmy Carter, President of the United States Warren Christopher, Deputy Secretary ol State Richard N. Cooper, Under Secretary of State for Economic Affairs Richard N. Gardner, Ambassador to Italy Richard Holbrooke, Assistant Secretary of State lor East Asian and Pacific A ffairs Walter F. Mondale, Vice President of the United States Jean-Lu- c Pepin, P.C., Chairman of the Board of Canada Elliot L. Richardson, Ambassador at Largo with Responsibility for UN Law of the Sea ConAnti-Inflati- on ference armament Agency; Chief Disarmament Negotiator AN UNBELIEVABLE POLITICIAN so-call- ed overseas you will receive FREE HIGHER SALARIES and WAGES. TRAVEL PAY, GENEROUS VACATION and BONUS, FREE MEDICAL CARE, FREE MEALS and HOUSING, more ADVANCEMENT OPPORTUNITIES. TRANSPORTATION, U.S. INCOME TAX under the Government eign Resident Rule (civil service excluded). NO For- anyone the opportunity to explore overseas employment we have published a complete set of To allow OVERSEAS EMPLOYMENT Our OVERSEAS EMPLOYMENT GUIDES contain the following infoGUIDES, rmation... List of CURRENT OVERSEAS JOB OPPORTUNITIES with a special section on overseas construction pro- jects, executive positions and teaching opportunities. How, Where and Whom to apply for the job of your choice OVERSEAS! FIRMS and ORGANIZATIONS employing all types of Personnel in nearly every part of the Free World. Firms and organizations engaged in OVERSEAS CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS, MANUFACTURING, MINING. OIL REFINING. ENGINEERING, SALES, SERVICES, TEACHING, SECRETARIAL, AIR-CRAF- T, ETC.! COMPANIES and GOVERNMENT AGFNCIES em- -. ploying personnel in nearly every occupation, from the unskilled laborer to the college trained professional! and Where to apply for OVERSEAS JOBS! How GOVERN- MENT Employment on U.S. Government ships CHANT "MER- MARINES! of U.S. Businesses operating AUSTRALIA that employ Americans. Directory List of U.S. DEFENSE CONTRACTORS with in oper- ations OVERSEAS THAT EMPLOY Americans! Information about JOBS OVERSEAS! several Plus TEMPORARY EMPLOYMENT and SUMMER APPLICATION FORMS that you may send directly to the COMPANIES or ORGANIZATIONS that interest you the most! MAIL OUR ORDER FORM TODAY!! The Job You Want May Be Waiting For You Right Now!! ORDER FORM MAIL TO: Overseas Employment Guides 1727 SCOTT BURBANK. ROAD, CA. SUITE C 91504 am enclosing $10.00 cash, check or money order. Please send me your complete set of OVERSEAS EMPLOYMENT GUIDES immediately. I M. Solomon, Under Secretary of the Treasury lot Monetary Affairs Cyrus R. Vance, Secretary of State Paul C. Wamke, Director, Arms Control and DisAnthony Andrew Young. Ambassador to the U.N. hirst term Senator Jesse Helms (R. of N.C.) has rolled up a record probably never equaled by any other U.S. Senator. On more than 2.200 roll call votes Senator Helms has been present 97 percent of the time! Moreover, he has returned to the U.S. Treasury $591,000 worth of funds allocated for his official use. He has one of the smallest staffs in the Senate. Also, when he campaigned for Ronald Reagan last year while the Senate was in session, he returned that portion of his salary which represented the time he was campaigning and not in the Senate. Senator Jesse Helms has never taken a junket at the taxpayers expense. When Jesse Helms flies with the President on Air Force One, he sends his personal check, equivalent to first class commercial air fare, in payment for his flight. In most jobs llenry l). Owen. Brookings Institution David Packard, Hewlett-Packar- d Company Gerald L. Parksy, Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher Hilliam R. Pearce, Cargill Inc. John 11. Perkins, Continental Illinois National Bank & Trust Co. Peter (. Peterson, Chairman, Lehman Brothers Edwin O. Krischauer. Harvard U.; former Ambassador to Japan Charles W. Robinson. Kuhn. Loeb & Company David Rockefeller , Chase Manhattan Bank Robert V. Roosa. Brown Bros., Harriman & Co. Hilliam M. Roth. Roth Properties Hilliam V. Roth, Jr., United States Senator llenry B. Schacht, Cummins Engine Company William W. Scranton, former Governor Pennsylvania. former Amhass.vJor to Unit erf Nations Mitchell Sharp. Member of Parliament Gerard C. Smith, W ilmer. Cutler & Pickering; former Chief, U.S. SALT Delegation Kdson W. Spencer. Honeywell Inc. Maurice F. Strong, Petro-CanaRobert Taft Jr., Taft, Stcttinius & Hollister Arthur R. Taylor Janies R. Thompson, Goi'ernor of Illinois Russell F. Train, former Administrator, EPA Philip 11. Trezise. former Asst Secty of State Paul A. Volcker, Federal Reserve Bank of N.Y. Martin J. Ward, United Association of Journeymen and Apprentices ol the Plumbing and Pipe Fitting Industry of the U.S. and Canada Glenn K. Halts, Communications Workers ol America Caspar W. Weinberger, Bechtel Corporation Marina v. N. Whitman, University of Pittsburgh Carroll I.. Wilson, MIT .Arthur M. Wood, Sears, Roebuck & Co. Members of the Executive Committee FORMER MEMBERS NOW IN PUBLIC SERVICE da Barker B. C onable. Jr. . H ouse ol Rcpresentat ives ?n Cranston, United States Senate $ta.tes ,Sen?te Columbia skilled unskilled U.S. Private Corporations and Organi- Government zations. North American Members Jllted Steelworkers ol America David M. Abshire, Georgetown Center for Strategic and InternationalUniversity Studies Gardner , Professor of Political Economy. University of Michigan Graham Allison, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University Ouris .Anderson, Editor, Chatelaine Magazine John B. Anderson, House ol Representatives Ernest C. Arbuckle. Wells Fargo 3ank Anne Armstrong, former U.S. Ambassador to Great Britain I. Paul Austin, The Coca-Col- a Company fieorge w. Rail, Lehman Brothers Michel Belanger, Provincial Bank of Canada Robert H Bonner , British Columbia Hvdra John Brademas, House of Representatives Andrew Brimmer, Brimmer Si Co., Inc 100 COUNTRIES OVER George S. Franklin Coordinator spot for a limited nuclear war. We Australia Europe Japan The South Pacific Far East South America Central America THE TRILATERAL COMMISSION (As of May 10, 1977) gy WOMEN Now, if only even half of the other Senators and Congressmen had that sense of responsibility, what a wonderful government we would have! On the personal side ot Helms, several years ago, Helms and his wife, Dorothy, read a newspaper story about an orphan who, when asked what he wanted for Christmas said he wanted a mother and father. The Helms, who already had two daughters, adopted the boy. who had cerebral palsy. The boy, named Charles, underwent expensive operations for limbs which had been deformed at birth. Today, Charles is 23 and is a college g graduate and a senior swimmer. There is no fraud here. No wild promises. Just an honest man and a great father. -- Manchester Union Leader life-savin- NAME . . ADDRESS CITY STATE 30 DAY MONEY ZIP BACK GUARANTEE If you are dissatisfied with our Overssas Employment Guides, for any reason, simply return our Guides to us within 30 days and your S10 00 will oe refunded to you immediately. NO QUESTIONS ASKE0. Character: To be worth character anything, must be of firm capable standing upon its feet in the world of daily work, temptation, and trial; and able to bear the wear and tear of actual life. Cloistered virtues do not count for much. Samuel Smiles |