"America's
Older Version of the Precautionary
Principle!"
By Ron Ewart,
President
National Association of Rural
Landowners
© Copyright June 7,
2009 - All Rights Reserved
Radical national and international
environmentalists, the United Nations, the European Union and the U.
S. Congress have all adopted the policy commonly known as the
"Precautionary Principle", which goes like this:
"..... if an action or policy might cause severe or
irreversible harm to the public
or to the environment, in the
absence of a scientific consensus that harm would not ensue, the burden of
proof falls on those who would advocate taking the
action."
The principle implies that
there is a responsibility for the government to intervene and protect the
public, or the environment, from exposure to harm where scientific investigation
discovers a "plausible" risk (that
could be anything folks) in the course of having screened for other
suspected causes. (If they screen at
all) The protections that mitigate suspected risks can
be relaxed only if further scientific findings emerge that more robustly support
an alternative explanation (but new scientific findings
are never found). In some legal systems, as in the
law of the European
Union, the
precautionary principle is also a general and compulsory principle of
law. (Clever these
Europeans. We saved their butts, twice, and they are still trying
to convert us to their distorted,
socialist ideology.)
Nevertheless, we can virtually
guarantee you that even if new scientific evidence emerged to make a law, limits
or prohibitions unnecessary, there would be no desire on the part
of politicians to undo the law. One only need look at the increasing
science against man caused global warming. In spite of the
mounting evidence against it, the United States Government is still moving
ahead to enact CO2 emission limits and cap and trade
legislation.
Here is another principle in
politics: "Once a law, always a law." Laws don't
get repealed unless the "people" force the politicians to do it.
But this
so-called precautionary principle, isn't a principle at all. It is an
irrational policy by government to do whatever it damn well
pleases, under the guise of taking or preventing some action, usually in
the form of a new law to control the people, even if there is no compelling
evidence that such action, or preventing such action, is
necessary. They just arbitrarily do it. CO2 emission limits and cap
and trade legislation to slow down or stop the fraud that is man-caused global
warming, are two of the more glaring examples of this "principle".
Much of environmental protection passed by the U. S. Congress under the
Environmental Protection Agency, the Endangered Species Act, the Clean Water
Restoration act, the Marine Mammals protection Act and the Salmon Recovery
Act etc., fall into this irrational category. International
environmental treaties have been ratified by our Congress using this insane
rationale. So essentially, the United States has done what the European
Union has done and has incorporated the "Precautionary Principle" into American
law. The American people had absolutely no say in the
matter.
However, the Founding Fathers had a different version of the
Precautionary Principle and it was embedded in the Declaration of Independence
in the second paragraph: ".....
that whenever any Form of Government
becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to
abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such
principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most
likely to effect their Safety and Happiness .......
and
..... then
the Framers codified their all-encompassing precautionary principle
into the Second Amendment of the U. S. Constitution, wherein it
states: "A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the
security of a free State, the right of the people to keep
and bear Arms, shall not be
infringed."
The Founding Fathers not only
believed that government would increase its powers over time, but had 2,000
years of history to prove that it has happened in virtually every culture.
Thus, their precautionary principle against government increasing its power to
the point of tyranny, was to make sure that Americans would be armed in such
event. So why then would government, whose sworn duty is to preserve,
protect and defend the Constitution of the United States, be in such a
hurry to relieve you of that right and take your guns away, or make gun
ownership impotent by taking your ammunition away, or making it too
expensive? They are doing it for the simple reason to strip you
of your power, contained in the Founding Father's precautionary principle,
so as to increase their power and have nothing to fear from you.
If we allow government to repeal the
second Amendment by whatever means, the American
People's Precautionary Principle, our only recourse against rising tyranny
may be what the colonials had to do against the dictatorial rule of King
George the III. It is our firm hope that it never comes to that, but like
all alternatives, the least desired alternative must be considered as
a final course of action, if all other alternatives fail.
If you would like to learn more about
the "Precautionary Principle", we encourage you to read a 1999 article in
the Reason Magazine entitled "Precautionary
Tale". You'll get an idea on how the environmental
movement has been and is using this so-called principle to effect law and
legislation in every country on the planet. The following
paragraph is an excerpt from the article:
"At
this year's (1999) annual meeting of the prestigious American Association for
the Advancement of Science in Anaheim, California, in a symposium titled "The
Precautionary Principle: A Revolution in Environmental Policymaking?",
environmental advocates and academics insisted that a principle of ultimate
precaution should trump all other considerations in future environmental and
technological policy making. They pointed out that the Principle has already
been incorporated into several international treaties, including the Framework
Convention on Climate Change and the Kyoto Protocol, which require developed
nations to cut back dramatically on the burning of fossil fuels to reduce the
putative threat of global warming. The U. S. Environmental Protection Agency is
already using it to help guide its promulgation of new regulations on synthetic
chemicals."
All most all governments, including
the U. S. Government, have bought into this environmentalist scam,
hook, line and sinker. That is why it is still absolutely
necessary, if freedom is to prevail, that we perpetually maintain and
protect America's older version of the Precautionary Principle, the Second
Amendment as a precaution against, well you know ...........
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- - -
So that the American
People don't end up having to exercise "America's Older Version
of the Precautionary Principle", we must wake up the masses and
inspire them to get involved. That is the first and foremost task of the
National Association of Rural Landowners and it is why we keep writing our
frequent articles and essays, in addition to providing educational material
contained in NARLO's Freedom Disc to our new members. This effort we
perform, goes on 8 to 10 hours per day, 7 days a week, week in and week
out. Without financial assistance from folks like you, we are limited in
what we can do. If you are not currently a member of NARLO, help us to
remove those limits and join NARLO
today.
Ron
Ewart,
President
NATIONAL
ASSOCIATION OF RURAL LANDOWNERS
P. O. Box 1031,
Issaquah, WA 98027
425
222-4742 or 1 800 682-7848
(Fax No. 425
222-4743)
Website:
www.narlo.org