Energy News  
Down Mexico way In 2006

A supporter of Mexican presidential candidate Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador empties a bottle of soda over a security vehicle outside the Federal Electoral Tribunal (TRIFE) building during the session where the TRIFE is due to deliver the certificate declaring candidate Felipe Calderon winner of the election, 06 September 2006 in Mexico City. The unanimous decision by the Federal Electoral Tribunal came two months after the vote took place, but it did not change Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador's rejection of the tight election's outcome. Photo courtesy of Susana Gonzalez and AFP.
by William S. Lind
UPI Outside View Commentator
Washington (UPI) Sep 08, 2006
While Washington plays at Fourth Generation cabinet wars in far-off places, a genuine Fourth Generation threat is brewing up on America's southern border. After 70 years of stability under the dictatorship of the Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, Mexico drank deeply of the neo-conservatives' patent medicine, democracy, in the 1990s. At first, all hailed the seemingly happy results.

But Mexico's recent Presidential vote resulted in a razor-thin victory for the conservative candidate, Felipe Calderon, over a far-left challenger, Lopez Obrador. Obrador and his supporters now refuse to recognize Calderon's win.

They have set up blockades in the streets of Mexico City, prevented the current President, Vicente Fox, from delivering his state of the union speech, and threatened worse, specifically that if Mexico's electoral commission certifies Calderon's victory, Lopez Obrador will declare himself the real President of Mexico and set up a parallel government. Isn't democracy wonderful?

In itself, this crisis is not a Fourth Generation phenomenon. It is an old story in Mexican history. Calderon and Obrador are battling within the framework of the state, for the prize control of the state brings, namely, endless riches squeezed from a poor country. If either wins, and wins quickly, American interests are probably safe.

The problem takes on a Fourth Generation nature if neither wins and Mexico descends into civil war and anarchy. This, too, is an old Mexican story; in Mexico as in most of the world, the only real alternatives are tyranny or anarchy. Democracy is merely a way-station between the former and the latter. The neo-cons' patent medicine, it seems, has arsenic as a principal ingredient; one suspects their successors will once again give stability the high rank it merits among political virtues.

One certain result of chaos in Mexico will be a vast increase in the rate of illegal Mexican immigration into the United States -- the "big push" of all "big pushes" 4GW has so far served up. Such an invasion will offer dire consequences to the United States, in the form of disorder, crime, the expense of taking care of the "refugees," and perhaps most challenging of all, the necessity of sending them all back at some point. Any such repatriation would have to be, for the most part, forced.

Here we come face-to-face with one of Fourth Generation War, or 4GW's, basic ingredients, the West's moral incapacity to defend itself. No one can doubt that the rapid arrival of tens of millions more Mexicans will be catastrophic. But no one can also doubt that the usual games will be played by the Politically Correct Establishment, with the usual results.

We will get endless images of crying women and children, demands that we accept any and all "refugees," blather about "human rights" and "humanitarian principles," and in response we will cave and open the gates to the barbarians. The Establishment is morally incapable of manning the walls and repelling the invaders. Nor will it be able to send any of them back if they don't want to go, which means they will all stay. Perhaps Maine and New Hampshire will end up still speaking English.

Worse, if anything can be worse, the Bush administration may bring Wilsonianism full circle and intervene in Mexico. One can almost hear President Bush solemnly informing the American people that we must teach the Mexicans to elect good men as Woodrow Wilson more than 90 years ago. The result will be the same kind of fiasco we are engulfed by in Iraq and Afghanistan, just a streetcar ride away from San Diego.

By this point, Wilsonianism will have gone from tragedy to farce and back to tragedy again. Fourth Generation War will have arrived at our doorstep, and crossed it in great strength. This will be, not another cabinet war, but a war for national survival. Perhaps, just perhaps, the vast defeat we will suffer at the beginning of this war will bring the Politically Correct Establishment's eviction from Washington and its replacement with genuine national leaders, though where such are to be found is hard to imagine.

More is riding on a quick solution to Mexico's political crisis than anyone who does not understand 4GW can possibly imagine.

William S. Lind, expressing his own personal opinion, is Director for the Center for Cultural Conservatism for the Free Congress Foundation.

Source: United Press International

Community
Email This Article
Comment On This Article

Related Links
Democracy in the 21st century at TerraDaily.com
Democracy in the 21st century at TerraDaily.com



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Rights Campaigner Detained In China
Beijing (AFP) Sep 07, 2006
Chinese police Thursday detained an AIDS and human rights campaigner who has fought a series of high-profile rights abuse cases, his wife told AFP, marking the latest step in an intensifying crackdown. Hu Jia, 33, was released after 12 hours of interrogation, said his wife Zeng Jinyan, but police warned he would be taken away for questioning again on Friday.







  • Researchers Aim To Enhance Air Vehicle Systems
  • Chemical Screening system helps evaluate PEM Fuel Cell Materials
  • High-Value Chemicals Produced From Ethanol Feedstocks Could Boost Biorefinery Economics
  • Latest Fuel Cell Material Advance Overcomes Low Humidity Conductivity Problem

  • US Reactor Security Queried: Part Two
  • Australia Could Export Uranium To China Within Months
  • Russia To Sell Nuke Fuel To South Africa
  • Understanding Reactor Security Fears In The 21st Century

  • NASA Experiment Finds Possible Trigger For Radio-Busting Bubbles
  • California's Model Skies
  • ESA Picks SSTL To Develop Atmospheric CO2 Detector
  • Faster Atmospheric Warming In Subtropics Pushes Jet Streams Toward Poles

  • Fires Rage As Haze Thickens In Borneo
  • Large-Scale Farming Now Causes Substantial Forest Loss in Amazon
  • The Subtleties Of Tropical Forest Demise
  • NASA Satellites Can See How Climate Change Affects Forests

  • China Rejects Claims Of GM Rice Entering EU Foods
  • GM Chinese Rice Maybe Contaminating European Food
  • French Police Arrest Three As Hundreds Try To Destroy GM Crops
  • Japanese Sushi Infatuation Straining Atlantic Tuna Stocks

  • Real-Time Traffic Routing From The Comfort Of Your Car
  • Real-Time Traffic Routing From The Comfort Of Your Car
  • British Police Force To Introduce Greener Cars
  • Two New Segway Models Offered

  • US Sanctions On Russia Could Hurt Boeing
  • Boeing Puts Aircraft Market At 2.6 Trillion Dollars
  • Innovative Solutions Make Transportation Systems Safer Secure and Efficient
  • Joint Strike Fighter Is Not Flawed Finds Australian Government

  • Could NASA Get To Pluto Faster? Space Expert Says Yes - By Thinking Nuclear
  • NASA plans to send new robot to Jupiter
  • Los Alamos Hopes To Lead New Era Of Nuclear Space Tranportion With Jovian Mission
  • Boeing Selects Leader for Nuclear Space Systems Program

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement