Obama bill would commit $845 billion to...
Written by J.R.Lawendowski
Globalism
Chad Groening
OneNewsNow.com
Cliff Kincaid, the leader of the watchdog group America's Survival, is urging the U.S. Senate to reject a bill introduced by Barak Obama that Kincaid says would
subordinate U.S. foreign policy to the United Nations. The measure is known as "The Global Poverty Act of 2007" (S. 2433). It would require the president of the United States to "develop and implement a comprehensive strategy to further the United States foreign policy objective of promoting the reduction of global poverty, the elimination of extreme global poverty, and the achievement of the Millennium Development Goal of reducing by one-half the proportion of people worldwide, between 1990 and 2015, who live on less than $1 per day." The bill, introduced in the Senate on December 7, 2007, is sponsored by Democratic presidential frontrunner Senator Barack Obama.
Cliff Kincaid, president of America’s Survival, states he is very concerned about Obama's legislation, which has already been approved by a voice vote in the Senate Armed Services Committee and is similar to a bill passed by the House last year (H.R. 1302). Kincaid says the Senate bill would commit the United States to $845 billion in foreign aid over a 13-year period.
"This bill subordinates U.S. foreign policy to the U.N. and commits us to fulfill what are called the U.N. Millennium goals -- that is, 0.7 percent of GNP to foreign aid. And that means we've got to come up $845 billion," he laments.
According to Kincaid, S. 2433 references the U.N. Millennium Declaration of the Year 2000, which calls for innovative sources of finance for development. "That's U.N.-speak for global taxes," says Kincaid -- in other words, U.S. taxpayer money.
"Everybody knows it; they don't want to admit it -- but when they talk about innovative sources of financing for development, they're talking about a global tax on energy, carbon fossil fuels, and so forth," he argues. "That's how they intend to force us to pay."
Kincaid says American citizens must urge their senators to ultimately reject Obama's Global Poverty Act, which the activist says would do nothing to alleviate the problem in the first place.