I have three items for my write-up today on Pat Buchanan's The Great Betrayal: How American Sovereignty and Social Justice Are Being Sacrificed to the Gods of the Global Economy.
1. 
 A couple of times in this book, Pat Buchanan, a conservative, seeks to 
justify protectionism on socially conservative grounds.  Because wages 
in the U.S. have stagnated, Buchanan argues, married women with children
 have had to enter the labor force, and the result of that has been 
"falling birthrates and rising delinquency[,] teenage drug use, alcohol 
abuse, promiscuity, illegitimacy[,] abortions----and...the high divorce 
rate among working parents" (page 113).  Feminists such as Susan Faludi would
 probably question this argument, even though they would most likely 
agree with Buchanan that the stagnation of wages is a problem.
2. 
 On page 112, Buchanan has a chart entitled "Average Weekly Earnings, 
1960-95 (in 1982 Dollars)", and his source for the information in that 
chart is the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.  According to the chart, 
from 1960 to 1970, weekly earnings dramatically went up.  They went down
 a bit from 1970 to 1975, then they went up slightly from 1975 to around
 1978.  From around 1978 to around 1983, they really tanked.  There was a
 slight bump from around 1983 to 1985.  From 1985 to 1995, there was a 
decline.  My question is this: Can this decline be blamed 
on free trade?  John F. Kennedy had free trade policies that Lyndon 
Johnson held fast to, and weekly earnings went up during that time.  
Ronald Reagan had free trade policies, but Buchanan lauds some things 
that Reagan did that were protectionist.  Under Reagan, though, weekly 
earnings declined.
3.  Buchanan talks about a desire among some within the elites to erase national borders.  At one point, he refers to Strobe Talbott's
 vision that "all states will recognize a single, global authority" 
(Talbott's words, quoted on page 106).  I have two questions.  First of all, if Buchanan is against
 the elimination of nations, then why on page 113 does he criticize 
Welsh and Scottish nationalism and ethnic politics?  I realize 
that he thinks that there are people who are more loyal to their ethnic 
group than to their country, but doesn't ethnic pride contradict the 
drive towards the new world order that Buchanan criticizes?  Second, 
could a one world government actually eliminate some of the problems 
with free trade that Buchanan talks about?  Currently, 
companies leave the U.S. because they can pay overseas workers more 
cheaply, and the wages that are paid to overseas workers provide the 
workers with a fairly decent standard of living (at least according to 
Edward Gresser).  But would the disparity between wages here and wages 
overseas exist if the world had a single currency?  And would overseas 
companies be able to take advantage of other countries' loose 
regulations (as compared to what the U.S. has) and out-compete U.S. 
companies if the entire world had the same regulations?
 
 
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