Whether it was rewarding Jimmy Carter for criticizing the Iraq
War or supporting Al Gore in his crusade against global warming, the
Norwegian Parliament -- which chooses the winners of the Nobel Peace
Prize -- has sought to use the award as a political tool to influence
American politics. Its prestige and moral power make the prize a potent
weapon with which to help steer the direction of the colossus beyond the
seas that controls a quarter of the world's economy and most of its military
power.
Now, the Norwegians have weighed in to support Barack Obama in
his bid to reshape America so it looks more like, well, Norway -- or at
least like Europe.
 European socialism cannot succeed without conquering the United
States. If the European Union has high taxes and the U.S. keeps its levies
low, business and brains will flow to America. If the EU's labor standards
require long vacations and high benefits and proscribe layoffs, and ours do
not, employers will migrate across the ocean to do their business in the
States. If the Old World curbs ambition by taxation, regulation and social
opprobrium, the ambitious will flock to the New World, as they have done for
four hundred years.
So, Vladimir Lenin was right. Socialism cannot exist in just one
country -- or one continent. It must dominate worldwide, or wealth and power
will flow to those who remain committed to the free market. Europe realizes
this reality, and it makes Obama's election as president of the United
States all the more welcome.
The Nobel Prize is really Obama's payback for disciplining the
unruly United States and taming it to be a member of the European family of
nations. Europe wants to reverse the American Revolution and re-colonize us,
and it sees in Obama a kindred spirit willing to do its bidding.
Does the United States let its entrepreneurs run wild, coming up
with fanciful new ideas and making billions from them? Obama will regulate
and subdue business just like they do in Europe. Do U.S. businesses compete
by slashing prices, aggressively pursuing markets and jockeying for market
share? Obama will make them behave themselves and stay in line, just like
European companies do. Do Americans work hard and push aggressively to make
as much money as they can? Obama will raise taxes, emphasize community
values and narcotize their ambition by offering government largesse.
And does the United States still believe in a sloppy, contrarian
democracy in which ordinary people can directly affect their government,
states have powers and courts can reel in executive authority? Obama will
use his rubber stamp majority in Congress to pass new laws regardless of
public opinion and make us obey.
In foreign policy, is the United States still willing to stand
up, alone if necessary, to protect human rights in Bosnia, in Iraq and in
Afghanistan? Obama will curb this unruly independence and mold it within the
fabric of appeasement that has dominated Europe for the past half a century.
All this heavy lifting, this conversion of America into a
European state, deserves a reward. And what is a more fitting one to give
Obama than the Nobel Peace Prize? He obviously doesn't deserve the award for
economics or, given his health care ideas, for medicine. But the Peace Prize
expresses Europe's longing: to take back the nation its overly ambitious and
uppity children founded. |