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American sovereignty is today more challenged than ever before, not from enemies that threaten us militarily but from "friends" who urge that we share or reduce our sovereignty for larger global objectives.
Ambassador Bolton's review of John Fonte's book "Sovereignty vs. Submissions: Will Americans Rule Themselves of be Ruled by Others?"
The proliferation of international policymaking organizations has intensified discussions about global governance, raising questionsfor those concerned aboutshared sovereignty.
With Europe collapsing, China stumbling, and India and Brazil retreating from full free market reform, we’re the last stable, pro-growth economy left.
Free Trade, Sovereignty, Democracy contends thatits streamlined system for settling international trade disputes may allow the WTO to undermine democratic control.
Outer space has become the next frontier for American national security and business. But instead of advancing American primacy in this realm, the Obama administration has wrongly decided not only to follow a European Union draft “code of conduct” regulating outer space, but also to circumvent the Senate’s central constitutional role in making treaties.
Today Europe faces a great question indeed: whether a system of continual dilution of national sovereignty in order to create a pan-European government is more effective, stable, and just than one in which the continued sovereignty of numerous states allows them to determine their own destiny.
We have been locked in a struggle between our sovereignty and the advocates of "global governance" that most of our fellow citizens didn't even know was under way, let alone how disparate were these two worldviews.






