Libertarian Internationalism

One of the most dismissive terms thrown around in foreign policy circles is isolationist. If you are an isolationist, you clearly have not considered the issues carefully and rationally, and need not be taken seriously. Libertarian leaning politicians such as Ron and Rand Paul are frequent targets of this epithet.

There may or may not be a handful of actual libertarians who are isolationist, but the reality is that libertarianism is among the most internationally minded philosophies. Examining several key areas of international relations makes this clear: International trade, diplomacy and the military, and institutions.

The most obvious place where libertarians are internationalists is economic relations. True libertarians advocate the free flow of trade and investment, without government restrictions. This is about as international as you can get. For libertarians, the origin of a product or service is irrelevant. People around the world should be able to buy and sell from each other without government interference.

In the international arena, libertarians can and will have a strong voice and play an important role. That role should not be diminished by simplistic and inaccurate cries of isolationism.

Unfortunately, in most countries today, there is a strong sentiment for favoring domestic economic actors over foreign ones. This feeling manifests itself in various forms, such as tariffs and Buy National procurement policies. Libertarians stand almost completely united against this nationalist feeling, believing that trade and other economic interaction with foreign actors benefits us all.

Diplomacy and the military is a more complicated policy area, involving a number of instances of potential relations between domestic and foreign. Here, though, there is a strong case that libertarians are more internationalist than most others. Of course, in part this depends on what one means by internationalism.

Libertarians are most frequently accused of isolationism when they object to military intervention in foreign territories. That libertarians usually object to these interventions is not in doubt. However, use of the military cannot always credibly be called internationalist. Colonialism and conquest, although they do require contact with foreigners, are not generally a positive form of international relations.

More controversially, libertarians may sometimes object to peaceful aid to foreigners as well. But this is not done out of anti-foreigner sentiment. Rather it is based on skepticism over the effectiveness of aid and its misuse as a foreign policy tool, and a general preference for markets over government support. Libertarians certainly believe in private outreach among civil society groups in one nation to the people of other nations. The objection is only to the mismanagement of governments when they get involved.

Thus, for libertarians, war and government aid do not reflect true internationalism. To some extent, they are really about government bullying and condescension towards foreigners, the idea that we are superior to them and can use our power to re-make them in our image. In contrast, libertarians believe in treating citizens of other countries with respect and acting with humility.

Finally, there is the issue of international institutions. This is the area where libertarians are most likely to reject what is conventionally thought of as the internationalist position, as they worry about the power of these institutions. In reality, libertarians are not rejecting the idea of international institutions, but rather the specific policies pursued by some of these institutions. For example, if the IMF advocates Keynesian fiscal policy, and libertarians object, it is the policy they object to, not the institution itself. If there were international institutions that supported balanced budgets (or protected property rights), for example, libertarians would likely be supportive. There is no fundamental libertarian objection to international cooperation through institutions; the only concern is on specific issues of substance.

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Libertarian Internationalism

China sources say military building facilities on islands near Senkakus

Chinas military is building large-scale base facilities on islands near the Senkaku Islands, several Chinese sources said Sunday.

Construction is underway in the Nanji Islands in Zhejiang Province, lying about 300 km to the northwest of the Japanese-administered, uninhabited Senkakus in the East China Sea. China calls the islands Diaoyu.

The base is expected to enhance Chinas readiness to respond to potential military crises in the region as well as to strengthen surveillance over the air defense identification zone it declared over part of the East China Sea in November last year, the sources said.

According to the sources, several large radar installations have been built at high points on the main Nanji Island. Several landing strips have been paved, likely for use by aircraft based on warships or patrol vessels, and more landing strips are set to be built on an island adjacent to Nanji Island from around next year.

As the archipelago of 52 islands and islets is located about 100 km closer to the Senkakus than Okinawas main island, home to bases of the Self-Defense Forces and the U.S. military, the new base is likely to shake up Japan-U.S. security strategies relating to the Senkakus defense.

The continued expansion of Chinas interests in the East China Sea comes after Japan-China relations, tainted by territorial and wartime historical issues, were somewhat thawed by a meeting between Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing in November.

Military expansion may necessitate the relocation of the roughly 2,500 civilians who live in the archipelago, most engaged in fishing, as well as the restriction of tourism at the summer vacation spot.

UNESCO listed 15 of the islands as a biosphere reserve in 1998, reflecting the diversity of the archipelagos marine life.

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China sources say military building facilities on islands near Senkakus

Lasqueti Island rep is vice-chair of Islands Trust

At its first meeting since the local government elections in November, the Islands Trust Council elected a chair and three vice-chairs recently to form the Islands Trust Executive Committee for the 2014-2018 term.

Council also elected two representatives to sit on the Trust Fund Board. Nominees answered questions from trustees about the skills and values they would bring to these leadership positions, according to a news release from the Islands Trust.

The new chair of the Islands Trust Council is Peter Luckham from the Thetis Island Local Trust Area. The three new vice-chairs are: Trustee Laura Busheikin of the Denman Island Local Trust Area, Trustee George Grams of the Salt Spring Island Local Trust Area and Trustee Susan Morrison of the Lasqueti Island Local Trust Area.

The Islands Trust executive committee oversees daily business of the Islands Trust between quarterly meetings of the entire council. It has legislated responsibilities to consider approval of bylaws developed by local trust committees and Bowen Island Municipality. Members also serve as chairs of the 12 local trust committees that have authority for land use planning and regulation in the Islands Trust Area.

The Islands Trust Council also elected Trustee Kate-Louise Stamford of the Gambier Island Local Trust Area and Trustee Tony Law of the Hornby Island Local Trust Area to serve on the Trust Fund Board, a land conservancy for Canada's islands in the Salish Sea. The executive committee then Lasqueti Island's Morrison as its representative to the Trust Fund Board.

NEWS Staff/Island Trust

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Lasqueti Island rep is vice-chair of Islands Trust

Trade, commerce, bridges

WHY would anyone build bridges across islands? Well, why not? The country already has the San Juanico Bridge that stretches from Samar to Leyte across the San Juanico Strait. Thats one of the sane deed that the late unlamented dictator Ferdinand Marcos contributed to Philippine society.

Then theres Japan with its Akashi-Kaikyo Bridge (Pearl Bridge) that links Kobe to Iwaya islands. Pearl Bridge is the worlds longest suspension bridge span of 1,991 meters across the Akashi Strait that separates these two islands. The infrastructure cost the Japanese government an arm-and-a leg at $3.6 billion. Was the public investment of Japanese taxpayers money worth it?

Definitely. Every day, 23,000 cars pass over a structure that must withstand earthquakes (a 7.2 magnitude earthquake hit in 1995), consistently strong tidal currents (9 knots), and wind gusts up to 54 kph.

The Bridge has generated economic benefits in diverse fields, beginning with tourism and product distribution. Think tank calculations estimated an economic boost of 50 billion yen in the first year of the Bridges operations alone.

Is it farfetched to think that Western Visayas can replicate the feat? Negros Occidental Gov. Alfredo Maran Jr. thinks so. He proposed the interconnectivity among major Visayan Islands as a long term measure to decongest key urban centers, including Metro Manila. The concept is not new but a revival of the ideas of another Maran.

Then Negrense Governor Joseph Maran and other Visayan governors envisioned the Trans-Visayas Friendship Bridge to boost tourism, trade, commerce and investments in all three Visayas regions. There will be more traffic from both sides of the Guimaras Straits.

In Western Visayas, the connecting bridge between Panay and Negros Occidental would be the Tomongtong point in E.B. Magaloa town linked to San Juan Point, Banate town in Iloilo.

Unfortunately, our public officials are still talking the talk for eight years. Two years ago, real estate developer Vladimir Gonzles, who has been working with interested a Japanese investor on the PGN Bridges, said that based on the Master Plan of Japan International Cooperation Agency in 1999, the two bridges from Leganes in Iloilo to Buenavista, Guimaras and from San Lorenzo in Guimaras to Pulupandan in Negros Occidental will have a total length of 23.19 kilometers.

The distance is miniscule compared to the challenges of building Pearl Bridge. Its something doable within our social and technical level of development. The point is the technology is there, perhaps even Japanese investors and official development funds.

Regional Director Ro-ann Bacal lamented that Visayas is the most fragmented. If only we can connect Cebu, Negros and Panay, then we can be very strong. I agree. The division of the Visayas by the sea will lessen the obstacles to commerce and tourism.

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Trade, commerce, bridges

Genetic study shows how much America really is a melting pot

Image: DEMIS Mapserver/Wikimedia commons

Many Americans who identify as European actually carry African ancestry just as many Americans who identify as African carry European ancestry, finds an extensive new genetic analysis.

DNA tells no lies, so the findings, published in the American Journal of Human Genetics, reveal just what a melting pot of different racial and ethnic groups exists in the United States.

"Our study not only reveals the historical underpinnings of regional differences in genetic ancestry, but also sheds light on the complex relationships between genetic ancestry and self-identified race and ethnicity," study author Katarzyna Bryc of 23andMe and Harvard Medical School said in a press release.

Bryc and her team studied DNA sequence variations called "single-nucleotide polymorphisms" in the genomes of more than 160,000 African Americans, Latinos and European Americans. Study participants provided saliva samples, where the DNA sequence variations were found.

The researchers found that more than 6 million Americans who self-identify as European likely carry African ancestry. As many as 5 million self-described European Americans might have at least 1% Native American ancestry, according to the study.

The researchers also determined that regional ancestry differences reflect historical events in the U.S., such as waves of immigration. For example, Scandinavian ancestry is found in trace proportions in most states, but it makes up about 10% of ancestry in European Americans living in Minnesota and the Dakotas.

The scientists also discovered that people identify roughly with the majority of their genetic ancestry.

Couples share similar genetics

Nevertheless, racial lines appear to be more blurred than previously thought.

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Genetic study shows how much America really is a melting pot

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Health care to register strong growth

The health care sector in the Kingdom will register strong growth in the coming years due to an overall increase in spending on specialized treatment, said a health expert. Speaking at a health conference here recently, Abdulrahman Al-Nuaim, senior health care consultant and adviser at the King Faisal Specialist Hospital, said that the medical device sector will register strong growth due to an overall increase in health care spending like specialized treatment, growing penetration by health care insurance, increase in per capita income and huge investments in both human resources and infrastructure. Citing statistics, Al-Nuaim asserted that there are ample opportunities in this sector in the Kingdom, which accounts for nearly 50 percent of the total Middle East market. The Kingdoms medical device market was estimated at around $1.1 billion in 2013 and is expected to surpass $1.6 billion by 2018, he added. He said that several initiatives have been introduced on the health front in the Kingdom which will have a positive impact on all the allied fields of this sector. Many new specialties and super specialties are being introduced which will lead to an upsurge in the demand for medical devices, equipment and services. He noted that domestic production of medical devices is limited and restricted to a few items. Therefore, imports are estimated to account for more than 80 percent of the overall market value. Imports of medical devices to the Kingdom reached a new high of $1.864 billion, a rise of 14 percent compared to the previous year, he said. He said that the main suppliers for medical devices and equipment to the Kingdom are the United States with a 22.6 percent share, Germany (21.3 percent), the Netherlands (12.5 percent), China (7 percent) and Belgium (6 percent). He added that in 2013, the Kingdom exported medical equipment worth $19.7 million. Referring to the untapped opportunities in this sector Al-Nuaim underlined that there is big appetite for industrial localization with several semi-government companies being established to cater to this demand. He also said that the Kingdoms good track record of importing medical devices ensures stability and continuity for foreign companies. On a recent visit to the country, officials of Korean companies showed a keen interest. One of their representatives told Arab News: Our motto is to deepen the understanding regarding the health care market and introduce competitiveness of Korean medical industries in the Kingdom.

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Health care to register strong growth