Nobody’s freedom is safe right now – the United Nations General Assembly is in session. And it wouldn’t be a success without a rousing pro-globalism, anti-American speech by an American president. Mr. Obama fits that bill perfectly.
What were some of the main points of Mr. Obama’s farewell speech to the UN?
Well, for starters, we must give up some freedoms to achieve security. (Can’t he be a bit more original than that? What a let-down.)
To give him some credit for originality, he has expanded the concept of trading freedom for security from the individual level to that of nations. In other words, nations must surrender some of their autonomy to world bodies if a measure of security is to be achieved.
Of course, this is precisely the kind of talk we’ve come to expect from Obama and his ideological soul-mates. No doubt Hillary is chomping at the bit to take over where Barack has left off.
What else has he in mind for us?

F**k this$#%&!@* isn’t he gone yet so we can deal with the next worthless, criminal, lying POS that wants to replace him!!!
Not while I have bullets
Evil Who is this person and where did he come from?
obviously youve never met new zealand natives. Good luck with your confidence
B******T.
That is not us in the U.S.A. fool.
What is world government exactly? Who is it? What do they want? And why?
He is the antichrist
F**k you give up your right to try to do the stupid$#%&!@*your trying.
Bill Clinton, China linked via his foundation
By Stephen Braun
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
April 13, 2008 |NEW YORK
As Chinese authorities have clamped down on unrest in Tibet and jailed dissidents in advance of the 2008 Olympics, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton has taken a strong public stance, calling for restraint in Tibet and urging President Bush to boycott the Olympics opening ceremonies in Beijing.
But her recent stern comments on China’s internal crackdown collide with former President Bill Clinton’s fundraising relationship with a Chinese Internet company accused of collaborating with the mainland government’s censorship of the Web. Last month, the firm, Alibaba Inc., carried a government-issued “most wanted” posting on its Yahoo China homepage, urging viewers to provide information on Tibetan activists suspected of stirring recent riots.
‘Most wanted’ posting
Human rights activists said clear evidence of Alibaba’s collaboration with China’s state security apparatus surfaced last month with the appearance of a “most wanted” posting for Tibetan rioters on the firm’s Yahoo China homepage.
The postings, which appeared March 15 on both Yahoo China and Microsoft’s MSN China homepage, carried photos of suspected rioters and a phone number for informants to call. The postings vanished later the same day after news accounts highlighted them.
Yahoo officials said they had no advance warning from Alibaba that the postings would run. “We made our concerns known that the displays were inappropriate,” one Yahoo official said, but were told by Alibaba officials “that it was a standard news feed.”
http://www.latimes.com/world/la-na-clintonchina13apr13-story.html