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The Hegelian problem solvers in Congress proclaim

Posted: Thu Jul 10, 2025 7:05 am
by samiaseo222
The need for this new agency: “The security of the United States homeland from nontraditional and emerging threats must be a primary national security mission of the United States Government. Attacks against United States citizens on United States soil, possibly causing heavy casualties, are likely during the next quarter century, as both the technical means for carrying out such attacks, and the array of actors who might use such means, are proliferating despite the best efforts of United States diplomacy.”

If Congress bothered to look, they might find that United States diplomacy was the problem in the first place. Rather than solve the root problem of how we conduct our affairs in this world, they focus phone number list on a different problem: “Despite the serious threat to homeland security, the United States Government has not yet adopted homeland security as a primary national security mission. Its structures and strategies are fragmented and inadequate. The assets and organizations that now exist for homeland security are scattered across more than two dozen departments and agencies, and all 50 States.” The solution, according to Congress, is to blend everything into one super-agency, as if that will somehow make everything better.

“Guaranteeing that homeland security is achieved within a framework of law that protects the civil liberties and privacy of United States citizens is essential. The United States Government must improve national security without compromising established constitutional principles.” Constitutional principles are compromised whenever an agency exists. The framework of law, otherwise known as the Constitution, requires the separation of powers, that agencies, by definition and conduct, routinely violate. All hope of liberty or privacy evaporates when agencies begin to act on the public.