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View Full Version : Outgoing Czech President Klaus hit with revenge high treason charge



-:Undertaker:-
04-03-2013, 11:31 PM
http://www.lewrockwell.com/blog/lewrw/archives/133234.html



http://www.ukipmeps.org/uploads/file/farage-18-06-2012-klaus-600.jpg
Klaus was influential and allied with eurosceptics across the EU, famously stalling the Lisbon Treaty.


Outgoing Czech President Vaclav Klaus has since the (partial) transition from communist rule stood as nearly the single bright light in the former Eastern Bloc. At times a light shines from nearby Viktor Orban, Prime Minister of Hungary, with whom Klaus shares much philosophically. But Klaus has been a consistent and uncompromising leader in efforts to carve out a truly new and independent era for the once-captive nations. For those of us who highly value individual liberty and subsidiarity, Klaus was an heroic counter-weight to the intolerable bore, hectoring centralizer, and darling of the international Left-elite, Vaclav Havel.

The European Union, dominated as it is by those who in the West and East had in an earlier era dedicated themselves to international communism, could never forgive Klaus for his unrelenting opposition to the political reintegration of the former East under the rule of the same transnational elite that had a few years earlier been defeated by the 1989 transitions.

It is no wonder they hated him. As he wrote in last year's Europe: The Shattering of Illusions, now available in the US:


"Political elites have always known that the shift in decision-making from the national to the supranational level weakens the traditional democratic mechanisms (that are inseparable from the existence of the nation state), and this increases their power in a radical way. That is why they wanted this shift so badly in the past, and that is why they want it today."

Now his enemies through their allies in the Czech Senate have found a way to kick him one last time as he exits the political scene. As a coward puffs himself up when he knows there is no danger, the Czech Senate narrowly voted to impeach Klaus just days before he is to leave office, on charges of "high treason." His crime? Using his power as president on the occasion of the 20th anniversary of independence to grant amnesty to some 7,500 souls languishing in prison for mostly petty crimes. His real crime in the eyes of his enemies is his decades of obstructing the centralizing forces of the largely unelected European ruling class, blocking sovereignty-killing treaties like the Lisbon Treaty and opposing the multi-billion dollar bankster bailout fund, otherwise known as the European Stability Fund.

Leading the charge against the free market Klaus is Czech Senator Jiri Dienstbier, Jr., the son of a well-known communist journalist from the bad old days of the 1950s who traveled the world as a trusted servant of the world revolution. The apple does not fall far from the tree...

As a special Vaclav Klaus bonus, see here (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lLoDMv4XsWw&feature=youtu.be) Klaus hosting Rep. Ron Paul in Prague for the Prague Spring Lecture back in 2006.

Out of all the non-royal heads of state, I have to say that President Klaus has always been my favourite. A few of you may remember him, often called the 'Margaret Thatcher of Central Europe', as the man who stood in the way of the Lisbon Treaty a few years back and generally made life very difficult for the European Union. There's the famous video of course where he makes a speech in the EU Parliament, upsets them all, and they walk out in droves - at just before 8 minutes in you can see UKIP, a few Conservatives and some other pro-independence groupings standing in ovation for Klaus. Pretty good stuff. A big loss for the Czech Republic and the cross-European eurosceptic cause that his term is coming to a close.



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ljAANHPkrAE

Then again, some may even know him for this and the famous pen stealing incident. :P



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zpe4T0lXZcE

After he leaves office this Thursday, he's off to join the CATO institute.

Thoughts, if any?

GommeInc
05-03-2013, 01:01 AM
He did seem awfully familiar :P If you hadn't included the YouTube clip of him stealing a pen he would of just been some unknown leader :P

The charge of treason seems really bizarre for the supposed crime he committed. I wouldn't call releasing petty criminals treason, betrayal needs to exist and releasing prisoners isn't betrayal in this sense, especially when he didn't physically release the prisoners and must of had very little opposition. Plus it depends if the country or the actual Government feel it is betrayed and whether or not they actually care of the action. There doesn't seem to be much information to charge him with treason :/

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