> America First. We need a new foreign policy that ends foreign aid, and
>pulls up all the trip wires laid down abroad to involve American soldiers
>in wars that are none of America's business. And we need to demand that
>rich allies begin paying the full cost of their own defense.
>
> Economic Nationalism. Rather than making "global free trade" a golden
>calf which we all bow down to, and worship, all trade deals should be
>judged by whether: a) they maintain U.S. sovereignty, b) they protect
>vital economic interests, and c) they ensure a rising standard of living
>for all our workers. We must stop sacrificing American jobs on the altars
>of transnational corporations whose sole loyalty is to the bottom line. -
>
>The battle for the future will be as much a battle within the parties as
>it will be between the parties, a battle between the hired men of the
>Money Power who long ago abandoned as quaint but useless old
>ideas of nationhood - and populists, patriots and nationalists who want no
>part of Robert Rubin's world. - PB.
"Thus, the task of the state toward capital was comparatively simple and clear; it only had to make certain that capital remain the handmaiden of the state and not fancy itself the mistress of the nation. This point of view could then be defined between two restrictive limits: preservation of a solvent, national, and independent economy on the one hand, assistance of the social rights of the workers on the other.... The sharp separation of stock exchange capital from the national economy offered the possibility of opposing the internationalization of the German economy without at the same time menacing the foundations of an independent national self-maintenance by a struggle against all capital. The development of Germany was much too clear in my eyes for me not to know that the hardest battle would have to be fought, not against hostile nations, but against international capital."
-Adolph Hitler, Mein Kampf