Unfreakin' believable. States have ALWAYS been able to seize land through eminent domain for transportation projects especially. Kelo did nothing to make this easier and had NOTHING to do with such projects but was to increase the tax base. And there is something mysterious and creepy about building a transportation system that actually CONNECTS to others? OMG where are those "roads to nowhere" we all love so much?
Middle Easterners trying to sneak in to work NOT terrorists. Terrorists are not that stupid. And please do not post the "diary" "found" "proving" Arabs are coming in since it is written in Farsi you will only look stupid.
Hilarious stuff about the ports and the strange thing about Laredo. Imagine establishing a transportation system which goes from one end of the state to the other? Why such devious thinking PROVES a conspiracy.
The Port project is 180 miles south of the US border and will never replace the US ports you mention. But please do not let facts get in the way of full blown paranoia.
Now you are afraid of Mexico developing too much? Hilarious.
Phil Brennan
Wednesday, June 13, 2001
From Panama to the Philippines, an arm of Hutchison-Whampoa, Hutchison Port Holding (HPH), has become the worlds largest seaport operator, embedding itself in strategic seaports all across the globe.
Hutchison holds the exclusive contract to operate the Panama Canal.
An animated map on the Hutchison-Whampoa Web site shows the extent of the encircling movement with seaport operations in Africa (Tanzania International Terminal Services Ltd.) in the Western Hemisphere with seaport services in Beunos Aires, Argentina; Freeport, the Bahamas; Veracruz, Mexico; and at both ends of the Panama Canal.
HPHs latest acquisition, announced last month, involved eight Philippine ports. New ports in Mexico, Argentina, Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, Tanzania and Thailand make Hutchision-Whampoa the worlds largest private port operator with 23 cargo berths, bringing its worldwide total of ports to a staggering 136.
Other ports include Jakarta, Indonesia; Karachi, Pakistan; India (where the company runs the cellular phone services); Burma; China; and Malaysia. There are port operations in Britain at Harwich, Felixstowe (Britains largest port), and Thamesport, and in the Netherlands at Rotterdam. The last acquisition has caused alarm at the European Commission.
According to the latest reports, the company is interested in locating at South Koreas largest port, Pusan, and has finalized an agreement to operate out of Kwangyang, another South Korean port.
The company boasts of its worldwide scope on its Web site: "The World of Hutchison Port Holdings covers a broad spectrum of port operations and related service companies spanning the entire globe. With operations and services ranging from container ports, mid-stream operations and river trade to cruise terminals, warehousing, haulage and e-commerce companies, HPH has become a key provider of comprehensive logistics services for the global supply chain.
Just what is Hutchison-Whampoa?
According to a 1999 investigative report by the American Foreign Policy Council, "Hutchison Whampoa, through its Hutchison International Terminals [HIT] subsidiary or Panama Ports Company, has substantial links to the Chinese communist government and the People's Liberation Army.
"The Panama Ports Company is 10 percent owned by China Resources Enterprise [CRE], which is the commercial arm of China's Ministry of Trade and Economic Co-operation. In its investigation into China's attempts to influence the 1996 U.S. presidential campaign, the U.S. Senate Government Affairs Committee identified CRE as a conduit for espionage - economic, political and military - for China. Committee Chairman Senator Fred Thompson said that CRE has geopolitical purposes. Kind of like a smiling tiger; it might look friendly, but it's very dangerous.
Sen. Trent Lott has described the Hong Kong firm as "an arm of the People's Liberation Army."
The company is headed by a Li Ka-Shing, the chairman of Hutchison Whampoa Ltd. Intelligence sources say he has deep connections with the Chinese Communist government.
"Li has invested more than a billion dollars in China and owns most of the dock space in Hong Kong. In an exclusive deal with the People's Republic of China's communist government, Li has the right of first refusal over all PRC ports south of the Yangtze river, which involves a close working relationship with the Chinese military and businesses controlled by the People's Liberation Army, the AFP report stated.
"Li has served as a middle man for PLA business dealings with the West. For example, Li financed several satellite deals between the U.S. Hughes Corporation and China Hong Kong Satellite [CHINASAT], a company owned by the People's Liberation Army. In 1997 Li Ka-Shing and the Chinese Navy nearly obtained four huge roll-on/roll-off container ships, which can be used for transporting military cargo, in a deal that would have been financed by U.S. taxpayers.
According to the Thompson Committee, Hutchison Whampoa's subsidiary, HIT, has "business ventures with the China Ocean Shipping Company(COSCO) which is owned by the People's Liberation Army.
COSCO, which failed in a notorious Clinton-backed attempt to lease the former U.S. Naval base in Long Beach, Calif., has been criticized for shipping Chinese missiles, missile components, jet fighters and other weapons technologies to nations such as Libya, Iraq, Iran and Pakistan, the AFP report revealed.
"In 1996, the U.S. Customs Service seized a shipment of 2,000 automatic weapons aboard a COSCO ship at the port of Oakland, California. The man identified as the arms dealer, Wang Jun, is the head of China's Polytechnologies Company, the international outlet for Chinese weapons sales. Jun also sits on the Board of CITIC, China International Trust and Investment Corporation, the chief investment arm of the Chinese central government. It is also the bank of the People's Liberation Army, providing financing for Chinese Army weapons sales and for the purchase of Western technology.
Li is also a board member of CITIC. U.S. intelligence sources have described the company as a front for China's governmental State Council.
Rep. Dana Rohrabacher, R-Calif., has stated that CITIC has been used as a front company by China's military to acquire technology for weapons development.
Last year a report by NewsMax.com.s Christopher Ruddy and Stephan Archer noted that a declassified report by the U.S. Southern Command's Joint Intelligence Center, prepared in October 1999 and obtained by the government watchdog Judicial Watch, said that "Hutchison Whampoa's owner, Hong Kong tycoon Li Ka-Shing, has extensive business ties in Beijing and has compelling financial reasons to maintain a good relationship with China's leadership."
The military intelligence report also warns that "Hutchison containerized shipping facilities in the Panama Canal, as well as the Bahamas, could provide a conduit for illegal shipments of technology or prohibited items from the West to the PRC, or facilitate the movement of arms and other prohibited items into the Americas."
Adm. Thomas Moorer, former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, has noted that "the Chinese have always indicated that the proper way to fight a war was not to make a frontal assault but rather to get around behind the enemy and cut off all their supplies.
Try this link:
http://64.233.179.104/search?q=cache:uFV8Tz4oSDUJ:www.immigrationforum.org/documents/NewsClips/0705/DC070505.pdf+falfurrias+terrorist+illegal+mohammad&hl=en&gl=us&ct=clnk&cd=2#9
Go to page 9.
Major Seaport Proposed for Baja California Norte |
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The down-side is the obvious environmental impact. The LA Times described the intended area as deserted farmland This is far from fact. Punta Colonet south San Quintin is one of the most productive agricultural areas in Baja. Its proximity to Hwy 1 and the US have spurred the growth of large commercial farming in the area. Having anchored in Punta Colonet, it is a beautiful, unspoiled area where orchards and farms run right to the oceans edge. There has been tremendous growth in the region over the last 5 years. Chinese and Korean firms have not been known for their environmental planning or concerns. One US environmentalist is quoted as saying, This is just another case of exporting Californias dirty environmental problems to the pristine coastline of Baja California. This is one of the last places we can preserve the beauty that once was the entire west coast |
LA Harbor has been so overwhelmed last fall by the increase in imports that ships were reported waiting to be offloaded for as long as a week. Project lobbyists say that more port facilitates are needed and there are no options within the US. Part of the difficulty in US construction is the environmental criteria that such a facility would have to meet. Mexico has environmental concerns as well, but these concerns often are circumvented in the light of the need for economic growth and heavy lobbying. More than $200 billion dollars of shipping enters the US annually through California ports. A port in Punta Colonet would provide Mexico a piece of that action. The up-side of this project is the economic boon to Baja. Thousands of jobs would be created in the construction process as well as in manning the port. Although most of the skilled labor jobs would come from elsewhere in Mexico and more likely from foreign firms conduction the construction. |
If corners are cut to meet a budget, improvements to highways could be limited. Additional truck traffic on a road already in need on improvements beyond those ongoing would be disastrous. The road south of Ensenada is not safe or expedient in handling the truck traffic it now carries, as it winds into the mountains of Baja. Major improvements would have to be made north all the way to the US border to handle the additional traffic generated not only by the port, but by the needs of the people who would work there. The rail line that would be needed to cut road traffic and link the port to the US is another problem. It would have to be constructed and paid for by Mexican concerns. Mexican law prohibits the foreign ownership of such rail links. There would also be costs incurred by the US taxpayers to process and inspect the cargo before it entered the US, further taxing the busiest border crossing in the world, into San Diego. These same interests have expressed displeasure with increase scrutiny of inbound cargo. Delays in delivery cost money. As a note, French, English and Russian interests have all attempted to build port facilities in the area over the last 100+ years. All of these attempts were later abandon. Mitsubishi attempted to expand port facilities for salt exports in Baja Sur and was thwarted by international environmental interests just a few years ago. The Mexican government was forced to withdraw approval of the project in a case where concern for the planet overpowered the vast quantity of money the Japanese firm threw at the project. |