Do not celebrate too soon.
With the way McCain wants open borders and amnesty, if he is elected I would not be surprised if Juan pushed this nonsense too.
As for Obamma Lamma, GOD only knows how he’d screw up the U.S.A.
Dont bet the farm on it being dead.
It is like Comprehensive Immigration Reform. It won't be dead until
a wooden stake is driven through the heart,
it is salted,
disemboweled,
covered with garlic
sprinkled, no, drenched with holy water,
and salt,
burned
and buried under a silver cross,
It aint dead, yet. Politicians seem to always have a way of resurrecting these things.
It’s just on the back burner. This is a head fake by Pastor. Their dream will never die.
Dream on.
SPP has been delayed because immigration reform was delayed and REAL ID was delayed.
When the Lugar/Harris legislation on North American Perimeter Security(2005) became politically unfeasible, they backed up, changed the name, an appropriated money to aid Mexico in drug intervention, which will also be used to secure Mexico's perimeter.
Obviously, if Obama wins, there will be some changes. In his long article on Mexican foreign policy, published in the Dallas News, prior to the Texas primary, Obama criticized the way Bush had allowed only the NACC/transnationals to participate in planning the SPP. Obama said he would bring Civil Society, enviros, and unions to the table to provide input.
Don’t be fooled. A North American confab of some sort is still in the works. The global elite aren’t going to let this die.
It’s not dead, it’s pinin’ for the Fjords.
I hope that you are right. But the CFR have been, for now over 85 years, a group of well educated losers, who refuse to accept defeat. The organization was originally formed in the early 1920s by those upset over the fact that Wilson lost the debate over the League of Nations. They have been pushing ever since for more of the Wilsonian abandonment of the Washington/Jefferson foreign policy. They were instrumental in suppressing real debate over the United Nations, at the time of Ratification. They will continue to push.
Meanwhile, our capacity to resist continues to be undermined, on a long-term basis, by increasing evidence of a loss of any American identity. More significant than Senator Obama, himself, is what the wide-spread adulation for his candidacy tells us about how native Americans have come to see themselves--or not to see themselves. Obama is incidental, he would get no where as President with Congress, were it not for the fact that fewer and fewer among us, even care about the things that Congress would otherwise be expected to resist. Rather, more and more seemed desirous of purging their imaginary guilt over a heritage that once made all of us proud.
My current Feature at the Website addresses the real problem, as I see it:
Reflections On An Unfortunate Milestone--The Accidental American.
Bill Flax