Why America's government invites rampant illegal immigration
Did you know that the powerfully influential Council on Foreign Relations often described as a shadow government" issued a comprehensive report last year laying out a five-year plan for the "establishment by 2010 of a North American economic and security community" with a common "outer security perimeter"?
Roughly translated: In the next few years, according to the 59-page report titled "Building a North American Community," the U.S. must be integrated with the socialism, corruption, poverty and population of Mexico and Canada. "Common perimeter" means wide-open U.S. borders between the U.S., Mexico and Canada. As Phyllis Schlafly reveals in this issue of Whistleblower: "This CFR document asserts that President Bush, Mexican President Vicente Fox and Canadian Prime Minister Paul Martin 'committed their governments' to this goal when they met at Bush's ranch and at Waco, Texas, on March 23, 2005. The three adopted the 'Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America' and assigned 'working groups' to fill in the details. It was at this same meeting, grandly called the North American Summit, that President Bush pinned the epithet 'vigilantes' on the volunteers guarding our border in Arizona."
Globalization: The Final Demise of National Security
The Future of North American Integration in the Wake of the Terrorist Attacks
North American Cooperative Security Act
Trinational Elites Map North American Future in "NAFTA Plus"
Mexico wants a North American EU
The NAFTA trade corridor takes a transportation system from an east-west orientation, created to unify the continental United States, to a north-south one, a funnel down which the production of Canada is drawn into the US, and goods shipped to Mexican ports from China can be drawn up. One can only conclude the intent is to unify the three nations in the same manner as the continental railway unifed the US states.