Posted on 05/19/2006 6:56:03 AM PDT by Dark Skies
President Bush is pursuing a globalist agenda to create a North American Union, effectively erasing our borders with both Mexico and Canada. This was the hidden agenda behind the Bush administration's true open borders policy.
Secretly, the Bush administration is pursuing a policy to expand NAFTA to include Canada, setting the stage for North American Union designed to encompass the U.S., Canada, and Mexico. What the Bush administration truly wants is the free, unimpeded movement of people across open borders with Mexico and Canada.
President Bush intends to abrogate U.S. sovereignty to the North American Union, a new economic and political entity which the President is quietly forming, much as the European Union has formed.
The blueprint President Bush is following was laid out in a 2005 report entitled "Building a North American Community" published by the left-of-center Council on Foreign Relations (CFR). The CFR report connects the dots between the Bush administration's actual policy on illegal immigration and the drive to create the North American Union:
At their meeting in Waco, Texas, at the end of March 2005, U.S. President George W. Bush, Mexican President Vicente Fox, and Canadian Prime Minister Paul Martin committed their governments to a path of cooperation and joint action. We welcome this important development and offer this report to add urgency and specific recommendations to strengthen their efforts.
What is the plan? Simple, erase the borders. The plan is contained in a "Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America" little noticed when President Bush and President Fox created it in March 2005:
In March 2005, the leaders of Canada, Mexico, and the United States adopted a Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America (SPP), establishing ministerial-level working groups to address key security and economic issues facing North America and setting a short deadline for reporting progress back to their governments. President Bush described the significance of the SPP as putting forward a common commitment "to markets and democracy, freedom and trade, and mutual prosperity and security." The policy framework articulated by the three leaders is a significant commitment that will benefit from broad discussion and advice. The Task Force is pleased to provide specific advice on how the partnership can be pursued and realized.
To that end, the Task Force proposes the creation by 2010 of a North American community to enhance security, prosperity, and opportunity. We propose a community based on the principle affirmed in the March 2005 Joint Statement of the three leaders that "our security and prosperity are mutually dependent and complementary." Its boundaries will be defined by a common external tariff and an outer security perimeter within which the movement of people, products, and capital will be legal, orderly and safe. Its goal will be to guarantee a free, secure, just, and prosperous North America.
The perspective of the CFR report allows us to see President Bush's speech to the nation as nothing more than public relations posturing and window dressing. No wonder President Vincente Fox called President Bush in a panic after the speech. How could the President go back on his word to Mexico by actually securing our border? Not to worry, President Bush reassured President Fox. The National Guard on the border were only temporary, meant to last only as long until the public forgets about the issue, as has always been the case in the past.
The North American Union plan, which Vincente Fox has every reason to presume President Bush is still following, calls for the only border to be around the North American Union -- not between any of these countries. Or, as the CFR report stated:
The three governments should commit themselves to the long-term goal of dramatically diminishing the need for the current intensity of the governments physical control of cross-border traffic, travel, and trade within North America. A long-term goal for a North American border action plan should be joint screening of travelers from third countries at their first point of entry into North America and the elimination of most controls over the temporary movement of these travelers within North America.
Discovering connections like this between the CFR recommendations and Bush administration policy gives credence to the argument that President Bush favors amnesty and open borders, as he originally said. Moreover, President Bush most likely continues to consider groups such as the Minuteman Project to be "vigilantes," as he has also said in response to a reporter's question during the March 2005 meeting with President Fox.
Why doesnt President Bush just tell the truth? His secret agenda is to dissolve the United States of America into the North American Union. The administration has no intent to secure the border, or to enforce rigorously existing immigration laws. Securing our border with Mexico is evidently one of the jobs President Bush just won't do. If a fence is going to be built on our border with Mexico, evidently the Minuteman Project is going to have to build the fence themselves. Will President Bush protect America's sovereignty, or is this too a job the Minuteman Project will have to do for him?
Writer is certifiable.
Of course that's always a possibility. However, the writer is Jerome Corsi (who co-wrote "Swift Boat Vets..."). Do a keyword search for "corsi" and you'll find that he has written more recent articles on this same subject.
The Joint Statement of Presidents Bush, Fox and Prime Minister Martin, March 2005 Waco meeting, the "Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America" (SPP), and the goals stated in the "Building a North American Community" (by Dr. Robert A. Pastor) (pdf) file.
In the Joint Statement, it states, for instance:
our security and prosperity are mutually dependent and complementary. Its boundaries will be defined by a common external tariff [i.e., the perimeter of the entity now known as the "North American Community"] and an outer security perimeter [id.] within which [id.] the movement of people, products, and capital will be legal, orderly and safe.
This one paragraph (which cannot be taken as an isolated statement of intent, there are others in the other documents which expand upon this idea), is yet another suggestion that there will be a line drawn around the entity now known as the "North American Community" with an almost indistinguishable division within the three countries. The suggestion is legitimate in that the beginning sentence states the entity's "security and prosperity are mutually dependent and complementary," as if it were one organism, as if it has been melded into one country. Thus, the sovereignty of each country, Canada, the United States of America, and Mexico, has been removed.
See: This article was found on CFR website: http://www.cfr.org/project/311/study_group_on_globalization_and_the_future_of_border_control.html and Building a North American Community, the Selling of America, by Deanna Spingola | 14 July 2005
And see: A North American Community Approach to Security
Council on Foreign Relations | June 9, 2005 | Dr. Robert A. Pastor
Posted on 06/13/2005 11:48:46 AM PDT by Travis McGee
In February 2001, Fox and Bush jointly endorsed the Guanajuato Proposal, which read, "After consultation with our Canadian partners, we will strive to consolidate a North American economic community whose benefits reach the lesser-developed areas of the region and extend to the most vulnerable social groups in our countries." Unfortunately, they never translated that sentiment into policy (with the exception of the symbolic but substantively trivial $40 million Partnership for Prosperity).
See also: From "Building a North American Community":
Develop a North American Border Pass. The three countries should develop a secure North American Border Passwith biometric identifiers. This document would allow its bearers expedited passage through customs, immigration, and airport security throughout the region. The program would be modeled on the U.S.-Canadian NEXUS and the U.S.-Mexican SENTRI programs, which provide smart cards to allow swifter passage to those who pose no risk. Only those who voluntarily seek, receive, and pay the costs for a security clearance would obtain a Border Pass. The pass would be accepted at all border points within North America as a complement to, but not a replacement for, national identity documents or passports.This, btw, is already implemented. For information on "biometrics" used at the border, and what's been currently in place, see Western Hemisphere Travel Initiative, April 5, 2005
Trinational Call for a North American Economic and Security Community by 2010
March 14, 2005 - Three former high-ranking government officials from Canada, Mexico, and the United States are calling for a North American economic and security community by 2010 to address shared security threats, challenges to competitiveness, and interest in broad-based development across the three countries.
Former Canadian Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance John P. Manley, former Finance Minister of Mexico Pedro Aspe, and former Governor of Massachusetts and Assistant U.S. Attorney General William F. Weld make policy recommendations to articulate a long-term vision for North America in a Chairmen's Statement (English) (PDF) of the Independent Task Force on the Future of North America sponsored by the Council on Foreign Relations in association with the Consejo Mexicano de Asuntos Internacionales and the Canadian Council of Chief Executives. [One task force member is Dr. Robert A. Pastor]
"The Council on Foreign Relations, which has no affiliation with the US government and no institutional position on merging the US with Canada and Mexico, certainly managed get its agenda enacted. How did that happen?"
United States of North America
by Steven Yates | May 1, 2006
"The new architecture would include a free trade zone protected by a common security perimeter, within which goods, people, and capital would move freely across what had once been firmly established international borders."
The Plan to Replace the Dollar With the 'Amero' | May 22, 2006
Pastors 2001 book Toward a North American Community called for the creation of a North American Union that would perfect the defects Pastor believes limit the progress of the European Union. Much of Pastors thinking appears aimed at limiting the power and sovereignty of the United States as we enter this new super-regional entity. Pastor has also called for the creation of a new currency which he has coined the Amero, a currency that is proposed to replace the U.S. dollar, the Canadian dollar, and the Mexican peso. Commission for Labor Cooperation
The Council of Ministers of the Commission is supported by a Secretariat, whose staff is drawn equally from the three NAALC countries. It includes labor economists, labor lawyers and other professionals with wide experience in labor affairs in the region. They work in the three official languages of the NAALC English, French and Spanish in a unique multinational institution devoted to advancing labor rights and labor standards as an integral part of expanding trade relations.
Located in Washington, D.C., the Secretariat also undertakes labor-related research and public information, and assists the member countries with their cooperative activities.
The official web site of the North American Commission on Environmental Cooperation.
Intermodal Association of North America
Information on the North American Trade Corridors
Conclusions of the U.S.-Mexico Migration Panel
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace/Global Policy
February 15, 2001
On February 15, 2001, the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace International Migration Policy Program hosted a breakfast briefing featuring three members of the U.S.-Mexico Migration Panel, which released a report on February 14 to U.S. President George W. Bush and Mexican President Vicente Fox including proposals to change and improve the relationship of the U.S. and Mexico regarding migration.
- | - The panel's report calls on the U.S. and Mexico to craft a "grand bargain" that would be mutually beneficial, make migration safe, legal, orderly, and predictable, and decrease migratory pressures over time. The report calls for a reconceptualization of the border as a "line of convergence rather than a line of defense."
A North American Community A Modest Proposal To the Trilateral Commission [pdf]
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
November 1-2, 2002 | Dr. Robert A. Pastor
Foreign companies would prefer to invest in the interior (where the workforce would be more stable), but the roads and infrastructure are inadequate. The World Bank estimates Mexico needs $20 billion a year for ten years, just for infrastructure. The three leaders should establish a North American Development Fund, whose priority would be to connect the U.S.-Mexican border region to central and southern Mexico. If roads were built, investors would come, immigration would decline, and income disparities would narrow. If Mexicos growth rate leaped to twice that of its neighbors, the psychology of the relationship would be transformed.
The North American Development Fund is a done deal. It's called the "North American Development Bank"
"The NADB was created by the United States and Mexico, under NAFTA, in a joint effort to preserve and promote the health and welfare of border residents and their environment.
ORGANIZATION Under the Charter, the BECC and NADB have a shared Board of Directors, while each institution has its own officers and staff. Board of Directors The BECC-NADB Board of Directors consists of ten members: five from the United States and five from Mexico. The chairmanship of the board alternates between U.S. and Mexican representatives every year. United States Mexico Secretary of the Treasury * Secretary of Finance and Public Credit (SHCP) Secretary of State Secretary of Foreign Affairs (SRE) Administrator of the Secretary of the Environment and Natural Environmental Protection Agency Resources (SEMARNAT) Rep. of U.S. border states Rep. of Mexican border states Member of U.S. public who Member of Mexican public who resides in the border region resides in the border region * Current Chair
At the North American Studies, you can peruse through a list of [28, mostly pdf] publications which provides relevant background information for
* Prepared Statements and Testimony
* Articles and Papers
* Books
One of which is entitled, "The Future of North American Integration: Beyond NAFTA"
By: Peter Hakim (Editor), Robert E. Litan (Editor)
The governments of Canada, Mexico, and the United States now must confront the question of whether NAFTA is enough. Do they want to keep their trilateral relationship focused on economic matters or are they interested in integrating more deeply-perhaps initiating a process to build a North American Community similar to the European Union?
The North America's Superhighway Coalition (NASCO) (the corridor), connecting Canada, the U.S., and Mexico, as well as the planned Punta Colonet Project, which will likely shut down American ports in Long Beach/Los Angeles area, and possibly the Washington port:
Formed in 1997 [when Bush was Gov. of Texas], NASCO is a partnership of businesses and state and provincial governments in the U.S., Canada and Mexico focused on developing the international trade corridor based on I-35 from Laredo, Texas to Kansas City, Missouri and I-35, I-29 and I-80/I-94 north of Kansas City to the Canadian border.
North American Inland Port Network (NAIPN) [founded in 2003 by NASCO members in Canada, US and Mexico] is a sub-committee of the North America's SuperCorridor Coalition (NASCO). NAIPN advocates the interests of Inland Ports along the International Mid-Continent Trade and Transportation Corridor (IMCTTC) and supports NASCO's mission to strengthen the Secure, Multi-Modal Trade and Transportation System.
2006 Texas Republican Party Platform
On Saturday, June 3, 2006, the Republican Party of Texas adopted their 2006 State Republican Party Platform. Under the first section of their platform, titled Preserving American Freedom, is a plank specific to the Trans-Texas Corridor. It reads:
"Trans-Texas Corridor Because there are issues of confiscation of private land, State and National sovereignty and other similar concerns, we urge the repeal of the Trans-Texas Corridor legislation." [page P-4]The NAFTA Corridors: Offshoring U.S. Transportation Jobs to Mexico
U.S. workers, who have seen so many lucrative manufacturing jobs moved overseas, assumed that import transportation and distribution jobs could not be offshored and were, therefore, relatively secure.Current transportation trends are proving labors assumption to be dead wrong. Sparked by organized resistance and wildcat actions by workers against falling wages and deteriorating working conditions at Americas ports and on the nations highways, the flow of container traffic is being shifted to a south-north orientation. By leveraging both the U.S. and Mexican governments and taking advantage of the terms of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), big capital is developing container terminals in Mexico and using that country as a land bridge and labor pool to deliver shipping containers to destinations in the United States at discount prices.
* * * Chart 1 signals the beginning of the assault on labor in the north, which could eventually result in the offshoring of hundreds of thousands of transportation jobs to the south and undermine the working class on both sides of the border significantly. The success of this offshoring scheme rests on the development of vast transportation corridors in the United States and Mexico and the extensive exploitation of Mexican labor to both construct and operate the system. The recently established NAFTA Railway (Transportación Ferroviaria Mexicana, Texas Mexican Railway, and Kansas City Southern Railway, merged under control of the latter), which began operations in the Lazaro CardenasKansas City Transportation Corridor in 2003, offers a preview of capitals offshoring plan in action.
Mexico plans an alternative to the jammed docks in L.A., Long Beach
By Diane Lindquist
Union-Tribune Staff Writer | August 14, 2005
As cargo clogs West Coast ports again this summer, Mexican officials and global shipping executives are getting ready to transform a remote bay 150 miles south of the border into a megaport to help relieve the Asian import glut.
The sleepy, sweeping inlet of Punta Colonet in Baja California will be transformed into a multibillion-dollar container port, one of the biggest maritime transportation centers on the West Coast of North America, under a plan by Mexico's government.
Mexico plans a multibillion-dollar project to remake Punta Colonet, a desolate, sparsely inhabited inlet two hours beyond Ensenada, into a major container port on the scale of those at Los Angeles and Long Beach.
The new port in Mexico will, of course, require major road construction for connections to the Superhighway corridor. I can only presume where funding for that will come from (and it won't be from Mexicans or Mexico).
Also, one can only presume what will happen to all the American jobs at the San Diego/Los Angeles ports when the Mexican port opens, the size of which will equal the Los Angeles and Long Beach ports. Imagine what will happen to the communities and surrounding areas which currently depend upon the income generated by those ports and the union workers (illegals cannot be part of American unions) of those ports. Where will all the young entry level workers go to find work when so many jobs will likely be "outsourced"? How many non-union businesses will be forced to close their doors because there's no longer a workforce (or families) to support their busines (I'm thinking even of such businesses restaurants, grocery stores, hardware stores, and clothing stores)? Will we continue to hear the same mantra that those were just "jobs Americans wouldn't do" so they're being shipped out to Mexico?
Then there's yet another upgrade to another port, closer to Mexico City, as stated in the following article (which is also referred to in the NASCO/NAIFN website: Strategic Agreements with Manzanillo and Lazaro Cardenas, Ports on the West Coast of Mexico):
Hutchison Ports Holdings to construct terminal at Mexican port
5/24/2006 | Intermodal
Hutchison Ports Holdings Group plans to spend $200 million to build a container terminal at the Port of Lazaro Cardenas, Mexico a project that could mean more intermodal traffic for Kansas City Southern de México S.A. de C.V. and its parent, Kansas City Southern. [KCS' North American rail holdings and strategic alliances are primary components of a NAFTA Railway system, linking the commercial and industrial centers of the U.S., Canada and Mexico.]The terminal is designed to handle 2 million containers annually. Hutchinson Ports expects the facility to handle 450,000 containers annually after the company completes the projects first phase next year. The terminals second and third phases will increase annual capacity to 850,000 containers and 1.7 million containers, respectively.
When you're done reading the above, you've still only scratched the surface. There's a great deal more information, and much of it can be found on this thread (or you can search on FR for other threads, and google for yet more). I only posted the "little bit" above to try to impress upon you that what is going on has absolutely nothing to do with the writer, certifiable or not.
Never underestimate the ability of certain people to deny reality, even when piles of evidence are thrust into their faces. Dig deeply enough, and we will probably find a hardcore party partisan.
Posted on Wed, May. 17, 2006
Goal is to speed trade with Mexico Customs facility hung up in review By RICK ALM The Kansas City Star
A planned Mexican customs facility in Kansas City has been delayed awaiting State Department approval, but project officials are still saying that ground can be broken next month.
City officials had hoped that the first foreign customhouse on U.S. soil would be built and opened by June, but federal approval has bogged down. (Emphasis added) Full article: Click here Info on KCSmartport: Click here
Then they will only do so while standing in a hole with the evidence covering them and overflowing. To deny the truth of this matter, after mounds of controverting evidence, someone could only be a hardcore party partisan.
Ain't that just so......cozy?
Indeed!
Bummer...
Wow! Now that's a post. Thx!
Is that ever a trueism... which is why our government is comfortable giving our country away. Anyone watch Lou Dobbs over the last week and the segments on the electronic voting machines? Proprietory software owned by Venezuela!!!! No paper trail to prove the outcome on the machines is correct.
New Mexico is the only State using those machines that has decided to return to paper ballots because of the issues with the company.
Then there is the girl whose family was making and selling forged documents for $250 a pop, included Drivers License, SS Card, etc... she asked if this wasn't helping terrorists and he father said he didn't care, it was making them rich. She turned him in and testified against him, he was convicted in federal court and got ONE YEAR!!!!! Now, she is terrified, she thought they would send him away for a long time, and the governement isn't giving her any real protection and she is afraid for her life.
Hi AZ Carolyn...
I'm not a regular CNN fan, so I missed Dobbs. But the times I have heard him, he's right down the pipe on the illegal immigration issue. Very little was brought up in the senate debates pertaining to forged documents. And there's been nothing discussed about abating it either. Plus "the father said he didn't care, it was making them rich," just about sums up their disrespect for the United States, and rule of law. Yet, our "Bloviating Fiddlers" are giving them a full silver platter, and Damnesty!
Yet, the secret service has confiscated, and is making an issue out of real phony million dollar play money, with religious quotes on the backside, being handed out by a Texas Ministry! Makes me wonder where the moral compass, and values got lost in all this illegal immigration BS!
Yep. Soooo many Quislings.
No, I normally don't watch him, because I always forget when he's on. But for the past month, because of cable problems, I haven't even been able to watch t.v. That's incredible about the voting software coming from, of all places, a Latin American country.
No! That's preposterous. How can they define themselves as a "security" department when they're providing anything but that?
yw.
What's even more preposterous, is all of this forging of documents, Birth Certificates, Social Security Cards, Drivers Licenses, money laundering, ID's, Maricular Cards will be forgiven if the US Senate get their way with the US House. Back to the thread's question of "North American Union to Replace USA" which IMHO is a true statment, with the answer being yes!
Good graphic Smartass!!
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