North American Union On Schedule As Bankers Erase Borders
Events unfold and changes come about. All of them point
straight down that long, lonesome road - the NAFTA
Superhighway.
That's the one that runs from Mexico's industrial heartland
through Laredo, onward to Detroit, thence to Canada's
Toronto suburbs. In fact, it runs right through America's
back door, through the bread basket and the rust belt of the
foundries, assembly plants and steel mills and onward to
where our neighbor, the British Commonwealth Nation of
Canada, does business amid her own smokestacks and mines,
mills factories.
Take a look at the number one recommendation of the Council
on Foreign Relations on the matter:
"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..."
It would be easy to dismiss misgivings about the evolution
of NAFTA to something called the "Security and Prosperity
Partnership of North America" and then the projected and
ultra-confidential North American Union if it were not for
that one nagging question:
What about the Consitution of the United States of America?
Does that document not say that the power to mint the
currency and secure the borders will be reserved to the
federal government?
Does it not state plainly in its preamble that "We The
People" intend to do all this, in part, to provide for the
common defense?
Certainly, that is what it says and - to be sure - it is
what it is. All that would be fine if people were paying
attention, but they are not paying attention.
Economic and political events transpire much too slowly to
be readily apprehended in the land of the sound bite, the
television program that shatters time and space into
fractions of seconds that cast the mind's eye in thousands
of different directions in the course of just a few minutes.
It's hard to make people aware that the erasure of national
borders and the removal of all trade restrictions, the
abandonment of the dollar in favor of a universal currency
to be called the "Amero," and a de-emphasis of American
defense posture in favor of a new era of a tripartite
defense posture just isn't anything like what you will find
if you read the U.S. Constitution.
After all, these changes have been unfolding since the 19th
century when the precursor group that later evolved into the
Council On Foreign Relations studied the full economic
implications of a North American Union.
President Franklin Roosevelt, a Harvard man and an old Wall
Street hand, once referred to it this way:
"They who seek to establish systems of government based on
the regimentation of all human beings by a handful of
individual rulers call this a new world order. It is not new
and it is not order."
Not much is known about the provisions of the partnership
agreements. Former Council on Foreign Relations President
David Rockefeller, speaking at an annual exclusive gathering
of bankers and industrialists, the Bilderberger conference,
praised such publications as The New York Times, The
Washington Post and Time Magazine for keeping their
knowledge of events under the blanket while the hush hush
details were worked out.
Here are the bare bones details.
Long after the enactment of NAFTA, President George W.
Bush met at his Crawford ranch with Mexican President
Vicente Fox and Paul Martin of Canada in March of 2005
where they hammered out the Security and Prosperity
Partnership of North America agreement.
After their meeting, they drove to Baylor University in Waco
and announced at a press conference that in the future the
three governments would be busy forming a new nation made up
of the three with an "outer security perimeter" to achieve
the "free flow of people within North America."
A White House press release issued on March 31, 2006, laid
out these priorities in the implementation of the Security
and Prosperity Partnership:
* North American Competitiveness Council
* North American Emergency Management
* Advancing cooperation on Avian Pandemic Influenza
* North American Energy Security Initiative
* North Amerian Smart, Secure Borders
In April of 2007, President Bush, Canadian Prime Minister
Steven Harper and Mexican President Felipe Calderon met with
the leaders of the top 10 corporations from each of their
nations. They announced the formation of an American
Competitiveness Council and a plan to provide military
assistance to Mexico to help with the war on drugs.
In February of 2008, the U.S. and Canada signed an agreement
that would allow the armed forces of both countries to
support each in other case of domestic emergencies, even
though it might not involve a cross-border crisis.
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