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Friday, 10/12/2007 11:35:09 AM

Friday, October 12, 2007 11:35:09 AM

Post# of 13540
Connecting more of the dots or why was Drug Rush Limp Wrist so adamant of his support for NAFTA?

Is It “Free Trade” or Something Else?
By: John F. McManus (not verified)
October 15, 2007

When appended to trade, the word “free” brings to mind unencumbered transactions. The term has been applied to NAFTA (North American Free Trade Agreement), CAFTA (Central American Free Trade Agreement), and other so-called free-trade pacts that the United States has signed. Almost completely ignored in commentary about these “free trade” agreements is the revealing fact that, while the measures carry the label “free,” they are book-length and chock full of mandates governing the exchange of goods. The NAFTA agreement alone fills over 1,700 pages. If buyers and sellers have to submit to such a massive array of regulations as those found in NAFTA, using the word “free” in the name of this or any similar trade agreement is deliberately misleading.

In fact, NAFTA and other trade agreements like it are polar opposites of genuine free trade. Moreover, free trade is impossible to achieve unless certain conditions are met.

Lewis E. Lloyd’s 1955 book, Tariffs: The Case For Protection, contained a chapter entitled “Free Trade and the Real World.” He listed eight assumptions that would have to be realized if free trade could exist. The first is that taxes must be similar. If only one country’s producers are burdened with heavy taxation, then the element of fairness doesn’t exist.

Similarly, because unnatural advantages can be achieved through currency manipulation, there would be a need for a single monetary system. Then, business laws and business ethics would have to be harmonized. Wage rates among the trading partners would also have to be similar. If freedom were to exist in the international marketplace, Lloyd claimed, migration of workers would have to be allowed. And add to all of this the need to be assured that there would be no military action taken by one nation against any others — a virtual impossibility. Though he never used the term, Lloyd was suggesting what has more recently come to be known as a “level playing field.”

To create these conditions on a worldwide basis, there would have to be global governance — all nations answering to one ruling body, a body with the military power to back up its will. In simple terms, there would be a need for world government.

It becomes obvious that this kind of “free trade” is not in the best interests of Americans who value our unique American liberties under the U.S. Constitution. Moreover, most business leaders prefer that their transactions involve “fair” trade. Yet in November 1993, though NAFTA did not represent fair trade, the House and Senate approved U.S. entry into this pact, and President Clinton signed the measure into law on December 8, 1993.

NAFTA Never Meant to Keep Promises
NAFTA was sold to Congress and the American people with fervent promises that it would stimulate commerce with our neighbor nations, and also that it would create American jobs, curtail illegal immigration, and have no harmful impact on U.S. independence. But the promises were not kept, as millions lost jobs, factories closed, illegal immigration continued, and NAFTA’s judicial panels trumped U.S. court decisions. Yet our political elitists continue to push for new trade agreements similar to NAFTA, and they are doing it for a reason other than helping Americans.

Some internationalist heavyweights did indicate the purpose of the pacts. In the October 1, 1993 edition of the Wall Street Journal, for instance, David Rockefeller (who hardly ever authors a newspaper column) wrote an article wherein he called for “winning the support of the American people, the administration and Congress for NAFTA” because it was needed “to build a true ‘new world’ in the Western Hemisphere.”

Simply put, globalist-minded elitists like Rockefeller have been hard at work to make fundamental changes in how our country is governed. They want all the countries in the Western Hemisphere to knuckle under to a regional government run by unelected bureaucrats of their choosing, similar to the EU’s domination of Europe’s formerly independent nations. These deliberately misnamed “free trade” agreements lure unsuspecting victims into giving up their country’s independence with lying assurances that the only goals are improved commerce, more jobs, etc.

Occasionally the leading minds behind such efforts bare their real intentions. American University Professor Robert Pastor, a champion of what he calls the “North American Community,” wrote a 2004 article in Foreign Affairs, the journal of the Council on Foreign Relations, acknowledging that “NAFTA was merely the first draft of an economic constitution for North America,” He also wrote that “the European experience with integration has much to teach North American policymakers.”

In Europe, some public officials have acknowledged how they had been deceived. An official of Britain’s United Kingdom Independence Party laments, “The EU was sold to the people as a trading agreement and has turned into a political union which is changing our basic laws and traditions.” Czech President Vaclav Klaus said the EU means “no more sovereign states in Europe.” And early in 2007, Roman Herzog, the former president of Germany, noted with dismay that “84 percent of the legal acts in Germany” now originate at EU headquarters in Brussels. He questioned whether Germany could still “unreservedly be called a parliamentary democracy.” Here in the United States, NAFTA set the stage for these very same consequences.

In addition to the destructive effects listed above, NAFTA mandates that poorly inspected Mexican trucks have free access to all U.S. highways, and it constitutes the real reason that our southern border remains wide open. All of this is designed to bring our nation down and lift Mexico up so that, along with Canada, an eventual merger of the three nations will be far more easily accomplished.

Also, because of NAFTA, the internationalists behind this monstrous scheme deem that they have the “authorization” to proceed toward “integrating” the United States with Mexico and Canada with no further input from Congress. They even launched the U.S.-Canada-Mexico Security and Prosperity Partnership in 2005 as a prelude to a more binding “regional trading group” commonly labeled the North American Union.

Regionalism
The business and political elitists who are guiding this transformation have even admitted that they won’t be content with achieving regional governance, but that their end goal is global governance. In 1995, another of America’s veteran promoters of country-by-country merger spoke at a forum arranged by the Gorbachev Foundation. Zbigniew Brzezinski, the primary architect of David Rockefeller’s globalist Trilateral Commission, told the gathering, “We cannot leap into world government in one quick step. In brief, the precondition for eventual globalization — genuine globalization — is progressive regionalization because thereby we move toward larger, more stable, more cooperative units.”

Led by President Bush and his top internationalist teammates, the globalists promoting these attacks on our nation’s independence are proceeding without even notifying Congress. No one in either the House or the Senate should stand for such arrogance and destructiveness. Whether Democrat or Republican, all who serve in Congress must be alerted about these plans. Nothing less than the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution of the United States, and the freedom of the American people are at stake.
http://www.thenewamerican.com/node/5835

Let us remember than within days of David Rockefeller's public pronouncement, Henry Kissinger was running around; pushing the deal.

Here's more:
http://www.thenewamerican.com/node/5829


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