COUNCIL ON FOREIGN RELATIONS, HARVARD, OTHER UNIVERSITIES WORKING ON
PLAN TO END UNITED STATES
WORLDNET DAILY - In another example of the way the three nations of
North America are being drawn into a federation, or "merger," students
from 10 universities in the U.S., Mexico and Canada are participating
annually in a simulated "model parliament."
Under the sponsorship of the Canadian based North American Forum on
Integration, students met in the Mexican Senate for five days in May in
an event dubbed "Triumvirate," with organizers declaring "A North
American Parliament is born."
A similar event took place in the Canadian Senate in 2005. . .
"The creation of a North American parliament, such as the one being
simulated by these young people, should be considered," explained
Raymond Chretien, the president of the Triumvirate and the former
Canadian ambassador to both Mexico and the U.S. Participants discuss
draft bills on trade corridors, immigration, provisions of the North
American Free Trade Agreement and produce a daily newspaper called "The
TrilatHerald."
The 10 universities taking part include Harvard, American University,
Carlton University, Simon Fraser, Universite de Montreal, Ecole
nationale d'administration publique, Monterrey TEC, CIDE, Monterrey
University and Instituto Mexicano de la Juventud. . .
The board of directors of NAFI include Robert A. Pastor, professor and
director of the Center for North American Studies at American University
and vice chairman of the Council on Foreign Relations Task Force on
North America. He has testified before the Senate Committee on Foreign
Relations on the idea of merging the United States, Mexico and Canada in
a North American union stretching from Prudhoe Bay to Guatemala.
"What we need to do," Pastor instructed, "is forge a new North American
Community. ... Instead of stopping North Americans on the borders, we
ought to provide them with a secure, biometric border pass that would
ease transit across the border like an E-Z pass permits our cars to
speed through tolls." . . .
As vice chairman of the May 2005 CFR task force, he is an architect of
the Building a North American Community" plan that presents itself as a
blueprint for using bureaucratic action within the executive branches of
Mexico, the U.S. and Canada to transform the current trilateral Security
and Prosperity Partnership of North America into a North American union
regional government.
The CFR report is a five-year plan for the "establishment by 2010 of a
North American economic and security community" with a common "outer
security perimeter." Some see it as the blueprint for merger of the
U.S., Canada and Mexico. It calls for "a common economic space ... for
all people in the region, a space in which trade, capital and people
flow freely." . . .
Geri Word, who heads the SPP office, told WND the work had not been
disclosed because, "We did not want to get the contact people of the
working groups distracted by calls from the public."
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=52104
ELIMINATING REAL AMERICA TO BUILD CORPORATE AMERICA
SAM SMITH, 2002 - Bill Clinton told a 1995 Michigan State University
commencement shortly after the Oklahoma City bombing, "There's nothing
patriotic about hating your government or pretending you can hate your
government but love your country." And in a few years, George Bush's
attorney general would imply that even criticizing government policy was
unpatriotic.
How had loyalty to government come to replace loyalty to ideals, place,
and people in the pantheon of patriotism? In part because the American
elite had decided that nations no longer mattered all that much. It was
government we needed to honor lest our parochialism interfere with
corporate multi-nationalism. In 1992, Strobe Talbott had written in Time
Magazine, "Within the next hundred years . . . nationhood as we know it
will be obsolete; all states will recognize a single, global authority .
. . All countries are basically social arrangements, accommodations to
changing circumstances. No matter how permanent and even sacred they may
seem at any one time, in fact they are all artificial and temporary."
Talbott was expressing a centrist consensus later confirmed by that
Washington favorite, Francis Fukuyama: "Globalization will not be
reversed." And by Vaclav Havel, approvingly quoted in the New York
Review of Books referring to nations as "cultlike entities charged with
emotion."
It was not just a matter of words. No assault on American sovereignty
has been more successful than that carried out in recent years by the
globalization movement, using such mechanisms as NAFTA and the WTO. That
which, over the course of our history, the British, Mexicans,
Confederates, Spanish, Germans and Japanese had been unable to do was
now being accomplished by a handful of lawyers armed only with cell
phones, fax machines and the support of politicians willing to trade
their country's nationhood for another campaign contribution.
And it wasn't just happening to America. By the 1990s, about half the
top economies of the world were not nations, but corporations. Trade had
replaced ideology as the engine of foreign affairs. Politics, nationhood
and the idea of place itself was being supplanted by a huge, amorphous
international corporate culture that ruled not by force but by market
share. This culture, in the words of French writer Jacques Attali,
sought an "ideologically homogenous market where life will be organized
around common consumer desires."
http://prorev.com/patriot.htm
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