Free trade poses threats to U.S. sovereignty
By DON SNYDER
Your Nov. 27 editorial page contained two guest editorials pushing free trade.
I’m sorry, but those two are painting an unrealistic image of the free trade agreements in order to deceive America, and at the same time, slandering those who oppose them.
With the headline, “Weakened Bush Must Wage Fight for Free Trade,” Mr. Kondracke’s editorial is complaining about CNN’s Lou Dobbs exposing the free trade conspiracy to the American public, and called him a right-wing firebrand. He goes on to condemn people for being anti-globalization, and places them in the same category as communist Hugo Chavez.
Mr. Kondracke was the senior editor of The New Republic, a liberal publication in the direction of governmental interventionism, and he was also bureau chief of Newsweek. This, of course, is “ho-hum.” What you should know is that Mr. Kondracke is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, the semi-secret one-world organization behind the movement to abolish the U.S. Constitution. This is why Mr. Kondracke is a bit upset with true Americans like CNN’s Lou Dobbs.
The editorial from Cokie and Steve Roberts, “Look For The Foreign Label,” also pushes for globalization and says too bad for Americans who lose their jobs. As a contributing editor of U.S. News & World Report, Steve Roberts too is on the CFR bandwagon to convince Americans that the free trade agreements are really about free trade.
What neither tells you is that the free trade agreements have little at all to do with free trade. They are international building blocks for the New World Order, a one-world government in which the United States is a state to an international cartel with no borders or Constitution. Right now, the CFR is on the defensive about their unconstitutional Security and Prosperity Partnership (SPP) program. This governmental group placed within the commerce department is establishing a North American Union (NAU) to replace our republic. What does that have to do with free trade, you ask? Using the North America Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), the conspiracy is establishing a super highway through Mexico, the U.S. and Canada. As part of this system, a Mexican customs inspection facility is planned for construction on U.S. soil in Kansas City, Mo. That’s right, it is about 1,000 miles from Mexico. This super highway is also referred to as “Super Slab” since the proposed Trans-Texas Corridor-69 would be up to a quarter-mile across. Did you know that Congress never authorized the SPP and NAU?
It is also no coincidence that both column-writers are pushing hard on Congress for trade pacts. They know that CAFTA failed to pass in the House. Only after Bush and Cheney pressured the House to reopen the vote against House rules and arm-twisted the congressmen did it pass two minutes after midnight. They also are fearful of the House Concurrent Resolution 487, “expressing the sense of Congress that the United States should not engage in the construction of a North American Free Trade Agreement Superhighway System or enter into a North American Union with Mexico and Canada.” Congress is beginning to find out about this scam in spite of the media blackout.
The Bush administration is hard at work too by applying more pressure on Congress to pass the guest worker legislation, which becomes an important factor to eliminate the border altogether. Bush, working with the CFR, is rushing to meet its goal of having the NAU complete by 2010.
Now, while all this is going on, our federal deficit has risen to $3.5 trillion per year. This means U.S. money is flowing out of our hands and into the hands of other countries, predominately Red China. China is now using this money to build its infrastructure to become the New World leader, while cash-strapped America is being sold to foreign interests like the Indiana Toll Road for $3.8 billion.
You should kick the free trade baloney, have your congressman support Resolution 487, and have him say “no” to guest worker amnesty. For Christmas, buy American. Items not made here, like TVs, should come from Japan rather than China. If all this confuses you, www.jbs.org/nau has some answers.
(Snyder lives in Napa.)
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napablogger wrote on Dec 1, 2006 7:43 PM:
Dear Mike wrote on Dec 1, 2006 6:29 PM:
spank wrote on Dec 1, 2006 3:57 PM:
NR? wrote on Dec 1, 2006 9:32 AM:
Finally wrote on Dec 1, 2006 8:45 AM:
Mike wrote on Dec 1, 2006 8:45 AM: