There it is,
folks, in black and white. Hemispheric integration is about more
than trade. It is a political construct, and from the standpoint of our
future, a very dangerous one.
Jasper made
four points with regard to CAFTA and the FTAA.
First,
and for reasons we noted above, as free trade agreements these documents
are frauds. The many references to the environment, ensuring
opportunities for women, other forms of diversity, etc., etc., ought to
be sufficient to indicate why, and how. They are about hyper-regulation,
not free trade. Their actual aim is to mandate collectivism and
inculcate supersized socialism through massive redistribution of wealth.
The adoption
of the FTAA will mean the transfer, over a number of years, of hundreds
of billions of American taxpayer dollars. Though a document still in
progress, it already contains thousands of pages of regulations which
will be interpreted at an international level. Moreover, it will
continue expanding in unpredictable ways, as NAFTA and the WTO have
continued expanding, and to arenas going well outside trade.
The 1998 Summit of the Americas
contains sections on education (which the power elite has essentially
already controlled for years), municipal and regional administrations,
transportation, health care, drugs, terrorism, and more besides. We are
looking at reams of regulations that would effectively end property
rights by individuals and businesses, as these all must yield to the
“hemispheric integration” process.
Second,
these agreements are traps capable of bringing more and more aspects of
the American legal system under the control of globalist bureaucrats.
Supreme Court Justices Sandra Day O’Connor and Stephen Breyer have both
pondered whether the U.S. Constitution can survive in an increasingly
“globalized” era. The reality is that international tribunals created by
NAFTA are already arrogating for themselves the authority to overrule
U.S. courts in trade spats between American and foreign firms. William
Jasper had in his possession copies of an article entitled “NAFTA court
is law of the 3 lands” which appeared in the Sunday, April 14, 2004
Sacramento Bee. This article reported how, in 2002, a tribunal
created by Chapter 11 of NAFTA passed judgment on the ruling of a
Massachusetts court over a Canadian real estate company (the U.S.
Supreme Court had declined to hear the case). The tribunal had found in
favor of the Massachusetts court, but that isn’t the point. This is just
one of several cases that have arisen. The WTO has been
considerably more aggressive in handing
down judgments against state laws in ways that indicate growing attacks
on U.S. sovereignty. Professor John D. Echeverria of Georgetown
University’s law school observed (in the above-mentioned article), “This
is the biggest threat to United States judicial independence that no one
has heard of and even fewer people understand.” Professor Peter Spiro of
Hofstra University’s law school also noted, “It’s basically been under
the radar screen…. But it points to a fundamental reorientation of our
constitutional system. You have an international tribunal essentially
reviewing American court judgments.” Professor Spiro, by the way,
approves.
A recent article of his in the Council
on Foreign Relations flagship journal Foreign Affairs (2000)
attacked “new sovereigntists,” his term for those wishing to maintain
U.S. sovereignty under the Constitution. “Indeed,” he writes somewhat
euphemistically, “the Constitution will have to adapt to global
requirements sooner or later …”
It is
happening. None of this was planned when NAFTA was originally debated.
Sen. John Kerry, Bush’s erstwhile opponent last year, observed, “When we
debated NAFTA, not a single word was uttered in discussing Chapter 11
[of NAFTA]. Why? Because we didn’t know how this provision would play
out. No one really knew just how high the stakes would get.”
We know now!
Those currently debating CAFTA and the FTAA will not be able to
say they weren’t warned!
For third,
continued Jasper, CAFTA and the FTAA aren’t single agreements but
processes. The FTAA will include material from all previous Summits, and
there will be much of the open-endedness that has allowed international
tribunals to begin reviewing American court decisions. The model for
Western hemispheric integration has been the EU, which was sold to
Europeans as a “free trade zone” consisting of six nations, and has
since expanded to 25. The nations of Europe have lost control of their
economic destinies, lost their currencies, and are losing their
political sovereignty. While I do not foresee Americans ever giving up
the dollar,
Canada has at least toyed with the idea
of accepting it. The term here is dollarization. Several Central
American nations already use dollars. If more followed suit, this could
lead to our fiat money becoming the official currency of a pan-American
megastate, as the euro has become for the EU.
There are two
buzzwords to watch out for, given the European experience: broadening
and deepening. Broadening involves geographical expansion
or what can be called horizontal integration, eroding geographical
borders. In this sense, CAFTA is a broadening of NAFTA, and the FTAA is
the proposed broadening of CAFTA. Broadening, that is, means horizontal
regional integration. Then there is deepening. Deepening includes
gradual vertical integration beginning with economies and rapidly moving
to other arenas such as education, transportation, cultural issues,
security issues, and so on. In fact, advocates for deepening NAFTA are
hard at work.
Both George W.
Bush and Mexican president Vicente Fox have come out in favor of making
the FTAA akin to the EU. (One may
see here just how ambitious Bush’s
agenda really is!) It goes without saying that the FTAA includes
components regarding immigration. Is there really any wonder why Bush
not only has done nothing about flagrant lawbreaking by illegal
immigrants but actually undermined the rule of American law with
irrational-seeming policies such as amnesty-for-illegals? If the U.S.
Congress commits this country to the FTAA, the problem of illegal
immigrants will be “solved”: by a policy of entirely open borders. And
in a cultural context where we are all expected, in true political-correctese,
to “celebrate our diversity.” Result: there will be no exclusive
property rights for anyone!
This
monstrosity has actually received support from those influential in
American business! The late Robert Bartley, Wall Street Journal
editor, proposed a Constitutional Amendment in a
revealing article: “There shall be open
borders.” He
once told immigration critic Peter
Brimelow, “I think the nation-state is finished.”
The fifty
dollar question is: has all this been a natural process, an outgrowth of
the globalization we mentioned at the outset? Or has globalization been
hijacked by globalism, an aggressive, very well financed ideology
with a long-term elite-driven strategy to go along with it? The New
York-based Council on Foreign Relations was created in 1921. It was
created in response to the defeat of proposed U.S. membership in the
first attempt at creating an incipient world government in Europe, the
League of Nations. One can go back further, of course, to the Round
Table groups that began in 1891 following Cecil Rhodes’ having set aside
part of his fortune for the creation of a “secret society.” The goal of
this society was world government—conceived as a revival of a British
Empire that had reincorporated America.
Or one can go
back still further, to the British Fabian Society, the socialist group
founded in 1883. The Fabians repudiated classical Marxian revolutionism
in favor of gradualism, advocating the slow infiltration of institutions
and communities until they were transformed from within and turned to
socialist purposes. Fabians assisted Rhodes in making the contacts in
England necessary to build up his secret society; then Fabianism
migrated to America. Edward Mandel House, close associate of Woodrow
Wilson, was surrounded by Fabians, and when he was instrumental in
founding the Council on Foreign Relations it was all Fabian-approved.
Arnold Toynbee, well-known British historian, Fabian, and member of the
Royal Institute of International Affairs (the British equivalent of the
Council on Foreign Relations), stated ten years later: “We are at
present working ... with all our might to wrest this mysterious
political force called sovereignty out of the clutches of the local
states of the world. And all the time we are denying with our lips what
we are doing with our hands.”
The elites
have thus had no moral scruples about lying to the public when
confronted—although they are quite open about their intentions in their
own writings, which they have long assumed the masses would never read.
Indeed, the CFR’s Foreign Affairs has the look of just one more
dry, academic-type periodical, assuring that it will never have the
audience of, say, People—or even National Review. Which is
perhaps why we can find in it statements such as that of Richard N.
Gartner, a former UN ambassador, who wrote candidly in 1974 (in an
article entitled “The Hard Road to World Order”) of “an end run around
national sovereignty, eroding it piece by piece ...” Fabian-style
gradualism all the way.
In other
words, this scheme aimed at undermining U.S. sovereignty did not happen
overnight. Unfortunately, this means it cannot be stopped overnight. We
are looking at a broad-based convergence of institutions and an
accumulation of resources that has a lot of forward momentum. Authors
are appearing who maintain that world government of some sort is now
inevitable, if only because of globalized forms of technology such as
the Internet. An example is
Robert Wright, writing in the (Fabian
founded) The New Republic (January 17, 2000) that “In recent
years, more and more people have raised the specter of world
government…. Much power now vested in the nation-state is indeed
starting to migrate to international institutions, and one of these is
the WTO….” The process of creating world government will massively
accelerate after an FTAA is in place.
Fourth and
finally, CAFTA and the FTAA are treasonous. It should be
clear by now that they involve the gradual dismantling of our
Constitutional system of government involving checks and balances by
those who swore an oath upon taking office to uphold and protect the
U.S. Constitution. The Constitution was written by men who did not
trust power--including their own. This loss of mistrust of power has
been eroded over the past two and a quarter centuries of time, until our
globalist elites see central planning as the solution to everything. The
idea of an economic system absent stifling governmental controls is
simply beyond them. This is an important reason natural processes such
as globalization are vulnerable to being hijacked, so they begin
automatically to work against the natural liberties of the individual.
I have often
been asked by readers, “What can we do?” Here is something specific we
can all do. We can all fire up our word processors and begin turning out
letters to our Senators and Representatives in Congress. The backers of
CAFTA, the most immediate concern of the globalists, need 218 votes to
get it passed. What we as U.S. citizens can do is urge them to vote
against CAFTA, using arguments such as those developed in this article
and elsewhere. There are
models letters available (although I do
not recommend people sending letters and emails which look pretty much
alike!). There is no guarantee, of course, that the specifics of such
letters will be read. But the next election is a perennial concern up in
Rome on the Potomac. Each of our fearless leaders doubtless has a staff
person who keeps track of what comes in the mail (regular and
electronic), and what positions are taken on which issues. And it is
easy for letter-writers to find out how any particular Senator or
Representative voted on any issue.
This is
important, because the adoption of CAFTA and the FTAA will impact
seriously on Americans’ pocketbooks in ways going well beyond NAFTA.
More importantly, these trade agreements are more than trade agreements.
They are direct, long-term threats to the sovereignty of this country.
They would effectively end whatever tenuous hold the Constitution still
has on our government—and they would not replace it with a libertarian
natural order, either! They would replace it with the incipient New
World Order!
This article
first appeared Dec 7, 2004 on NewsWithViews and Mr. Yates is currently
expanding this work into a book-length mauscript to hopefully be
published in 2006 by Alertness Books.
© 2005 Steven Yates - All Rights Reserved