|
A North American United Nations?
by
Ron Paul
by Ron Paul
DIGG THIS
Globalists
and one-world promoters never seem to tire of coming up with ways
to undermine the sovereignty of the United States. The most recent
attempt comes in the form of the misnamed "Security and Prosperity
Partnership Of North America (SPP)." In reality, this new "partnership"
will likely make us far less secure and certainly less prosperous.
According to
the US government website dedicated to the project, the SPP is neither
a treaty nor a formal agreement. Rather, it is a "dialogue"
launched by the heads of state of Canada, Mexico, and the United
States at a summit in Waco, Texas in March, 2005.
What is a "dialogue"?
We don't know. What we do know, however, is that Congressional oversight
of what might be one of the most significant developments in recent
history is non-existent. Congress has had no role at all in a "dialogue"
that many see as a plan for a North American union.
According to
the SPP website, this "dialogue" will create new supra-national
organizations to "coordinate" border security, health
policy, economic and trade policy, and energy policy between the
governments of Mexico, Canada, and the United States. As such, it
is but an extension of NAFTA- and CAFTA-like agreements that have
far less to do with the free movement of goods and services than
they do with government coordination and management of international
trade.
Critics of
NAFTA and CAFTA warned at the time that the agreements were actually
a move toward more government control over international trade and
an eventual merging of North America into a border-free area. Proponents
of these agreements dismissed this as preposterous and conspiratorial.
Now we see that the criticisms appear to be justified.
Let's examine
just a couple of the many troubling statements on the SPP's US government
website:
"We affirm
our commitment to strengthen regulatory cooperation...and to have
our central regulatory agencies complete a trilateral regulatory
cooperation framework by 2007"
Though the
US administration insists that the SPP does not undermine US sovereignty,
how else can one take statements like this? How can establishing
a "trilateral regulatory cooperation" not undermine our
national sovereignty?
The website
also states SPP's goal to "[i]mprove the health of our indigenous
people through targeted bilateral and/or trilateral activities,
including in health promotion, health education, disease prevention,
and research." Who can read this and not see massive foreign
aid transferred from the US taxpayer to foreign governments and
well-connected private companies?
Also alarming
are SPP pledges to "work towards the identification and adoption
of best practices relating to the registration of medicinal products."
That sounds like the much-criticized Codex Alimentarius, which seeks
to radically limit Americans' health freedom.
Even more troubling
are reports that under this new "partnership," a massive
highway is being planned to stretch from Canada into Mexico, through
the state of Texas. This is likely to cost the US taxpayer untold
billions of dollars, will require eminent domain takings on an almost
unimaginable scale, and will make the US more vulnerable to those
who seek to enter our country to do us harm.
This
all adds up to not only more and bigger government, but to the establishment
of an unelected mega-government. As the SPP website itself admits,
"The Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America represents
a broad and ambitious agenda." I hope my colleagues in Congress
and American citizens will join me in opposing any "broad and
ambitious" effort to undermine the security and sovereignty
of the United States.
August
30, 2006
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
Ron
Paul Archives
|