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AIM Report:
U.S. Borders: Going-Going-Gone!
- December B
December 22, 2006
Some experts say
that up to a million people in Texas stand to lose their
homes and 584,000 acres of rich farm and ranchland are
to be destroyed, all for a privately funded highway.
By Wes
Vernon*
*Wes Vernon is a Washington-based writer &
broadcast journalist.
Readers of the AIM Report are
accustomed to learning of huge distortions or omissions by
the media. This time, the under-reported story deals with
the possible end of America, as we know it.
Major players
are secretive and are trying to keep the media out of the
loop. But that does not let the mainstream media off the
hook. There is enough stonewalling, secrecy and there are
plenty of telltale signs, so that any assignment editor
whose curiosity is not aroused is probably in the wrong
business.
But in
terms of the national media, only Lou Dobbs of CNN has blown
the whistle on a scheme whereby a North American "Security
and Prosperity Partnership," being implemented by the
Department of Commerce, could pave the way for a
transnational entity called the North American Union.
The implications of this scheme are staggering. Some
experts say that up to a million people in Texas stand to
lose their homes and 584,000 acres of rich farm and
ranchland are to be destroyed, all for a privately funded
highway. Of course, this is not the first time
property-owners did battle with highway builders. That in
itself is getting lots of media attention, but almost
entirely in the regional/local media. At first glance, one
might say this is a local story, so why should it go
national?
But
suppose you were told that this "highway" (to be built
largely by foreign investors) could serve as the starting
point for a much larger plan whose end result would be to
erase the borders (figuratively if not literally) between
the United States, Mexico, and Canada? Wouldn't you be
curious, no matter where you live? The national media isn't
interested.
The Trans-Texas Corridor (TTC) is its official name.
Critics call it the NAFTA Highway. The publicized TTC is
being treated as a regional story because of the disruption
to Texas farmers and other property owners.
The TTC is no
ordinary highway. The toll road would be four football
fields wide. It includes separate lanes (up to six for
automobiles, four for large trucks), plus tracks for freight
trains, separate tracks for high-speed and commuter rail,
also space for oil and gas pipelines, electricity wires, and
broadband transmission cables.
The
Associated Press (AP) has carried regional stories focused
on the Texas politics of the TTC highway—the anger of the
farmers and other property owners likely to get their Kelo
notices soon now that the election is over. Kelo is the U.S.
Supreme Court decision that said it was okay for government
to take your home away from you if some big corporate hotel
chain, strip mall contractor, or—in this case—foreign
investor wants to build on your land and create a fatter tax
base than what the government can get from ordinary
home-owners.
But
Freedom of Information (FOIA) e-mails suggest
the TTC is but one part of the drive for a North American
Union—not unlike the European Union. The vehicle
for that is the Security and
Prosperity Partnership (SPP), housed in the Department of
Commerce in Washington.
The
Council on Foreign Relations constantly promotes the SPP and
supported the conference that created it. That trilateral
meeting in Waco, Texas in March of 2005 ended in a handshake
between President Bush, Mexican President Vicente Fox, and
then-Canadian Prime Minister Paul Martin.
A
press release was all that was issued.
Any formal treaty
would have required ratification by the United States
Senate. None was written and submitted to the Senate.
Hidden
Agenda
The
SPP is very secretive about the 20 "working groups"
it has spawned where bureaucrats from the U.S., Canada, and
Mexico are rewriting proposals for our laws, regulations and
trade agreements whose ultimate effect would be to create a
North American Union.
AIM
e-mailed the SPP asking where and when the "working groups"
were meeting. Who are their members? What rules, laws,
regulations, and agreements were they re-writing? What is
their content?
Trying to
penetrate the layers of bureaucracy to get to the SPP office
can put one's patience to the ultimate test. Telephone
inquiries get the runaround, and e-mail requests for
information are ignored. A
Commerce spokeswoman did tell investigative author Jerome
Corsi the working groups "do not wish to be distracted by
calls from the public." That sounds like
code language for an attempt to keep it hush-hush as long as
possible because they know there would be an uproar
otherwise.
Where's Congress?
All
these meetings are going on without any congressional
hearings demanding answers as to the wisdom, legality or
constitutionality of any of the proposals.
Before our borders virtually
disappear, Congress has a constitutional responsibility to
be in on the ground floor. The SPP says it is keeping
members of Congress informed as to what is going on.
So AIM
e-mailed SPP requesting the names of the members of Congress
who are in the loop. Again, no answer.
Corsi, who is writing a book on this,
says he has talked with many members of Congress in their
offices, and by and large they were totally unaware of the
undertaking.
A red flag should have been
raised in Senate testimony by Dr. Robert Pastor,
Vice Chairman of the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) Task
Force on North America. Dr. Pastor was the Latin American
specialist on Jimmy Carter's National Security Council. He
was instrumental in the turnover—some called it a sellout—of
the Panama Canal.
In fact, when
President Clinton nominated Pastor in 1993 to be ambassador
to Panama, his confirmation was effectively blocked by
conservative Senator Jesse Helms, who charged the nominee
was responsible for a "cover-up" of Sandinista Nicaragua's
arms shipments to leftist terrorists in El Salvador.
Currently,
Pastor advocates "economic integration" of the U.S.,
Canada, and Mexico and says their citizens should "think of
themselves as North Americans." In an e-mail to AIM, he said
he has had no formal connection with SPP or the 2005
trilateral conference, but that he offered his
recommendations on North America to leaders of the three
countries.
On
infrastructure, Dr. Pastor told a subcommittee of the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee he favors "new North American
highways and high-speed rail corridors."
The CFR guru
cheerfully told the senators on June 9, 2005 that the North
American Union would be helped by creating "a new
consciousness among Americans." Shorn of the euphemisms,
that could be taken to mean we must disabuse these Americans
of their quaint notions of sovereignty.
No
Border
Dr. Pastor has a simple solution to the problem of
illegal immigration: Stop defending the U.S. border.
"Instead of stopping North Americans at the borders," he
says, "we ought to provide them with a secure biometric EZ
Pass that permits cars and trucks to speed through tolls."
In fact, the
FOIA e-mails and documents show that "trusted travelers" and
"trusted traders" would be able to enter the U.S. just that
easily, come and go and/or live here if they want to for as
long as they desire. How one would qualify as "trusted" is
not spelled out, but Dr. Pastor contends once a program is
in place, security checks at the border and at airports
could be curtailed.
Senators
present at the hearing (Norm Coleman, R-Minn. and Chris
Dodd, D-Conn.) were mostly non-committal.
Senator
Coleman said he was concerned about security issues, and
that Pastor was saying "instead of thinking small, we have
got to think big, and ultimately I think we will, but I
worry about the disruption before we get there."
Many
of Dr. Pastor's ideas are spelled out in a CFR report,
"Building a North American Community," which he co-authored.
AIM has a copy. The CFR advocates "establishment by 2010 of
a North American economic and security community."
CNN's
Lou Dobbs, one of the rare voices in the mainstream media to
throw any light at all on this scheme, was prompted by Dr.
Pastor's treatise to cry out that our political elites have
"gone utterly mad."
According to the 1987 book Covert Cadre, Dr. Robert
Pastor in the seventies was involved with the Institute for
Policy Studies (IPS), a pro-Marxist
think tank. The author of Covert Cadre, S.
Steven Powell, wrote that "By carefully selected euphemisms,
such as progressive and alternative, IPS has successfully
marketed its Marxist and radical views to the mass media.
And the media in turn have softened up Congress."
The
China Connection
To read
the bland wire stories about the superhighway, one would
never suspect that it is part of a plan to use the port of
Lazaro Cardenas in southwest Mexico (which has been vastly
expanded) to take in huge cargo shipments from Communist
China, load them onto Mexican trucks and freight trains and
route them on up to the border at Laredo, Texas and speed
the cargo through the Lone Star State, ultimately ending up
at a Mexican-owned customs facility at Kansas City,
Missouri. Reaching Canada will come later.
Officials of
the Kansas City Smart Port have claimed that the envisioned
Mexican customs office will still be on U.S. soil. Those
officials are "lying," Corsi tells AIM. Internal e-mails he
obtained under Missouri's "sunshine" law, clearly show that
the Mexican facility right in the heart of the USA will be
"Mexican sovereign soil."
The
North American Forum for Integration (NAFI), another group
pushing the NAU held a secretive September meeting in Banff.
It included high officials of the Bush and Clinton
administrations and Dr. Pastor, a member of NAFI's board of
directors. WorldNetDaily reports the only journalist invited
was Mary Anastasia O'Grady of The Wall Street Journal. But
an AIM Google search found no record of her writing about
the conference.
National Network
NAFI has on
its website long-range plans for other huge highway projects
in all regions of the U.S. One such highway (which was on
the Department of Transportation website) would connect
Mexico to Canada by way of Texas, Louisiana, Arkansas,
Mississippi, Tennessee, Kentucky, Indiana, Illinois and
Michigan.
Then the question arises: Are the
investors (including Cintra of Spain and Macquerie of
Australia) going to sink all that money into building this
huge "highway" only to have it stop at the Oklahoma border
out in the middle of nowhere? The Oklahoma Department of
Transportation claims not to have any plans "now" to build a
NAFTA superhighway or to continue the Trans-Texas Corridor
into Oklahoma.
Says Corsi,
"They're technically correct. They don't have any plans now.
But I can pretty well guarantee they're going to have plans.
They [the investors] are not building a four football-field
wide highway to end at the border." Ultimately, those
investors will go to Oklahoma DOT and say, "We've got money
for you."
Superficial
Coverage
In
addition to its regional coverage, the Associated Press (AP)
has also run a few reports about the Texas controversy on
its national wire, but even there, the emphasis was on the
TTC with only a brief reference to the bigger picture, as
for example in a July 20 story with this bland sentence:
"Supporters say the corridors [such as the TTC] are needed
to handle the expected NAFTA boom in the flow of goods to
and from Mexico and handle Texas's growing population."
Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA) documents obtained by the Minuteman
Project and Judicial Watch clearly indicate that a North
American Union encompassing the U.S., Mexico, and Canada is
the ultimate goal. The investigation on this story has been
done by watchdog groups, not by the media.
Other
than Lou Dobbs, almost no mainstream outlet has touched on
the full implications of a North American Union. There was a
Time magazine story in 2004.
But like the AP story cited above, Time mentioned the NAFTA
trade and the huge highway, but not plans for a North
American Union.
Some
conservative columnists, notably Phyllis Schlafly and Pat
Buchanan, along with Jerome Corsi, have been exploring the
long-range plan. William Hawkins of the U.S. Business and
Industry Council wrote an article in the Washington Times.
Beyond that, very little. The blackout has been pervasive.
Why
The Cover-Up?
Question: Why
do politicians of both parties totally ignore and even defy
the wishes of 80 to 90 percent of Americans who demand
border security? Could it be that if the borders are
ultimately to be rendered meaningless anyway, why hassle our
fellow "North Americans?"
On
October 25, a Washington news conference announced formation
of a coalition to oppose any North American Union. Leaders
include Howard Phillips' Conservative Caucus, Phyllis
Schlafly's Eagle Forum and the Minuteman Project. The
coalition includes Americans from more than 60
organizations.
Because the
event was held at the National Press Club, it was within
convenient walking distance for hundreds of Washington
journalists. But the only mainstream medium in evidence
there was a camera crew from CNN—possibly at the behest of
Lou Dobbs. Most of the attendees were from watchdog groups
or researchers. This writer
attended to gain information for AIM.
Corsi said the
creation of the North American Union would follow the
Council on Foreign Relations "blueprint [which] is to be put
in place by 2010 [and] would include courts beyond the NAFTA
courts; a parliamentary structure that would supplement and
strengthen existing parliamentary groups in effect today in
Canada, the United Sates, and Mexico; and the beginnings of
a new executive office—where some 5 to 15 people will be
appointed—how, we do not know—to preside over the continuing
institutionalization of what will become the North American
Union."
"Free trade
does not mean the United States has to give up its
sovereignty—the way the European community evolved into a
European government," Corsi warned. That is important. When
this writer recently gave a speech on this, one member of
the audience implied opposing the NAU was to oppose free
trade. Not so. The two are different issues.
The coalition at the Washington news conference
charged the North American Union would create a government
"of the elite, by the elite, and for the elite which will
ultimately destroy the middle class of the United States"
systematically "over one or two generations." It would
involve "illegal immigrants who will be reclassified as
trusted travelers and trusted traders, open our borders to
slave labor goods produced in China" and will—in Corsi's
words "undermine all manufacturing in the United States."
One would
think that the media in this nation's capital (many of whose
offices are housed in the 14-story National Press Club
building or within a few blocks) would be more than casually
interested. But that was not to be.
Tell
The People
The
American people will oppose this plan solidly when they
understand that our sovereignty is at risk. But how are they
to understand when their media won't tell them about
it—possibly not until the plan is a virtual done deal?
Phillips told
the news conference that he had met recently "with an
individual who is a top advisor to the new prime minister of
Canada [Stephen Harper]. He expressed his complete
support—reflecting the support of the prime minister"—of in
effect eliminating the border between Canada and the United
States. Phillips added, "The new president [president-elect]
of Mexico [Felipe Calderon], I understand is similarly on
board. So there are foreign leaders who are part of this
effort and are far more knowledgeable than are most [U.S.]
senators and congressmen."
But some lawmakers do know what's going on and are
pushing back. Four of them—Congressmen Virgil Goode (R-Va.),
Tom Tancredo (R-Colo.), Ron Paul (R-Tex.) and Walter Jones
(R-N.C.) have sponsored a House resolution expressing "the
sense of Congress that the United States should not engage
in construction of a North America Free Trade Agreement
(NAFTA) Superhighway system or enter into a North American
Union (NAU) with Mexico and Canada."
Where
Are The Dems?
Though these
four are Republicans, there is also potential for Democrat
support. After all, unloading Chinese cargo in Mexico would
bypass the International Longshoreman's Union; sending more
Mexican trucks into the U.S. will bypass the Teamsters.
Rail
labor has said there's no way its unions will sit still for
any diminution of its train crews on any railroad operation
on the TTC. Corsi—whose father helped organize the
United Transportation Union (UTU)—says the switch from
Mexican to UTU crews at the border will probably happen "for
awhile." But he believes the downward pressure on wages will
be designed "to impact the security of the United
Transportation workers."
Kansas
City Southern (KCS) will likely be the main (not necessarily
the only) TTC freight railroad. In an e-mail to AIM, the
railroad was circumspect. "KCS has no current role in any
Trans Texas Corridor proposals [italics added]; however, KCS
has given notice of its interest in participating in
hearings or proceedings regarding the proposals."
Phillips,
Schlafly and Corsi on the right will seek allies in
organized labor on the left to knock on every congressional
door next year and urge hearings in the House and Senate.
Moreover, in 2008, a left-right coalition would seek an
ironclad commitment from every presidential candidate not to
permit a North American Union to be created.
Does
one dare to dream that the New York Times, the Washington
Post, the L.A. Times, ABC, CBS, NBC, NPR, PBS and other
establishment media outlets will pay some attention?
What
You Can Do
Send the
enclosed cards or cards and letters of your own choosing to
Lou Dobbs
of CNN,
James Thompson
of Stoney Creek Inns, and
Tim Goeglein
of the White House.
Thanks to you,
AIM has made tremendous strides this year. It was your help
that enabled us to prevent Al-Jazeera English from entering
the U.S. media market.
But this
battle isn't over. To continue our campaign to keep Al-Jazeera
out of your living room—and provide all the other vital
facts you need in 2007, please support AIM's work with a
generous,
year-end contribution.
*Wes
Vernon is a Washington-based writer & broadcast journalist.