Can there be any question regarding the real motives of those seeking to establish the North American Union? That those seeking such a Union are, in fact, seeking to establish a regional government? Here are two recent articles, one from the organization, “August Review,” and the other from author and researcher, Cliff Kincaid, regarding the North American Union:
Lou Dobbs Slams North American Union
Cliff Kincaid: North American Union “Conspiracy” Exposed
Here’s an excerpt from the August Review article:
Then he proceeded to answer it: “More now on one of our earlier reports: the unprecedented attack on this nation’s sovereignty, an assault that is deceptively called the Security and Prosperity Partnership. It aims to integrate the economies of Mexico, Canada, and the United States by the year 2010.”
With 14 state legistlatures currently working though legislation to stop the Security and Prosperity Partnership, it is obviously not “just a myth” like so may elitists have claimed.
And an excerpt from the Cliff Kincaid article:
Filed under: Vox Populi, Hot Talk — Steve Farrell @ 4:58 pmA top Democratic Party foreign policy specialist said on Friday that a “very small group” of conservatives is unfairly accusing him of being at the center of a “vast conspiracy” to implement the idea of a “North American Union” by “stealth.” He called the charges “absurd.”
But Robert Pastor, a former official of the Carter Administration and director of the Center for North American Studies at American University (CNAS), made the remarks at an all-day February 16 conference devoted to the development of a North American legal system. The holding of the conference was itself evidence that a comprehensive process is underway to merge the economies, and perhaps the social and political systems, of the three countries.
Pastor said that he favors a “North American Community,” not a formal union of the three countries, and several speakers at the conference ridiculed the idea of protecting America’s borders and suggested that American citizenship was an outmoded concept.
Wearing a lapel pin featuring the flags of the U.S., Canada and Mexico, Pastor told AIM that he favors a $200-billion North American Investment Fund to pull Mexico out of poverty and a national biometric identity card for the purpose of controlling the movement of people in and out of the U.S.
So the “conspiracy” is now very much out in the open, if only the media would pay some attention to it.
Media Cover-Up
Accuracy in Media attended the conference in order to produce this report and shed light on a process that is being conducted largely beyond the scrutiny of the public or the Congress.
AIM has previously documented that Pastor’s campaign for a North American Community has received precious little attention from the major media, except for the notable case of CNN’s Lou Dobbs, who has called it “utterly mad.” In fact, a survey of news coverage discloses that several high-profile mentions of the concept of a North American economic, social or political entity have come from Pastor himself, such as a Newsweek International article that he wrote.
The conference, conducted in cooperation with the American Society of International Law, an organization affiliated with the Economic and Social Council of the United Nations, was held at the American University Washington College of Law. A large number of speakers came from American University.
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