06.23.06
Security and Prosperity Partnership Of North America- An End to U.S. Sovereignty?
The Information Radio Network this week had Jerome Corsi, co-author of a new book Minutemen: The Battle to Secure America’s Borders, as a guest on their show “News and Views”. I would suggest that you visit spp.gov to get an idea of what America’s future looks like within the next 10 years. To wit, the “Report to Leaders”:
“To make North America secure for the future, we need integrated, coordinated and seamless measures in place at, within, and beyond our borders to provide our people and our infrastructure with the highest possible common level of protection from terrorists and other criminal elements, as well as from the common threats of nature.
To make North America prosperous for the future, we need to improve the efficiency of the movement of people, goods and services crossing our borders.” (emphasis added)
Not the security and prosperity of the U.S., mind you, but North America. Not less immigration, but more “efficient” immigration. Not to mention that it appears a bit of a stretch that Mexico and the U.S. have common criteria for what constitutes “terrorists or other criminal elements”.
I am convinced that the US and Canadian dollars and the Mexican peso will be set to a constant mutual exchange rate well within the next decade. Not only that, but the most onerous of Mexican and Canadian law, could well become our law. Take the hate crime laws in Canada, for instance, which now effectively ban pastors from preaching on, for instance, portions of Romans Chapter 1.
The other co-author of the above book, Jim Gilchrist, founded the Minuteman project in an effort to help secure our southern border. Recent events, such as revelations that the Border Patrol cooperated with Mexican authorities (via Washington, of course), in reporting the location of the Minuteman volunteers, in conjunction with the SPP agenda, are compelling evidence that the Bush administration has committed itself to this North American equivalent of the European Union.
06.01.06
From the Great Land
Thanks to the 18-hour Alaska days this time of year, the last 72 hours have been a whirlwind of travel unprecedented in my experience, covering from Anchorage to Prince William Sound to the Arctic Circle (via plane, rental car, and passenger van). Check out the main website for more!