[PAA-Discuss] Does anyone know who this woman is????

Sherry Glover sglover001 at houston.rr.com
Thu Aug 24 14:38:17 EDT 2006


The NAFTA Super Highway
Aug. 23, 2006 by Phyllis Schlafly
It's not just American ports that are fast slipping into foreign ownership;
it's highways, too. A Spanish company, Cintra Concesiones de
Infraestructuras de Transporte, S.A., has bought the right to operate a
tollroad through Texas and collect tolls for the next 50 years.
Called the Trans-Texas Corridor (TTC), on which construction is planned to
begin next year, this highway would bisect Texas from its border with Mexico
to Oklahoma. Hearings held by the Texas Department of Transportation this
summer attracted hundreds of angry Texans.

Plans call for a ten-lane limited-access highway to parallel I-35. It would
have three lanes each way for passenger cars, two express lanes each way for
trucks, rail lines both ways for people and freight, plus a utility corridor
for oil and natural gas pipelines, electric towers, cables for
communication, and telephone lines.

Central to this plan is a massive taking of 584,000 acres of farm and ranch
land at an estimated cost of $11 to $30 billion, property then lost from the
tax rolls of counties and school districts. After the U.S. Supreme Court
decision in Kelo v. City of New London, no one need worry about the power of
eminent domain to take private property.

The Trans-Texas Corridor will be the first leg of what has been dubbed the
NAFTA Super Highway to go through heartland America all the way to Canada.
This would be a major lifeline of the plan to merge the United States into a
North American Community.

Plans are already locked in for Kansas City Southern de Mexico Railroad to
bring Chinese goods in sealed cargo containers from the southern Mexican
port of Lazaro Cardinas direct to Kansas City, Missouri. Mexican trucks will
be able to drive more sealed containers up the fast lanes of the NAFTA Super
Highway, inspected only electronically if at all, and making their first
customs stop in Kansas City.

In response to recent articles in conservative publications about the
sovereignty, freedom and economic dangers that will result from President
Bush creating the Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America (SPP)
in Waco in March 2005, the SPP has issued an unconvincing rebuttal.

This SPP document starts by declaring that "our three great nations share a
belief in freedom, economic opportunity, and strong democratic
institutions." That's false; Mexico is a corrupt country where a few
families control all the wealth while the rest of the people are kept in
abject poverty with no hope of economic opportunity.

The document states that SPP's mission is to make "our businesses more
competitive in the global marketplace." That's globalist doubletalk which
means producing U.S. goods with cheap foreign labor, thereby destroying the
U.S. middle class.

The document states that SPP wasn't "signed" by Bush at Waco. But when Bush
went to Cancun in March 2006, he proclaimed the first anniversary of
whatever he had agreed to in Waco in 2005, and he sent Michael Chertoff to
Ottawa to take "an important first step" toward whatever Bush did or didn't
sign in Waco.

The document denies that SPP's working groups are secret, but SPP won't
release the names of who is serving on them. The document denies that SPP
will "cost U.S. taxpayer money" because SPP is using "existing budget
resources" (no doubt coming from the fairy godmother).

Thanks to the internet, we can often find out more about the doings of the
Bush Administration from the foreign press than from the U.S. media. An
article written in Spanish from a Mexican perspective one year ago fully
described the plan for the "deep integration" of the three North American
countries.

Economist and researcher Miguel Pickard explained that although the plan is
sometimes called NAFTA Plus, there will be no single treaty text and nothing
will be submitted to the legislatures of the three countries. The elites
plan to implement their shared vision of "a merged future" through "the
signing of 'regulations' not subject to citizens' review."


Pickard revealed a series of three meetings of a new entity called the
Independent Task Force on the Future of North America (ITF). After secretly
conniving in Toronto, New York and Monterrey, the ITF called for a unified
North American Border Action Plan (i.e, open borders among the three
countries), and the three countries then signed "close to 300 regulations."

The United States was represented at the ITF by Robert Pastor, who has been
working for years to promote North American integration. Pickard revealed
that Pastor is in "constant dialogue" with Jorge G. Castaneda, Vicente Fox's
foreign relations adviser.

Pickard is convinced that George W. Bush is "vigorously pushing" the idea of
a "North American community." Pickard concluded that the schedule calls for
beginning with a customs union, then a common market, then a monetary and
economic union, and finally the adoption of a single currency (already
baptized as the "amero" by Robert Pastor).



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Further Reading: North American Union



Bouviers law dictionary, 1856 Edition
"Sui Juris - One who has all the rights to which a freemen is entitled; one
who is not under the power of another, as a slave, a minor, and the like.To
make a valid contract, a person must, in general, be sui juris. Every one of
full age is presumed to be sui juris.

 

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