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Taxpayer dollars support U.S.-Mexico merger plot
The master plan for merging the U.S., Mexico and Canada is being devised in
American University's Center for North American Studies whose faculty is
subsidized by the U.S. State Department through the Fulbright Program.
Source: WorldNetDailey, October 17, 2006
Deal lets U.S. get EU airlines traveler data Homeland security can monitor
passengers without violating European privacy regulations
The United States and the European Union worked out a tentative deal Friday
that will allow anti-terrorist officials in the United States to collect
personal data on travelers flying to the United States from Europe while
simultaneously ensuring the data-sharing would not violate EU rules on privacy.
Source: The San Francisco Chronicle (online), October 7, 2006
Mexico mega-port plan key to 'NAFTA superhighways'
There are mixed signals coming from Mexico about the fate of a proposed
mega-port in Baja California for mainly Chinese goods that would be shipped on
rail lines and "NAFTA superhighways" running through the U.S. to Canada.
Source: WorldNetDaily, October 7, 2006
Air security talks failure
The Standard (online), October 2, 2006
US and EU seek deal on air passenger data
A US proposal to keep sensitive airline passenger data for longer periods has
emerged as a stumbling block in efforts to reach a new deal with the European
Union.
Source: FT.com, October 2, 2006
Security and Prosperity
Partnership Of North America
The Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America (SPP) was launched
in March of 2005 as a trilateral effort to increase security and enhance
prosperity among the United States, Canada and Mexico through greater
cooperation and information sharing.
Source: SPP.gov
'Shadow' agency to issue N. American border passes
The Department of Transportation, acting through a Security and Prosperity
Partnership "working group," is preparing in 2007 to issue North American
biometric border passes to Mexican, Canadian, and U.S. "trusted travelers"
according to documents released to WND columnist and author Jerome R. Corsi
under a Freedom of Information Act request.
Source: WorldNetDaily, September 27, 2006
Newly
Uncovered Commerce Department Documents Detail “Security and Prosperity
Partnership of North America”
On March 23, 2005, heads of government Vincente
Fox, George W. Bush, and Paul Martin launched the North American partnership at
a meeting in Waco, Texas, with the expressed goal of “a safer, more prosperous
North America.” According to the documents, the partnership’s “working groups”
include government and business leaders from the United States, Mexico and
Canada, who are addressing a variety of topics, including movement of goods
between countries, traveler security, energy, environment and health.
Proponents of the partnership claim its purpose is to increase security and
prosperity for all three nations through enhanced cooperation. Critics maintain
the partnership will sacrifice U.S. sovereignty by establishing a “North
American Union,” with open borders and a common currency.
Source: Judicial Watch, September 26, 2006
N. American students trained for 'merger'
In another
example of the way the three nations of North America are being drawn into a
federation, or "merger," students from 10 universities in the U.S., Mexico and
Canada are participating annually in a simulated "model Parliament."
Source: WorldNetDaily, September 25, 2006
UN Chief Warns of Global War Over Religion, Says Only UN can Solve World's
Problems
Annan sees the United Nations as the only solution to the world’s woes.
“Yes, I remain convinced that the only answer to this divided world must be a
truly United Nations”, he said.
Source: Life Site, September 21, 2006
North America confab 'undermines' democracy
A closed-door meeting of high-level government and business leaders that
discussed the merger of North America was designed to subvert the democratic
process, charged an attendee of the confab in Banff, Canada.
Mel Hurtig, a noted Canadian author and publisher who was the elected leader
of the National Party of Canada, provided WND the
agenda
and
attendee list of the North American Forum at the Fairmont Banff Springs
Hotel in Banff, Alberta, Sept. 12-14.
Source: WorldNetDaily, September 21, 2006
North American merger topic of secret confab
Raising more suspicions about plans for the future integration of the U.S.,
Canada and Mexico, a high-level, top-secret meeting of the North American Forum
took place this month in Banff – with topics ranging from "A Vision for North
America," "Opportunities for Security Cooperation" and "Demographic and Social
Dimensions of North American Integration."
Source: WorldNetDaily, September 20, 2006
Texas governor leads superhighway rally
Texas Gov. Rick Perry has led a pep rally for a $7 billion highway project
that will loop around the Dallas-Fort Worth metropolitan area, but is being
opposed by landowners who will see their private property taken by the state.
Source: WorldNetDaily, September 1, 2006
Mexican truckers to hit U.S. roadways next year
Under the North American Free Trade Agreement – NAFTA – the borders were to
open partially to truckers from both countries in 1995. Full access was promised
by 2000. Because of the restrictions on Mexican trucks, the Mexican government
has imposed limits on U.S. truckers.
The U.S. restrictions were placed by the Clinton administration in response
to demands from the Teamsters union, which said Mexican trucks posed safety and
environmental risks. Currently, the U.S. permits Mexican truckers only in
commercial zones close to the border that extend no further than 20 miles from
Mexico.
Source: WorldNetDaily, September 1, 2006
Superhighway 'security' benefits questioned
Rep. Ron Paul has written his weekly
"Texas Straight
Talk" column about the "Security and Prosperity Partnership Of North America
(SSP)," which, he says, "will likely make us far less secure and certainly less
prosperous."
A key to that plan, he noted, is a massive new NAFTA superhighway about which
WorldNetDaily has run a
series
of reports.
Source: WorldNetDaily, August 30, 2006
How NAFTA superhighway is built under radar
But the plan does exist and the NAFTA superhighway is being built – under the
radar screen.
One need look no further than the $286 billion highway bill signed into law
earlier this month by President Bush for some of the "earmarks."
Source: WorldNetDaily, August 29, 2006
NAFTA superhighway to mean Mexican drivers, say Teamsters
The August issue of Teamster magazine features a cover story on the plan for
an enlarged I-35 that will reach north from the drug capital border town of
Nuevo Laredo, Mexico, 1,600 miles to Canada through San Antonio, Austin, Dallas,
Kansas City, Minneapolis and Duluth, while I-69 originating at the same crossing
will shoot north to Michigan and across the Canadian border.
Source: WorldNetDaily, August 28, 2006
Feds finally release info on 'superstate'
After missing a deadline, the U.S. Department of Commerce finally has granted
a Freedom of Information Act request to obtain complete disclosure of a
congressionally unauthorized plan to implement a trilateral agreement with
Mexico and Canada that critics say could lead to a EU-style alliance in North
America.
Source: WorldNetDaily, July 26, 2006
Feds stonewalling on 'superstate' plan?
The U.S. Department of Commerce appears to be stonewalling a Freedom of
Information Act request to obtain complete disclosure of a congressionally
unauthorized plan to implement a trilateral agreement with Mexico and Canada
that apparently could lead to a North American union.
Source: WorldNetDaily, July 19, 2003
U.S.-Mexico merger opposition intensifies
Does the agenda of the Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America
include a common currency that would scrap the dollar in favor of what some are
calling the "amero"?
Source: WorldNetDaily, July 9, 2006
More evidence Mexican trucks coming to U.S.
An internal document shows a planned "inland port" in Kansas City anticipates
an increasing volume of Mexican truck traffic, despite claims it will be
restricted to railroad transports from south of the border.
Source: WorldNetDaily, July 8, 2006
Docs reveal plan for Mexican trucks in U.S.
Despite claims to the contrary, a planned Midwest "inland port" with a
Mexican customs office will not be restricted to railroad traffic, according to
internal documents obtained by WorldNetDaily.
Source: WorldNetDaily, July 6, 2006
Mexican trucks to enter U.S. freely?
A U.S. government agency has begun a new audit to determine if the Bush
administration has resolved inspection issues that would allow Mexican trucks to
enter the U.S. freely.
WorldNetDaily, June 27, 2006
Mexican customs to be stationed in Kansas City
A Mexican customs office is being built in the U.S. heartland as part of a
newly designed "inland port" facility that links with a Mexican seaport, an
official in Kansas City confirms.
Source: WorldNetDaily, June 20, 2006
Proposal for UN Standing Army Would See UN Head Trumping Security Council
June 16, 2006 (LifeSiteNews.com) - A book launched at the United Nations
headquarters today proposes a permanent standing UN army with "rapid reaction
capability" under the sole direct command of the UN. The proposals stem from A
United Nations Emergency Peace Service to Prevent Genocide and Crimes Against
Humanity, envisioning a standing UN army that would "take action to prevent war
and dire threats to human security and human rights" within 48 hours of UN
authorization.
Source: Life Site, June 16, 2006
Small Arms
Review Conference 2006
United Nations Conference to review progress made in the implementation of
the prevention and ending of the illicit trade in small arms and light weapons,
New York, June 26-27, 2006
Source: UN announcement
Tancredo confronts 'super-state' effort
Responding to a
WorldNetDaily report, Rep. Tom Tancredo, R-Colo., is demanding the Bush
administration fully disclose the activities of an office implementing a
trilateral agreement with Mexico and Canada that apparently could lead to a
North American union, despite having no authorization from Congress.
Source: WorldNetDaily, June 15, 2006
Bush sneaking North American super-state without oversight?
Despite having no authorization from Congress, the Bush administration has
launched extensive working-group activity to implement a trilateral agreement
with Mexico and Canada.
Source: WorldNetDaily, June 13, 2006
Bush Administration Quietly Plans NAFTA Super Highway
Quietly but systematically, the Bush Administration is advancing the plan to
build a huge NAFTA Super Highway, four football-fields-wide, through the heart
of the U.S. along Interstate 35, from the Mexican border at Laredo, Tex., to the
Canadian border north of Duluth, Minn.
Source: Human Events Online, June 12, 2006
Bilderbergers meet secretly today in Ottawa
The famed secret society known as the Bilderberg Group is meeting today in
Ottawa, and, if you haven't been invited, welcome to the club.
It is one of the most exclusive conferences of global elites you will ever
find – or not find.
Source: WorldNetDaily, June 9, 2006
U.N. making homeschooling illegal?
A U.N. treaty conferring rights to children could make homeschooling illegal
in the U.S. even though the Senate has not ratified it, a homeschooling
association warns.
Source: WorldNetDaily, May 27, 2006
Defiance in the land of the free
A Native American woman is at war with the US.
For 30 years she’s been fighting to keep her ancestral land — and now the United
Nations is on her side.
Source: Times Online, April 23, 2006
Europe: Report Finds 'Many Indications' Of Secret CIA Prisons
A preliminary report by Europe's official
human-rights watchdog, the Council of Europe, has found that the United
States may have secretly moved more than 100 terror suspects abroad for
interrogation in countries with poor human rights records.
Source: Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty, January 24, 2006
GIs can be forced to wear U.N. beret
The U.S. military can force its personnel to wear the blue beret of
the United Nations and serve under the world body's command, a federal
judge ruled.
WorldNetDaily, December 25, 2004
U.N. 'peacekeepers' rape women, children
With the United Nations already under fire for the Oil-for-Food
mega-scandal and other corruption, sensational allegations of rampant
sexual exploitation and rape of young girls and women by the U.N.'s
so-called "peacekeepers" and civilian staffers in the Congo is
dragging the global body's reputation to an all-time low.
Source: WorldNetDaily, December 24, 2004
SAID to push democratisation agenda
The US Agency for International Development will unveil
early next year a comprehensive strategy for improving democracy and
governance in developing countries, a significant step in re-orienting US
aid programmes to support the democratisation agenda of President George
W.?Bush.
Source: MSNBC, December 23, 2005
Battlegroups are first step towards a Euro
army
European Union defence ministers will today
sign off plans for battlegroups of troops poised for instant
action, in a significant move towards a European army.
The British and the French, the driving forces
behind the scheme, will provide the first 1,500-strong
battlegroup, or "expeditionary force", starting in January.
Source: news.telegraph (online), November 22, 2004
Time is ripe' for reviving constitution, say Britain's EU partners
Europe's federalist leaders yesterday celebrated the last days of
Britain's EU presidency and announced that the "time is ripe" for reviving
their most cherished project: the EU constitution.
Source: news.Telegraph, December 20, 2005
Spain told to charge Catholic Church sales tax
The European Union today asked Spain to start charging
the Catholic Church sales tax, saying a special exemption breaks EU tax law.
Source: The Post.IE, December 16, 2005
Security Watch: To be "Owned" by Sony
It was a grand experiment that failed miserably: As a means of
copy-protecting its music, Sony employed a piece of software from
First4Internet. But the technology, as used by Sony, did two bad things:
First, it hid itself on computers by using
root-kit technology; and second, it opened a remote access connection
that called out to Sony (or one of its agencies). This exposed users'
computers to worms that took advantage of the stealth technology.
Source: C/net, November 18, 2005
U.N. claims U.S. social system violates human rights
Problems with U.S. social benefit systems impede people struggling to
overcome poverty, the United Nations said.
High health care costs and lack of low-cost housing exacerbate
poverty and this can be seen as a human rights abuse, concluded a 17-day
fact-finding mission by the U.N. Commission on Human Rights Tuesday.
Source: World Peace Herald (online), November 15, 2005
EU to build network of spy satellites
The European Union is building its own network of spy satellites allowing
Brussels to ensure nations and private individuals are obeying its policies,
it was announced yesterday.
Source: news.telegraph, November 15, 2005
No resolution on
Net control seen at summit
The United States is headed for a showdown with much of the rest of the
world over control of the Internet but few expect a consensus to emerge from
a U.N. summit in Tunisia this week.
Source: MSNBC, November 14, 2005
EU Asked to Probe CIA Jail Allegations
European lawmakers on Monday called on the European
Union's executive office to conduct a formal investigation into allegations
that the CIA set up secret prisons at Soviet-era compounds in Eastern Europe
to interrogate al-Qaida suspects.
Source: Breitbart, November 14, 2005
Finger-vein reader to foil car thieves
Car thieves could be foiled by a car security system that recognises the
unique pattern of veins on a driver's fingers as they pull the door handle.
Source: New Scientist (online), November 2, 2005
CIA holds
terror suspects in secret prisons
The CIA has been hiding and interrogating some of
its most important al Qaeda captives at a Soviet-era compound in Eastern
Europe, according to U.S. and foreign officials familiar with the
arrangement.
Source: MSNBC, November 2, 2005
European Union lowercases 'Christ'
A new grammar rule devised by the European Union in Brussels stipulates
the word "Christ" shall be spelled with a lowercase "c."
Source: WorldNetDaily, November 1, 2005
Citing avian flu, US senator demands Roche give up Tamiflu drug rights
Citing a global need to prepare against the threat of
an avian flu pandemic, a senior US politician demanded that Swiss
pharmaceuticals giant Roche give up its rights over the leading anti-flu
drug Tamiflu.
Source: Breitbart (online), October 17, 2005
Prisoners to get the vote
Prisoners [in the UK] could be given the vote after the European Court
ruled yesterday that laws disenfranchising them were a breach of their human
rights.
Source: Telegraph, October 7, 2005
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