It doesn't happen quickly. It's been a half-century since the European
Common Market was created to enhance cross-border trade in coal and
steel among six European countries. The next 40 years saw the idea of
cross-border "harmonization" expand into the European Community, with
the 1992 Maastricht Treaty. With the signing of the Lisbon Treaty in
December 2007, 27 European nations are on the verge of becoming one
consolidated state.
The North American Free Trade Agreement, which went into force in 1994,
is supposed to function much the same as the European Common Market, by
removing tariffs on goods traded among the member nations. The Security
and Prosperity Partnership, launched in 2005, is building a North
American Community. This process is designed to "harmonize" and
"integrate" cross-border rules and regulations. Following the European
blueprint, the next step is the creation of a North American Union.
In Europe, what started as a simple agreement to enhance trade among
six nations has grown into a full-blown treaty that will bring 27
former nations under the rule of a single, appointed government. In
Europe, the process has been littered with objections and resistance.
The one-government idea was first put to the people in the form of a
new constitution, but when the people had an opportunity to vote, the
idea was widely rejected. The new approach removes the people from the
equation and now requires only that the parliaments of the various
nations ratify the treaty.
American advocates of the one-government idea learned from the European
experience. NAFTA, which is, in fact, a treaty, was not presented to
Congress as a treaty. A treaty requires 67 Senate votes for
ratification. An executive agreement requires only 51 Senate votes and
a simple majority in the House of Representatives.
The Security and Prosperity Partnership was not even presented to
Congress; it was not a "signed" agreement, but an executive
"partnership," which needed no congressional involvement. Congress has
chosen not to challenge this executive authority.
The new European Union will have its own parliament, its own president,
its own court system and, of course, its own currency – the euro. A
single "high representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and
Security Policy" will speak for the 27 member-states, instead of 27
"foreign ministers." Some Europeans fear that this officer will replace
both England's and France's ambassadors to the United Nations and to
the U.N. Security Council. The Lisbon Treaty does not automatically
transform the 27 member states into one nation, but it is a major step
toward that goal.
The North American Community, now under construction through the
Security and Prosperity Partnership and similar efforts at the state
level, will not automatically transform Mexico, Canada and the United
States into "MexiCanAmeri," or "CanAmeriMex," or the North American
Union. But it is a major step toward that goal.
The plan to build a North American Community calls for annual summit
meetings of the three nations. The next will be held in New Orleans in
April. It calls for a common tariff, which NAFTA is supposed to do. It
calls for "a common approach to regulations," which the SPP working
groups call "harmonization and integration." It calls for a
tri-national "Advisory Council," and an "Inter-Parliamentary Group" –
all of which is now under construction.
The leaders of all three nations laugh and say these activities have
nothing to do with a North American Union. The facts on the ground,
however, make their denials laughable.
So-called "free traders" applaud NAFTA and point to jobs created by all
the exports to Mexico and Canada. They never mention the jobs that have
also been exported as the result of the trade deficit. When NAFTA went
into force, the deficit with Mexico and Canada was $13 billion. It has
grown steadily, and last year was $138.4 billion. NAFTA is the process
by which U.S. wealth is redistributed to other nations.
What's worse, the implementation of NAFTA, the SPP and the North
American Community are devices that bypass elected representatives.
NAFTA, approved by Congress on a promise of prosperity, has produced a
constant drain on our prosperity. Neither the SPP nor the North
American Community was even discussed in Congress. Both of these
executive devices are moving our nation closer to the one-government
concept pioneered by the European Union.
The government we are moving toward is an administrative government, in
which elected representatives become little more than a token to the
form of government created by the U.S. Constitution. When any
government is empowered to impose rules of behavior without the consent
of the governed, freedom is the victim. When government is empowered –
without the consent of the governed – to define what freedom may be
exercised, the result is a dictatorship, whether by a Hitler, a supreme
soviet, or an appointed Inter-Parliamentary Group.
Where are the Americans who still believe that the best possible
government is a government whose power is limited by the consent of the
governed? They are certainly not in a Congress that allows NAFTA, the
SPP and the North American Community to continue.
Original
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