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Resolution seeks to head off union with
Mexico, Canada
Howard Phillips building coalition behind congressional
measure
Posted: October 25, 2006 1:00 a.m.
Eastern
© 2006 WorldNetDaily.com
A coalition spearheaded by Conservative Caucus Chairman
Howard Phillips, author Jerome Corsi and activist Phyllis Schlafly is launching
an effort today in support of a proposed congressional resolution that
denounces any effort by the U.S. to enter into a North American Union with
Mexico and Canada.
The
resolution
sponsored by Republican Reps. Virgil Goode Jr. of Virginia, Tom Tancredo
of Colorado, Walter Jones of North Carolina, and Ron Paul of Texas
expresses "the sense of Congress that the United States should not engage in
the construction of a North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) Superhighway
System or enter into a North American Union (NAU) with Mexico and Canada."
Phillips and Corsi, a
WND columnist and
author, hosted a news conference at the National Press Club this morning.
Yesterday,
Corsi announced the
Internet release of about 1,000 documents obtained in a Freedom of
Information Act request to the Security and Prosperity Partnership of North
America. He says the documents show the White House is engaging in
collaborative relations with Mexico and Canada outside the U.S. Constitution.
The documents can be viewed
here, on a special website
set up by the Minuteman Project.
Corsi told WND the coalition, which now numbers about 50
leaders, is calling for a congressional investigation.
"We'd like to see both the House and the Senate in the 110th
Congress conduct a serious investigation and get full disclosure from SPP of
all documents," he said. "If the Bush administration wants to continue to deny
that we're on the same track that Europe went on to create the European Union
and the euro, then there should be no harm in full disclosure."
Otherwise, he continued, "I'm charging they are secretly on
the path to create a North American Union, a new currency the amero
along the same stealth path that was used in Europe, keeping everything
below the radar, by administrative decree, making it to late to stop before the
American people finally realize what's gong on."
Phillips, who has been chairman of the public-policy
Conservative Caucus since 1974,
told WND "this could be the most important project on which we've ever worked."
"It's incredible that a project of this magnitude with such
potential fatal consequences to American's status as an individual republic
should get this far without serious public debate and consideration," said,
Phillips, who was one of the founders of the U.S. Taxpayers Party, which
changed its name to the Constitution Party in 1999.
He was the party's presidential candidate in the 1992, 1996
and 2000 elections.
The
resolution
Phillips is promoting reads, in part:
- Whereas, according to the Department of Commerce, United
States trade deficits with Mexico and Canada have significantly widened since
the implementation of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA);
- Whereas the economic and physical security of the United
States is impaired by the potential loss of control of its borders attendant to
the full operation of NAFTA;
- Whereas a NAFTA Superhighway System from the west coast
of Mexico through the United States and into Canada has been suggested as part
of a North American Union;
- Whereas it would be particularly difficult for Americans
to collect insurance from Mexican companies which employ Mexican drivers
involved in accidents in the United States, which would increase the insurance
rates for American drivers;
- Whereas future unrestricted foreign trucking into the
United States can pose a safety hazard due to inadequate maintenance and
inspection, and can act collaterally as a conduit for the entry into the United
States of illegal drugs, illegal human smuggling, and terrorist activities;
- Whereas a NAFTA Superhighway System would be funded by
foreign consortiums and controlled by foreign management, which threatens the
sovereignty of the United States.
The resolution calls for the House of Representatives to
agree on three issues of determination:
- The United States should not engage in the construction
of a North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) Superhighway System;
- The United States should not enter into a North American
Union with Mexico and Canada; and
- The President should indicate strong opposition to these
or any other proposals that threaten the sovereignty of the United States.
"As important as this resolution is," Corsi said, "we need
still more congressional attention. Where is congressional oversight of SPP? We
need congressional hearings, not just congressional resolutions."
H.Con.Res.487 has been referred to the Committee on
Transportation and Infrastructure and to the Committee on Internal Relations
for consideration prior to any debate that may be scheduled on the floor of the
House of Representatives.
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