|
Mexican Gov't Reveals Plans for Trans North American
Corridor
by Jim Kouri October 8, 2007
NewsWithViews.com
In the midst of the current presidential race, American
voters are being denied information regarding alleged plans to merge the three
nations of North America -- the United States, Mexico, and Canada.
Not only are most political leaders in both major parties
failing to discuss allegations of an impending North American Union, but the
mainstream news media are failing to examine what promises to be THE major news
story of the 21st Century.
Meanwhile, the Mexican government has revealed to its own
citizens that Mexico has entered extensive discussions with government
officials in Texas and top representatives from the Bush administration to
extend what it called the Trans-Texas Corridor into Mexico, with a plan to
connect to the Mexican ports on the Pacific, including Manzanillo and Lazaro
Cardenas.
In fact, the official website of the Mexican northeastern
state of Nuevo León contains multiple reports that José Natividad
Gonzáles Parás, governor of the Mexican state of Nuevo
León, has actively discussed these plans with numerous US government
officials, including Texas' state and local officeholders.
"All one needs to do is to look at the social mass viewpoint
on Americans themselves by their own media as well as media outlets in other
countries," Emmy and Golden Globe Award winning actor Michael Moriarty told
NewsWithViews.com during an exclusive interview.
"Americans are looked at [sic] majoritively speaking, as
gun-toting, constitution quoting, trigger happy [sic] misinformee's. Yet,
carrying a gun is the first and foremost sign of being a truly free person. The
view that Americans are stupid is a widely held one, yet they are one of the
last bastions of freedom left to view," added the former Law & Order star.
Texas Governor Rick Perry, Secretary of Transportation Mary
Peters and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice all discussed the extension of
the Trans-Texas Corridor into Mexico to create what's called a "Trans North
America Corridor."
In fact, just last August during a trip to Mexico, Perry
made news in the conservative news media by calling the idea of building a
fence along the US-Mexico border "idiocy."
"Largely unreported in the American press were meetings
Perry held in Mexico with Gonzáles Parás in which the two
discussed extending the corridor into Mexico," said Moriarty.
"In their private meetings, the pair thoroughly discussed
extending Trans-Texas Corridor into Mexico," said Moriarty during his NWV
interview.
"We have had interaction with the governor of Texas,"
Gonzáles Parás said on the government web site. "We have had a
very productive relationship with Rick Perry, who is also interested in what we
can do to continue that which is known as the Trans-Texas Corridor, that in
reality is the corridor of North America, the Trans North America Corridor,
that includes railroads, bridges, passenger automobile highways, and truck
highway lanes."
Gonzáles Parás further explained the extension
of TTC-35 into Mexico would connect through Monterrey, a city which he
suggested would function as a hub for truck-freight traffic. Monterrey is the
capital of Nuevo León.
"One of the themes that merited the most attention on the
part of the two governors was the development of the infrastructure needed for
the competitive development of the region as it relates to developing the
Trans-Texas Corridor in connection with the project we call the Corridor of
Northeastern Mexico," the Nuevo León government web site reported
Gonzáles Parás saying Sept. 1, at the conclusion of Perry's
visit.
"Gonzáles Parás is reportedly pursuing plans
to establish Monterrey as an 'inland port' where international container
freight cargo, largely delivered into Mexico via the Mexican ports on the
Pacific, could be transported via a Trans North America Corridor into the
United States via Laredo, Texas," claims Moriarty, who's been following this
story closely.
Once on I-35, the Mexican trucks transporting the Chinese
containers could travel north, heading toward US inland ports are being
established by the Free Trade Alliance San Antonio in San Antonio and in Kansas
City by the Kansas City SmartPort.
On May 24, Gonzáles Parás announced during his
meetings in Austin, Perry had agreed the envisioned Trans North America
Corridor would pass through Laredo and connect with San Antonio, just as Mexico
ultimately planned to extend the superhighway south into Colombia.
"We have also worked in Monterrey to create an inland port,
a metropolitan center for moving rapidly the commercial traffic from Monterrey
to the inland port at San Antonio," Gonzáles Parás said in the
state-published interview.
"For this strategic project to be accomplished, we have been
working with the federal government in Mexico as well as holding discussions
with the secretary of transportation and the secretary of state in the United
States," he said.
Similar comments made by Gonzáles Parás at a
press conference in Mexico that first announced Transportes Olympic had been
selected as the first trucking firm to cross the border in the Mexican
truck-demonstration project.
In speaking to the group assembled at the company's
headquarters, Gonzáles Parás announced the Trans-Texas Corridor
was not just the NAFTA Superhighway, but "the Logistical Trans-Corridor of
North America," uniting Mexico, the United States and Canada.
He next announced the time had arrived to declare a North
American Economic Community. Gonzáles Parás explained the
Trans-Texas Corridor was more accurately known in Mexico as the "Logistical
Trans-Corridor of North America."
"I want to let you know how much we in this border state of
Nuevo León have been working with our neighbor state of Texas," he said,
"making agreements which permit us to enrich what in Texas is called the
'Trans-Texas Corridor,' but what we in Mexico know as the 'Logistical Corridor
of North America.'"
"We, Canada, and the United States have to perfect this
Logistical Trans-Corridor of North America for our mutual benefit,"
Gonzáles Parás continued.
He expanded his vision of a Logistical Corridor of North
America to include the construction of a train and truck corridor that would
cut through the heart of North America.
As far as a NAFTA Superhighway, the first segment is the
planned four-football-fields-wide Trans-Texas Corridor which the Texas
Department of Transportation plans to build parallel to Interstate 35.
"At the recent Security and Prosperity Partnership of North
America (SPP) third summit held in Montebello, Quebec, President Bush and
Canada's Prime Minister Stephen Harper ridiculed the idea that SPP might result
in the creation of a North American Union or NAFTA Superhighways," said
Moriarty.
"However, these reports written in Spanish and published on
the Nuevo León government website suggest that discussions about
extending TTC-35 into Mexico are much further advanced than have been admitted
by the Bush administration or reported upon in the US mainstream media,"
Moriarty added.
The well-known actor and musician takes a dim view of
America's future if the current trend continues unabated.
"The Old World Order is now legally dead, but is still on
life support in America. The old world was about individual freedom and
protection of the family unit and the family of countrymen. The New World Order
is about the loss of sovereign rights given by God, and the replacement of
those rights with freedoms handed out by man, or "the world government" such as
the United Nations," said Moriarty.
The well-known actor and musician takes a dim view of
America's future if the current trend continues unabated.
"The New World Order is alive and well today and has been
for quite sometime. The founding of International Banking Cartels, Foreign
Relations advisers and the creation of a World Court were all the political egg
and semen needed to begin the pregnancy, global crisis (real or fabricated) was
all that was needed to give birth to the dreams of powerful men."
|