SELLING AMERICA TO COMMUNIST CHINA
July 24, 2007
By Cliff Kincaid & Andy
Selepak, NewsWithViews.com
In remarks on July 20 to a Freedom 21 conference
in Dallas, Texas, conservative leader Phyllis
Schlafly declared that the Chinese communists
intend to exploit development of a North
American Union in order to bring more cheap
goods into the U.S. and destroy more American
jobs.
The Freedom
21 conference, organized by Tom DeWeese of
the
American Policy Center and Cathie Adams of
Eagle Forum of Texas, was devoted to
highlighting the erosion of American sovereignty
through an ongoing process that aims to
economically and politically integrate the U.S.,
Canada and Mexico.
Schlafly, president of Eagle Forum, highlighted
the role of Democratic Party foreign policy
specialist Robert Pastor in the unfolding plan.
Pastor helped lead the campaign to surrender
U.S. control of the Panama Canal through the
Panama Canal Treaty, a development that has
taken on added significance in view of the fact
that a Chinese firm, Hutchison Whampoa, now
controls not only the ports at both ends of the
Panama Canal but
ports and terminals in Mexico. The company
has close ties to the Chinese regime.
Speaking at the same conference, Rep. Duncan
Hunter, a Republican presidential candidate,
said unfair Chinese trade was decimating
America’s industrial base and that the communist
regime was using “crisp new American trade
dollars” to build up its war machine.
Schlafly came close to endorsing Hunter for
president, declaring, “Wouldn’t it be wonderful
to have him in the White House?” She said he was
“right on every issue” and “he’s the only one of
all the candidates who talks about the jobs
issue, and I think that is the coming big issue
in the next election.” Her remarks followed
Hunter’s speech.
New Book Highlights Threat
She strongly recommended Jerome Corsi’s new
book, The Late Great USA, which argues
that a North American Union would provide China
another “economic advantage” over the U.S., with
ominous national security implications.
Indeed, Corsi comes close to arguing that China
is the ultimate power broker behind the scheme,
saying that “In order to solidify its economic
superiority over North America, Red China is
working to restructure the North American
transportation infrastructure.”
It also turns out, according to information
presented at the conference by Oklahoma activist
Amanda Teegarden, as well as Corsi’s book, that
a Hutchison Whampoa subsidiary is a major
investor in a firm, Savi Networks, that has
developed a radio technology to track and manage
cargo shipments. Hutchison Whampoa owns 49
percent of the firm, with 51 percent owned by
U.S. defense contractor Lockheed Martin. In
2006, Lockheed Martin was the
top contributor among military contractors
to candidates for federal office and national
political parties. Fifty-eight percent of its
money went to Republicans.
Schlafly also attacked so-called “patent
reform,” now moving through Congress, which
she said would benefit China by forcing
Americans to put information about their
inventions on the Internet where it could be
stolen. And she warned against President Bush’s
plan to “to put all the illegal aliens in Social
Security,” a scheme called “totalization,”
which would “break the bank.”
Several speakers at the Freedom 21 conference
were activists from Texas and Oklahoma opposed
to the building of corridors or “NAFTA highways”
through their states to bring goods from Mexico
to the U.S. Organizations represented at the
conference included
Oklahomans for
Sovereignty and Free Enterprise,
Corridor Watch, and
Texans
Uniting for Reform & Freedom.
“The purpose is to bring in cheap goods from
China,” Schlafly declared. “The plan is to bring
the cheap Chinese goods and the containers
across the Pacific and then dock at the Mexican
Pacific port Lazaro Cardenas and then bring them
up on the railroad that’s already in place, put
them in the Mexican trucks and bring them up the
NAFTA highway. And they will never be inspected
until they get to Kansas City.”
Schlafly said that we are witnessing the
unfolding of a plan that is based on a series of
steps, including passage of “free trade”
agreements, creation of a common market and a
monetary and economic union, the establishment
of international trade tribunals to govern trade
and other disputes between the U.S., Canada and
Mexico, and the use of a single currency for
North America.
“Their model is the European Union,” she said.
North American Institutions
Accuracy in Media has confirmed this, having
reported on a Washington conference on
development of a North American legal system
where participants were told of proposals to
create North American institutions, including a
“North American Court of Justice” with the power
to overrule the U.S. Supreme Court. Robert
Pastor, who claims to be in favor of a North
American “community,” not a union, presided over
the conference.
Robert Pastor, who also runs the Center for
North American Studies at American University,
helps facilitate model “North American
Parliament” meetings where students play the
role of delegates to a trilateral legislature.
One of his students, Marlon Brown,
has written about Pastor’s personal vision
and plans for a “North American Parliament.”
The White House, which claims the North American
Union is a myth, has announced that Bush will
travel to Montebello, Quebec, Canada to meet
with Prime Minister Stephen Harper of Canada and
President Felipe Calderon of Mexico at the
“North American Leaders’ Summit” on August
20-21. “The leaders will review progress and
continued cooperation under the Security and
Prosperity Partnership, as well as discuss
hemispheric and global issues,” the White House
says.
The Security and Prosperity Partnership is seen
by critics as a key part of the North American
Union (NAU) plan. The SPP, an executive branch
initiative, has never been approved by Congress
but has nevertheless resulted in the creation of
dozens of working groups involving officials
from the U.S., Canada and Mexico meeting to
“harmonize” the laws and regulations of the
three countries. The public interest law firm
Judicial Watch has been forced to go through the
Freedom of Information Act to get information
about the activities of these groups.
Opposition Developing
In the House, Rep. Virgil Goode (R-Va.) has
introduced House Concurrent Resolution 40
opposing the NAU. No formal opposition has yet
surfaced in the U.S. Senate. Conservative Caucus
chairman Howard Phillips has announced that
opponents of the NAU will hold a press
conference on August 20 in Ottawa, Canada, on
the occasion of the upcoming SPP meeting. The
press conference will be held at the Marriott
Ottawa from 10:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.
Schlafly was the first national commentator to
write about the prospect of a North American
Union, noting in a
July 13, 2005 column that the influential
Council on Foreign Relations had just issued a
report urging an “integrated North American
Community.”
Schlafly, who almost single-handedly stopped
passage of the so-called Equal Rights Amendment
to the Constitution, urged participants in the
Freedom 21 conference to vigorously oppose the
North American Union, which she noted has
received little media coverage, save for Lou
Dobbs of CNN. She also noted that some members
of Congress claim not to know anything about it
or dismiss it as a conspiracy theory.
However, Schlafly said, there are certain facts
that “cannot be disputed,” and that when you
“connect the dots,” people will get the big
picture.
She said some of the key dates in this process
were: