Perry's push for
super highway raises conspiracy buzz
Some say
it's part of a plan to create one nation in
North America
August 18, 2007
By R.G. RATCLIFFE
/ Houston Chronicle
Austin Bureau
AUSTIN — Black helicopters, the
Illuminati, Gov. Rick Perry and the
Trans-Texas Corridor are all now part of
the vernacular of the global domination
conspiracy theorists.
Perry's push for the Trans-Texas
Corridor super highway is part of a
secret plan, the conspiracy theorists
say, to create the North American Union
— a single nation consisting of Canada,
Mexico and the United States with a
currency called the Amero.
Government denials of the North
American Union and descriptions of it as
a myth seem to add fuel to the fire. A
Google search for "North American Union"
and "Rick Perry" returns about 13,400
Web page results.
"Conspiracy theories abound, and some
people have an awful lot of time on
their hands to come up with such
far-fetched notions," said Perry
spokesman Robert Black.
Perry enhanced the conspiracy buzz
earlier this summer by traveling to
Turkey to attend the secretive
Bilderberg conference, which conspiracy
theorists believe is a cabal of
international monied interests and power
brokers pressing for globalization.
And the conspiracy rhetoric is likely
to ratchet up this week as President
Bush meets with Mexican President Felipe
Calderon and Canadian Prime Minister
Stephen Harper in Quebec in their third
summit to discuss North American
relations under the Security and
Prosperity Partnership.
"There is absolutely a connection
with all of it," said Texas Eagle Forum
President Cathie Adams. The Trans-Texas
Corridor "is something not being driven
by the people of Texas."
The first, and most controversial,
leg of the Trans-Texas Corridor plan is
a proposed 1,200-foot-wide private toll
road to run from Laredo to the Oklahoma
border parallel to Interstate 35. This
TTC-35 would be built by a consortium
headed by Spanish owned
Cintra S.A. and
Zachry Construction Corp. of San
Antonio.
The seed of the North American Union
controversy rests in the 1992-93 passage
of the North American Free Trade
Agreement under Presidents George H.W.
Bush and Bill Clinton. Under that
treaty, Interstate 35 was designated
informally as the NAFTA highway.
'Stealth' attempt
Fast-forward to March 2005 to Crawford,
when President Bush, Harper and
then-Mexican President Vicente Fox
agreed to pursue the Security and
Prosperity Partnership, SPP. The idea
was to promote cooperation among the
countries on economic and security
issues.
But conservative author Jerome Corsi
— in his new book: The Late Great
U.S.A.: The Coming Merger with Mexico
and Canada — argues the SPP is a
"stealth" attempt to wipe out the
nations' borders and form a single
economy like the European Union.
With an entire chapter dedicated to
Perry's Trans-Texas Corridor plan, Corsi
says the first step to integrating the
economies is to integrate the
transportation infrastructure.
"His (Perry's) actions have been to
fight hard to build this toll road and
not listen to the objections expressed
by the people of Texas," Corsi said.
Corsi became nationally known in 2004
as the co-author of Unfit for
Command: Swift Boat Veterans Speak Out
Against John Kerry. Corsi said
extensive research shows the SPP has
created working groups on the North
American Union that answer to
presidential Cabinet secretaries.
"This is more of a shadow
bureaucracy, a shadow government already
in effect," Corsi said. "Unless it is
stopped, it will turn into a North
American Union with an Amero."
The official federal Web site for the
SPP has a section dedicated to busting
the North American Union as myth.
"The SPP does not attempt to modify
our sovereignty or currency or change
the American system of government
designed by our Founding Fathers," the
site says.
But that has not stopped a growing
opposition to the North American Union
by groups such as the Eagle Forum, The
Conservative Caucus and the John Birch
Society.
'Wanted' individual
The North American Union also has been
fodder for cable television
commentators: CNN's Lou Dobbs and Fox's
Bill O'Reilly.
Perry fueled his role in the debate
in June by attending the Bilderberg
annual conference, a secretive
closed-door meeting of about 120
business, government and media leaders
from Europe and North America.
Republican presidential candidate and
U.S. Rep. Ron Paul of Lake Jackson was
asked about the trip on the syndicated
talk radio show of Alex Jones in June.
Paul said the trip was "a sign that he's
involved in the international
conspiracy."
Jones' Web site features mug
shot-like photos of Perry labeled
"Wanted for Treason." Jones in an
interview said Perry's trip and the
Trans-Texas Corridor show a willingness
by the governor to sell out Texas'
infrastructure to international bankers.
"Perry is actively waging war,
economically in the interests of the
elites and neomercantilism," Jones said.
The 2001 book Toward a North
American Community: Lessons from the Old
World for the New by Robert A.
Pastor, an American University professor
and director of the Center for Democracy
and Election Management, is cited by
Corsi as the blueprint for the merger.
"I've never proposed a North American
Union," Pastor said. "The only people
who talk about a North American Union
are those people who are trying to
generate fear."
Belief in sovereignty
Pastor said greater cooperation between
the three countries makes sense for both
economics and internal security.
Pastor said those promoting the
conspiracy are doing so because of
"historical xenophobia," "a fear of
immigrants, mostly from Mexico" and a
"traditional isolationism."
Black said there is no way the
governor would support merging the U.S.
with its neighbors.
"The governor is a firm believer in
the sovereignty of the United States.
Too many of our brave men and women have
died defending it," Black said.