A recent Seattle Times article that scoffs at the very
thought of a North American Union being implemented and
dismisses it as a conspiracy theory sums up the biggest
threat to freedom in America today, blind ignorance in
the face of troubling facts.
"Forget conspiracy theories about
JFK's assassination, black helicopters, Sept. 11, 2001.
This is the big one." writes Philip
Dine
"We're talking about the secret plan to build
a superhighway, a giant 10- to 12-lane production, from
the Yucatán to the Yukon. This "SuperCorridor"
would allow the really big part of the plan to take place:
the merging of the governments of Canada, the United States
and Mexico. Say goodbye to the dollar, and maybe even
the English language.
The rumor is sweeping the Internet, radio and magazines,
spread by bloggers, broadcasters and writers who cite
the "proof" in the writings of a respected American
University professor, in a task force put together by
the Council on Foreign Relations and in the workings of
the Commerce Department. "
Dine goes on to surmise that the entire
subject of the North American Union is an urban myth that
"feeds on American fear of immigration and globalization".
The John
Birch Society has an excellent response to
Dine, which goes something along the lines of:
If the NAU is a myth why is it that...
18 states have introduced resolutions calling on
their federal representatives to halt work on the North
American Union (they include Virginia and South Carolina)
3 of these states (Idaho, Montana and Oklahoma) have
passed their resolutions
22 U.S. Congressmen, including NC's Virginia Foxx
and Walter Jones, along with all three Republican Congressmen
running for President, have signed on as co-sponsors
of HCR40, which calls on the executive branch to end
all work on the North American Union and NAFTA superhighway
Even the Sierra
Club of Canada is sounding the alarm against
the North American Union
We would add that if the North American
Union is a myth why is it thatSecurity and Prosperity Partnership (SPP) documents
released under the FOIA show that a wide
range of US administrative law is being re-written in
stealth under this program to "integrate" and
"harmonize" with administrative law in Mexico
and Canada, just as has become commonplace within the
EU.
The documents contain references to upwards of 13 working
groups within an entire organized
infrastructure that has drawn from officials
within most areas of administrative government including
U.S. departments of State, Homeland Security, Commerce,
Treasury, Agriculture, Transportation, Energy, Health
and Human Services, and the office of the U.S. Trade Representative.
Mr Dine simply dismisses the SPP by quoting a spokesman
for the Commerce Department who describes SPP as "standard
intergovernmental diplomacy and coordination that occurs
all the time". The fact is though that standard intergovernmental
coordination is required by law to adhere to Congressional
oversight, something which the SPP agreement completely
bypassed.
Dine also calls the slated single North American currency,
the amero, a myth despite the fact that Robert Pastor,
"the American University professor to whom conspiracy
theorists point as 'the father of the NAU'" as he
puts it, has authored
a book and chairs confabs promoting the adoption
of the amero as a common monetary currency to replace
the dollar and the peso.
Just a conspiracy theory huh? Not according to Steve
Previs of Jefferies International who stated on CNBC,
"I think one thing for people who are dollar based
need to focus on is the Amero, that's the one thing that
nobody is talking about that I think is going to have
a big impact... on everybody's life in Canada, the U.S.
and Mexico..."
The recent news that the United States and
the European Union have signed up to a new transatlantic
economic partnership that will see regulatory standards
"harmonized" and will lay the basis for a merging
of the US and EU into one single market,
is also presumably a conspiracy theory.
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The most telling aspect of Dine's Seattle
Times article is his immediate connection of The NAU to
"conspiracy theories about JFK's assassination",
a sure fire way of spotting a debunkaholic from a mile
off.
A recent poll
indicates that 80% of Americans believe the
JFK murder was a conspiracy, older polls have been as
high as 90% - are all these people misinformed or are
they simply aware that the facts do not fit the story
they have been sold on that issue?
For further clarification of what constitutes
a debunkaholic, witness a classic piece of debunking here
on the JFK assassination by a former Clinton official
and lobbyist for the nation of Pakistan prior to 9/11,
Lanny Davis:
Davis cites little green men and suggests
that anything posted on the internet is a conspiracy.
He also states that rattling around the internet now is
the absurd suggestion that new evidence indicating a conspiracy
in the JFK murder has come to light. He fails to mention
that the new information comes from a former top FBI scientist
along with Texas A&M University researchers and was
reported in the Washington Post.Davis also
neglects to mention new revelations from E. Howard Hunt,
the former CIA agent and Watergate conspirator, who admitted
on his deathbed that he was part of a CIA
conspiracy to assassinate JFK.
This is the mind set of the debunker. It
has become all too easy for those who do not have the
strength of character to stand up and be counted to dismiss
anything they do not like the sound of as urban myth or
conspiracy theory.
While there are many valiant truthseekers
and active minds among us, on the opposite side a whole
generation of debunkers has also emerged. A society of
people who almost instinctively seize upon any issue and
automatically explain any worrisome aspects as untrue
or misunderstood because to do otherwise would mean having
to set aside a great deal of their lives to search hard
to find out what is really happening in the world around
them.
The debunker generation, the fallout from
a fast food culture of rampant consumerism, culturally
and spiritually exhausted yet still yearning for more
and more in less and less time, would rather look away
than face the reality of what is really unfolding before
their eyes.
Worse still are the high priests of the
debunking generation who seem to declare themselves as
some kind of pseudo psychologists, who rather than debate
the bare facts of an issue will continually slip into
an analysis of the internal mind. These debunkers dismiss
anything they don't want to hear as "comfort seeking"
or "reality escapism" conspiracy. 9/11 truthers
for example are often roundly categorized as "people
who want to believe they cannot do anything about the
dangers we face in the world because they are too lazy
and so invent theories and fit the facts to them".
The great irony here of course is that it
is the debunkers themselves who are guilty of the crimes
they have charged everyone else with and not the other
way round.