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Conquering Canada: The Elite Re-Configuration of North America
By Carl Teichrib
“The acquisition of Canada this year…will be a mere matter of marching…”
– Thomas Jefferson
Disbelief was the first emotion. Not because I didn’t comprehend the
message, but because of the brazen nature of the broadcast. After the
evening news was over, I immediately placed phone calls to friends in
the United States. Was it on your evening news? Did you see it?
The response was the same regardless of which state I called. No,
there’s nothing about this story here. Are you sure it exists?
While America appeared to have a news blackout in early 2005,
flashed coast-to-coast across Canada was a report of monumental
significance: a story that will impact every citizen of Mexico, the
United States, and Canada. *snip* |
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I just stumbled over this,
and wowser. The article is chock full of sharp electrical
jolts to the gonads. Let me share 60 amps with you.
“ |
- The piece that caught my breath was the proclamation of an unveiling.
The New York-based Council on Foreign Relations would be releasing a
study on integrating the continent, a move that would take us well
beyond NAFTA. For the observant, it was clear that all three nations would have to re-configure their priorities.
- Later that fall, the Atlanta Federal Reserve published an article in
its Economic Review debating what final form a tri-national currency
would take. This issue not only stated “that a single currency for
NAFTA countries is possible,” but also that
- Ironically, as 9/11 shifted the eyes of the US executive branch towards
the Middle East, corporate elites embraced North American integration
as a lesson learned. Keep in mind that our tri-national trade is
staggering, with Canada and the US alone constituting the largest
bi-national economic relationship on the planet. To give a sense of
this relationship: just the yearly trade passing through one
US/Canadian border crossing, the Windsor/Detroit station, is more then
the total annual US trade with Japan.
-
Being sensitive to potential criticism that the CCCE is selling-out
their country, the organization released a Q&A styled paper
explaining that their ideas did not represent a merger, but merely a
new partnership. Sovereignty, the document implied, wasn’t in jeopardy.
However, in a report presented to the CCCE by a partnering Canadian
foreign policy institute, admittance was made that any time a country
agrees to be bound by an international treaty, it automatically
involves “the surrender of some degree of national sovereignty in
exchange for larger purposes.” *snips ahoyt*
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Funny thing is, over the weekend I was thinking the
unthinkable. I can see the day - the possibility, way in the
future - when George Bush is presented in history books as the greatest
visionary ever to occupy the Oval Office. Not just for his grasp
of the Islamo threat, but ... this. It'll come over my dead
body. But, then, I'll be dead, won't I? You too.
Bastards will throw all my pictures away too, because nobody paid
my ISP bill. I'm a visionary too.
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