October 30, 2010

World Control: World Government: Page 4

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There is a strong movement to create a world government in which sovereign nations would become member states of the world government. In addition, nations are combining to form de facto regional governments.
Look who’s listening in on public conversations
In what may appear to be a chapter straight out of George Orwell’s "1984," a surveillance system currently used in several Dutch cities records public conversations as far as 100 yards away and monitors movements to detect signs of anti-social behavior and fighting.
Source: WorldNetDaily, July 8, 2010
Has Anyone Read the Copenhagen Agreement?
And how will developed countries be slugged to provide for this financial flow to the developing world? The draft text sets out various alternatives, including option seven on page 135, which provides for "a [global] levy of 2 per cent on international financial market [monetary] transactions to Annex I Parties." Annex 1 countries are industrialized countries, which include among others the U.S., Australia, Britain and Canada.
Source: Wall Street Journal (online), October 28, 2009
Dominican Republic calls for tax on tax havens to fund UN humanitarian goals
Dominican Republic President Leonel Fernández today called on the United Nations General Assembly to consider a possible tax on tax havens, off-shore banks and international financial centres to make up for the damage the global economic crisis has wrought on efforts to achieve the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).
Source: UN News Centre, September 23, 2009
Canada joins Transatlantic Union effort
The agreement announced last Thursday concluded "scoping exercises" between Canada and the EU that began Oct. 17. The exercises determined 14 areas to be placed on the negotiating table, including trade in goods and services, investment, trade facilitation, customs regulation, technical barriers to trade, competition policy and sustainable development.
Source: WorldNetDaily, March 10, 2009
Sudden death for NAFTA highway plan
Tens of thousands of opponents to a NAFTA highway project that would have crossed Texas with a corridor the width of four football fields have been given good news by the state: the Trans-Texas Corridor plan is being dropped.
Source: WorldNetDaily, January 8, 2009
North American Army created without OK by Congress
In a ceremony that received virtually no attention in the American media, the United States and Canada signed a military agreement Feb. 14 allowing the armed forces from one nation to support the armed forces of the other nation during a domestic civil
emergency, even one that does not involve a cross-border crisis.
Source: WorldNetDaily, February 24, 2008
7-year plan aligns U.S. with Europe’s economy
Six U.S. senators and 49 House members are advisers for a group working toward a Transatlantic Common Market between the U.S. and the European Union by 2015.
Source: WorldNetDaily, January 16, 2008
FBI wants instant access to British identity data
The US-initiated programme, "Server in the Sky", would take cooperation between the police forces way beyond the current faxing of fingerprints across the Atlantic. Allies in the "war against terror" – the US, UK, Australia, Canada and New Zealand – have formed a working group, the International Information Consortium, to plan their strategy.
Source: The Guardian, January 15, 2008
Mexican trucks defy Congress, still roll
A constitutional crisis is developing between Congress and the Department of Transportation over the federal government’s decision to continue its project allowing Mexican trucks on U.S. roads, in defiance of new legislation.
Source: WorldNetDaily, January 5, 2008
Canada openly proclaims NAFTA Superhighway
Several readers pointed to a Canadian government video clip gaining wide circulation on the Internet. It involves a Nov. 20 "Speech from the Throne," in which John Harvard, lieutenant-governor of the Province of Manitoba, Canada, opened the second session of the 39th assembly of the provincial legislature with comments proclaiming support for the development of a "Mid-Continent Trade Corridor."
WorldNetDaily, December 8, 2007
How Brussels Regulates our Daily Lives
The European Commission in Brussels wants to protect European citizens even more effectively against danger and disease. Soon there will be a well-intended — but mostly completely unnecessary regulation for every aspect of life.
Source: Spiegel on Line, November 23, 2007
Bush support for sea treaty affirmed
The president continues to support the pending Law of the Sea Treaty, but a spokeswoman isn’t going to speculate on how it would have affected critical U.S. operations on the sea had it been adopted earlier.
Source: WorldNetDaily, November 16, 2007
Bush officials team with Mexico to defend trucks
Bush administration officials held a news conference with Mexico’s transportation secretary yesterday to respond to criticism of a program allowing Mexican trucks on U.S. roads, but critics in Congress who helped pass counter-legislation are unmoved.
Source: WorldNetDaily, October 18, 2007
Mexico’s Fox openly calls for North American Union
Mexico’s former President Vicente Fox is making no secret of his desire to promote a "North American Union" to compete economically with Europe and the Far East.
Source: WorldNetDaily, October 12, 2007
U.N. Law of Sea Treaty on Senate fast-track
For the second time in three years, the Bush administration is putting on a major effort for Senate ratification of the United Nations’ Law of the Sea Treaty, a wide-ranging measure critics say will grant the U.N. control of 70 percent of the planet under its oceans.
Source: WorldNetDaily, September 30, 2007
Congress debate begins on North America Union
A House resolution urging President Bush "not to go forward with the North American Union or the NAFTA Superhighway system" is according to its sponsor Rep. Virgil Goode, R-Va., in an exclusive WND interview "also a message to both the executive branch and the legislative branch."
Source: WorldNetDaily, September 25, 2007
Port sparks NAFTA super-railway challenge
With the focused development of the port in Prince Rupert, British Columbia, as an official "Asian Gateway," Canadian National is positioned to compete with Canadian Pacific as the first truly continental NAFTA super-railroad, reaching from Canada to Mexico through the heart of the U.S. On Sept. 12, Canadian National used the opening of its new container terminal at Prince Rupert to declare the railroad the "Midwest Express," a reference to its ambition to move containers of good manufactured in China into the heartland of North America through distribution hubs in Chicago and Memphis.
Source: WorldNetDaily, September 19, 2007
Deal creates path for NAFTA railway
Now, CP and the KCS are positioned to form the first continental NAFTA railroad, given their connection through IC&E and KCS jointly operating out of the KnocheYard in Kansas City.
Source: WorldNetDaily, September 18, 2007
Hoffa: Bush creating North American Union
Saying he is convinced "the Bush administration has a master plan to erase all borders and to have a super-government in North America,"
James P. Hoffa
, general president of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, celebrated theSenate’s 75-23 vote Tuesday night to block the Department of Transportation’s Mexican truck demonstration project.
Source: WorldNetDaily, September 14, 2007
1st U.S. truck rolls across Mexican border
Less than a week after the first Mexican trucks were allowed to cross the border and travel throughout the U.S., the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration announced today the first U.S.-based trucks crossed into Mexico to deliver goods.
Source: WorldNetDaily, September 14, 2007
U.S. under U.N. law in health emergency
The Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America summit in Canada released a plan that established U.N. law along with regulations by the World Trade Organization and World Health Organization as supreme over U.S. law and set the stage for militarizing the management of continental health emergencies.
Source: WorldNetDaily, August 28, 2007
China to install sensors along NAFTA Highway
Radio sensing stations to track traffic and cargo up and down the I-35 NAFTA Superhighway corridor are being installed by Communist China, operating through a port operator subsidiary of Hutchison Whampoa, in conjunction with Lockheed Martin and the North America’s SuperCorridor Coalition, Inc.
Source: August 18, 2007
Congress tells Bush: Back off SPP agenda
Twenty-two members of the U.S. House of Representatives 21 Republicans and a Democrat are urging President Bush to back off his North American integration efforts when he attends the third summit meeting on the Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America next week in Montebello, Quebec.
Source: WorldNetDaily, August 17, 2007
Now, here come the Mexican airplanes
The U.S. has built nine navigation systems for Mexico and Canada under the controversial Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America in an apparent first step toward establishing the satellite infrastructure needed to create a North American air traffic control system.
Source: WorldNetDaily, August 9, 2007
Now Africa heads toward continental government
While the African Union professes to respect the sovereignty of the individual countries constituting the group, it still has created executive, legislative, and judicial bodies required for regional government, including an African Union Executive Council, a Pan-African Parliament and an African Union Court of Justice.
Source: WorldNetDaily, August 6, 2007
Traffic ticket data shipped to Mexico
The Orange County Superior Court in California is outsourcing the processing of traffic tickets to a California company that sends the information through a Nogales, Mexico, subsidiary, raising public concerns of identity theft and complaints of language problems that allegedly lead to months of administrative errors in processing paperwork.
Source: WorldNetDaily, July 28, 2007
Secret memo: One-world agenda dominates SPP summit
The memo shows a secondary focus of the leaders’ meeting in Montebello, Quebec, Aug. 20-21, will be to prepare for a continental avian flu or human pandemic and establish a permanent continental emergency management coordinating body to deal not only with health emergencies but other unspecified emergencies as well.
Source: WorldNetDaily, July 24, 2007
Bill
paves way for Canada’s ‘disappearance’

Murray Dobbin, a Vancouver author and journalist critical of SPP, argued in an article titled, "The Plan to Disappear Canada ‘Deep Integration’ comes out of the shadows," the secretive trilateral bureaucratic working groups organized under the auspices of SPP are "harmonizing" virtually every important area of public policy with the U.S., including "defense, foreign policy, energy (they get security, we get greenhouse gases), culture, social policy, tax policy, drug testing and safety and much more."
Source: WorldNetDaily, June 23, 2007
Texas governor clears way for NAFTA Superhighway
The way was opened when Texas Gov. Rick Perry, a Republican, vetoed a series of proposals the Texas Legislature assembled to slow down the work on what is considered to be a key link in a continental NAFTA superhighway network.
Source: WorldNetDaily, June 22, 2007
NAFTA superhighway extends north
A NAFTA superhighway plan under way in Texas will be extended to Oklahoma and Colorado, stretching the four-lane, train-truck-car-pipeline corridor from the Mexican border at Laredo, Texas, to Denver
Source: WorldNetDaily, June 17, 2007
Secret New Plan for EU Superstate
French and Dutch voters rejected the original plan – which would hand Brussels the power to represent individual countries at the UN and change national laws – two years ago.
Source: Daily Express (online), June 15, 2007
Truckers demand feds come clean on Mexican rigs
Pointing to an overwhelming rebuke by the House, opponents of an agreement that would allow Mexican trucks to travel freely on U.S. roads are demanding the Department of Transportation come forward and tell the American public whether or not the program will begin next month, reports WND columnist Jerome Corsi.
Source: WorldNetDaily, June 8, 2007
Trans America
Are an international super highway and a North American Union on the horizon? A proposed multi-modal transportation system could leave Oklahoma stuck in the middle
Source: Urban Tulsa Weekly (online), June 6, 2007
North American future 2025
The Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) proposes to conduct a research project that will examine the future strategic issues facing North America projecting out to the year 2025. The results of the study will enable policymakers to make sound, strategic, long-range policy decisions about North America, with an emphasis on regional integration. Specifically, the project will focus on a detailed examination of future scenarios, which are based on current trends, and involve six areas of critical importance to the trilateral relationship: labor mobility, energy, the environment, security, competitiveness, and border infrastructure and logistics.
Source: Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS)
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