Says
GOP risks loss by ridiculing questions about 'North American Union'
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Posted:
September 22, 2007
1:00 a.m. Eastern
Speaking
yesterday in St. Louis at Phyllis Schlafly's Eagle Council meeting, WND staff
reporter Jerome Corsi predicted the Republican Party risks losing the 2008
Presidential
election and two-thirds of the House and the Senate if President Bush continues
to ridicule questions about a possible North American Union as "conspiracy
theories" while continuing to press an active integration with Mexico and
Canada in the remaining months of his second term.
Calling
Karl Rove the architect not only of the Republican electoral victory in 2004 but
also of the Republican electoral defeat in 2006, Corsi told the group the main
issue was immigration.
"Yes,
the war in Iraq was an issue in 2006," Corsi acknowledged, "but even
Richard Nixon won a landslide in 1972 despite the growing unpopularity of the
Vietnam War. The Democrats will lose any time they run a far-left anti-war electoral
campaign."
C-span's
Book-TV recorded Corsi's presentation for later broadcast.
Corsi
asserted in 2006 "grassroots Americans voted against open borders and illegal
immigration, whether Karl Rove or the Republican National Party want to admit
it, or not."
"Every
time President Bush pushes to have Mexican trucks cross our borders, the American
grassroots feel betrayed," Corsi told the group.
"George
Bush can put Hillary Clinton in the White House," Corsi said, "and all
he has to do is keep ridiculing the idea of a North American Union or NAFTA superhighways,
instead of answering the question directly."
Corsi
contended the Bush administration is not listening to the American people, "not
even when the House and the Senate vote overwhelmingly in bi-partisan majorities
to take the funds for the Mexican trucking demonstration project as a last ditch
effort to stop the Department of Transportation from letting unsafe Mexican trucks
from rolling across the borders."
A
main thesis of Corsi's current WND-published New York Times bestselling book,
"The Late Great USA: The Coming Merger with Mexico and Canada," is the
Security and Prosperity Partnership has created a bureaucratic trilateral working
group structure that is creating the infrastructure for a European Union-style
North American Union and the construction of a NAFTA superhighway network.
"We
are six years into the war on terror, yet President Bush has still failed to secure
our borders with Mexico and Canada. Why is that?" Corsi asked. "The
American public demands an explanation, especially when Hezbollah terrorists who
bought their way into the U.S. by bribing Mexican officials are now in federal
prison for sending money back to Hezbollah terrorists in Lebanon."
The
explanation, Corsi argued, is that Bush opened U.S. borders with Mexico and Canada
when he agreed to the Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America, or
SPP, at a summit meeting with Mexico's then-president, Vicente Fox, and Canada's
then-prime minister, Paul Martin, at Waco, Texas, March 23, 2005.
"The
Bush administration admits there are 12 million illegal immigrants living in the
United States," Corsi noted. "The real number is probably 20 million
or more. But the question is why is one of every 10 people born in Mexico living
in the United States as a Mexican national today?"
By
2010, Corsi said, 20 percent of Mexico's population would be living in the U.S.
under the Mexican flag.
"Now
there are 47 Mexican consulate offices in the U.S. dedicated to protecting the
civil rights of these Mexican citizens living in our country," Corsi told
the group. "We have already become a dual country, and I don't remember ever
voting to allow that to happen."
Corsi
rebutted the argument that the U.S. could not evolve incrementally into a North
American Union without the U.S. Constitution being amended.
"In
Europe, the intellectual elite and the multi-national corporations who advanced
the European integration agenda proceeded by the incremental method," Corsi
answered.
"The
same is happening here," he explained. "First, President Bush allows
our borders to be open and a fait accompli just happens. An increasing proportion
of Mexico's population begins living in the United States, without any requirement
that they become U.S. citizens, and our elected politicians do nothing to stop
it."
"Then
President Bush comes to the Senate, now twice, and argues that 12 million illegal
immigrants cannot be rounded up and deported," Corsi continued. "The
only solution President Bush offers is to pass 'comprehensive immigration reform,'
which is nothing more than a code name for an amnesty that one way or another
legitimates the illegal aliens remaining here.
"That's
how the incremental method is meant to work," Corsi said. "By the time
the people get to vote, the fact of North American integration will be already
accomplished to the point where a vote will not be sufficient to reverse the fait
accompli or to preserve our sovereignty without important compromises on the way
to becoming a regional government."
Corsi
also addressed the Bush administration attempt to ridicule the idea that new NAFTA
superhighway systems are being built, with the plan to import millions of containers
from China into the U.S. through Mexican ports, with Mexican dock workers, Mexican
truck drivers and Mexican train workers being used to reduce the costs of transporting
the containers into the U.S. heartland.
"President
Bush can ridicule and call names all he wants," Corsi said, "but dozens
of government websites document the effort of the Bush administration to advance
public-private partnerships where foreign investment concerns build and operate
new toll roads in the United States."
Corsi
point out that just by going to websites such as KeepTexasMoving.com anyone can
navigate to the Trans-Texas Corridor and see the Texas Department of Transportation
documenting the new four-football-fields wide superhighway that Cintra, an investment
consortium in Spain, plans to build parallel to Interstate 35.
"Already
the investment bankers are talking to Oklahoma," Corsi pointed out, "trying
to convince the state politicians to offer the billions Cintra is offering to
extend TTC-35 north. What's Oklahoma going to do? Just let the four-football-fields
TTC-35 superhighway end at the Oklahoma border? I don't think so."
Corsi
also noted the general counsel of the Federal Highway Administration wrote letters
threatening to withdraw federal highway funds from Texas if the Texas legislature
should succeed in voting a stop to the TTC project.
"With
that type of heavy-arm pressure being placed on Texas," Corsi asked, "can
anyone reasonably doubt that the Bush administration is as determined to see the
TTC project be built as they are to see Mexican trucks cross the border before
Bush has to leave office?"
Corsi
asserted that in 2008, Republican Party candidates are going to have to distance
themselves from President Bush, promising to secure the nation's borders and oppose
any move to establish a North American Union or to build NAFTA superhighways.
"Simply
denying that North American integration has occurred, as a below-the-radar-strategy,
will not be credible enough to win," he said.
"Truly,
the Democratic Party candidates are no more direct or reassuring on these issues,"
Corsi admitted. "Democrats are conflicted on these issues, many openly supporting
illegal immigrants in the view that the Democratic Party can guarantee decades
of electoral success simply by championing illegal immigrants as the next generation
of downtrodden who will look to Democrats for social welfare benefits and generous
opportunities to achieve citizenship."
The
problem, Corsi said, is that grassroots American voters, "even in the red
states are angry at Bush over these issues."
"Unless
Republican candidates in 2008 address issues of border security, globalism, the
North American Union and NAFTA superhighway directly, people are going to vote
against Republicans, even if they regret having to vote for Democrats as a consequence,"
he said.