UN Agenda 21 requires that Canada,
Mexico and the U.S. merge into the North American Region of the UN Global
Government.
Mexican President Demands U.S. Merge With Mexico, Canada EU-style "North American Union"
would kill U.S. national sovereignty Kit DanielsJune
28, 2016
Mexican President Enrique Nieto is
attending a North American leaders summit in Ottawa on Wednesday to push the
years-long, globalist proposal that would combine the U.S., Mexico and Canada
into a regional entity at the expense of U.S. national sovereignty, which
starts with joint energy agreements.
“The purpose of this visit is to renew
our bilateral relationship, to give it new life, to find ways to advance the
prosperity and competitiveness of North
America,” Nieto said, with emphasis added on North America.
He’s not the first Mexican president to
push the NAU; Vicente Fox also pushed the globalist plan, but he was so vocal
about it, the Bush administration finally told him to keep quiet to avoid
negative press.
“I proposed a ‘NAFTA Plus’ plan to
President Bush and Canada’s Prime Minister Jean Chrétien to move us toward a
single continental economic union, modeled on the European example,” he wrote
in his autobiography Revolution of
Hope. “…At summits
I took every opportunity to advocate clearly for free-market policies; showing
what sound economics could do to fund social justice; arguing for globalism,
NAFTA and the Free Trade Area of the Americas.”
And during Fox’s presidency, in 2005,
the globalist Council on Foreign Relations met with the Mexican government to
discuss the implementation of the NAU.
“We are asking the leaders of the United
States, Mexico, and Canada to be bold and adopt a vision of the future that is
bigger than, and beyond, the immediate problems of the present,” CFR member and
former Canadian Deputy Prime Minister John P. Manley wrote. “They could be the architects of a new
community of North America, not mere custodians of the status quo.”
However, the NAU proposal would
“increased labor mobility” between the U.S. and Mexico, which would effectively
grant amnesty to illegal immigrants, and a “North American regulatory plan”
with a “unified approach” to all three countries, which would effectively end
U.S. national sovereignty.
Additionally, the NAU would strengthen
controversial trade deals such as NAFTA which has only exacerbated illegal
immigration by fueling mass unemployment in Mexico.
“There are no jobs [in Mexico] and NAFTA
forced the price of corn so low that it’s not economically possible to plant a
crop anymore,” Rufino DomÃnguez, the former coordinator of the Binational Front
of Indigenous Organizations, revealed. “We come to the U.S. to work because
we can’t get a price for our product at home. There’s no alternative.”
Sin maiz, no hay pais: without corn,
there is no country, as the Mexican saying goes.
NAFTA disrupted Mexico’s corn production
so badly that 75,000 Iowa farmers were able to grow twice as much corn as
3,000,000 Mexican producers – and at half the cost because the U.S. maintained
its corn subsidies under NAFTA.
That resulted in the mass migration of
Mexican farm workers flowing into America.
“The big wave in illegal immigration
from Mexico began in the 1980s, but it picked up strongly after NAFTA – that
wasn’t unexpected,” NPR’s Tim Robbins reported, a rare admission from an establishment
outlet.
Donald Trump has spoken out against
NAFTA and EU-style bureaucracies, which explains why Nieto and other globalist
Mexican officials have spoken out against the GOP nominee.
http://www.infowars.com/mexican-president-demands-u-s-merge-with-mexico-canada/
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