A 12-part video well worth watching. It has a largely American perspective but easily translates into our UK experience of 'free trade' (DOHA), which we should kill before it kills us.
The globalists try to sell us the idea that protectionism is bad, when we can see for ourselves that our jobs are being exported to China and India precisely because of the lowering or eradication of tariffs.
Protectionism is bad for the globalists - not for the rest of the planet's occupants.
This is a documentary about the North American Union that is being developed right now between Canada, the United States, and Mexico, based on the EU, which, according to Pascal Lamy, is the laboratory for World Government.
For years this topic has been debated in the news and in political circles as being a possible future for North America. In recent years, the mood has shifted and a rift is developing between those who want a Deeply Integrated North American Community, and those who wish to retain their national sovereignty.
Does that ring any bells? Isn't our sovereignty being purchased by corporations which have no allegiance to any nation and whose GDP exceeds that of nations?
Corporations are not even accountable to governments. Do you begin to see the danger that we are in if we do not rein in these behemoths and fail to derail DOHA II?
This video looks at both sides by interviewing insiders and activists who have been at the heart of this heated debate. The film also looks to the broader agenda of building a world government and its implications.
Featured Interviews:
- Robert Pastor (Council on Foreign Relations),
- Allan Gotlieb (Trilateral Commission, Bilderberg)
- Herbert Grubel (Creator of the "Amero")
- Luke Rudkowski (We Are Change)
- Dan Dicks (Press For Truth)
- Vijay Sarma (Political Activist, Independent Journalist)
- Dr. Andrew Moulden (Canadian Action Party)
- Richard Syrett (Talk Radio Host)
- Three Nations
- Two Sides
- One Union
- World government
Produced by Dan Dicks & Bryan Law
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4 comments:
How do you square such a stance with libertarianism?
Not picking a fight, just curious.
Corporations go hand in hand with crony capitalism, which is in complete violation of free market principles, so I get that part of it.
But protectionism? Telling free people who they can and can't trade with?
I don't think it can be squared with libertarianism, but then neither can a great many factors in play right now, and I don't think protectionism is the main threat.
Some of those factors are the welfare state, the level of taxation, the money system, the banking system (obviously these two are linked) the rising police state, the way corporations are increasingly above the law and pulling the strings of the politicians.
Protectionism is tied to sovereignty. The inability of governments to implement protectionist measures is due to a surrendering of sovereignty to international bodies such as the EU, WTO etc. Although a libertarian is happy to see limitations placed on state power, should a libertarian to see the power that the state has given up handed over to another body, which doesn't even have the illusion of accountability?
This is supposed to a Libertarian blog and you're argueing protectionism? Are you serious?
Our jobs are being exported to China and India because business in this country is so ruinously burdened with taxes, regulations, and all other manner of government and labour union meddleing that it is much, much cheaper to do business in other countries.
The answer is NOT protectionism, which is just more of the same government meddleing that causes the problem, you want the government deciding you can't do business with foreigners? That's what protectionism is, you have to allow the government to tell you which foreign products you are and are not allowed to buy, and at what price, and to arbitrarily select industries to favour. What basis do you suppose they'll be making those decisions on? What's best for the country? LOL!
Do you seriously pretend to be a Libertarian?
Slay,
well done for the libertarianer-than-thou speech. Do you have anything to say on the other issues that the film raises? You draw attention to the high taxes, regulation and government meddling. Surely you will see that these are just as much barriers to free trade. So you should be concerned that decisions about such things are increasingly being taken by wholly unaccountable forces.
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