Westside Eagle-Observer

Globalists love Trump’s USMCA

- By Harold Pease, Ph.D.

No one has been more outspoken against globalism than President Donald Trump. His “America First” platform is the antithesis of plans for world government. This is the reason all globalists, Democrat and Republican, and all globalist mediums, especially The New York Times and Washington Post, oppose him at all costs. Hence the shock when globalists now praise Trump’s USMCA (United States/Mexico/Canada) sovereignt­y-destroying replacemen­t of NAFTA — seemingly a merged agreement of the worst parts of NAFTA and TPP.

Most Americans viewed the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p (TPP) trade agreements for what they were, sovereignt­y sucking packs to undermine and destroy the independen­ce of nation-states, as previous agreements had done in Europe, resulting in the European Union. Globalists, funded by the financial global elites (from the Rockefelle­rs to George Soros) had failed previous tries at world government, notably the League of Nations and the United Nations, and concluded that loyalty to nation-states is the enemy to world government — hence their decades-old strategy of consolidat­ing regions of the globe, first economical­ly, then politicall­y into regional government. These then consolidat­e later into a world government.

Trump had billed the TPP as “the worst agreement ever negotiated” and three days after his inaugurati­on withdrew the United States as a signatory and refused further TPP negotiatio­ns. He promised to renegotiat­e NAFTA as well. In the Rose Garden, Oct. 1, 2018, USMCA rollout, Trump said, “Throughout the campaign, I promised to renegotiat­e NAFTA, and today we have kept that promise.”

So why are the globalists so happy with USMCA? It looks to be a blend of the worst parts of NAFTA and TPP. According to the online Huffington Post, “At least half of the men and women standing behind Trump during his Rose Garden ceremony praising the new deal were the same career service staff who negotiated nearly identical provisions in TPP, which Trump had railed against.” One of these, Trevor Kincaid, the lead negotiator for TPP, said, “It’s really the same with a new name. It’s basically the ‘22 Jump Street’ of trade deals.”

Richard N. Haass, president of the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR), the lead organizati­on for world government and the most influentia­l organizati­on on foreign policy in both major political parties the last hundred years, tweeted his praise for the agreement, “The USMCA looks to be the trade pact formerly known as NAFTA plus 10-20%. Hope it becomes a precedent for TPP.” Adding later, “What matters is that the U.S. joins it.…” Haass, so enthused by the agreement, added the next day, “USMCA is NAFTA plus TPP plus a few tweaks. Whatever … TPP by another name.” No wonder. The lead negotiator of the agreement was CFR member Robert Lighthizer, who candidly admitted that the USMCA is “built on” many aspects of the TPP.

Christian Gomez, who spent considerab­le time with the 1,809 paged document wrote, “A sideby-side comparison of the USMCA and the TPP shows extensive overlap. Virtually all of the problems inherent in the TPP are likewise contained in the USMCA, such as the erosion of national sovereignt­y, submission to a new global governance authority, the unrestrict­ed movement of foreign nationals, workers’ rights to collective bargaining, and regional measures to combat climate change” (What’s Wrong with the USMCA? New American, Nov. 2018).

So, the globalists are happy. They thought, under Trump, their decadesold efforts to unite the United States, Mexico and Canada into a regional government, economical­ly first, then politicall­y, as they had the European Union, would be unraveled. Instead, globalists regained all their lost ground and leaped forward into the areas of labor, immigratio­n and environmen­tal regulation, which agreement would handcuff the legislatur­es of these countries to regional law passed by unelected bureaucrat­s.

Gomez added, “The pact is even worse than NAFTA regarding underminin­g American sovereignt­y and self-determinat­ion, in favor of North American integratio­n extending beyond trade to include labor and environmen­tal policies. It is, in fact, so bad that the globalists who had lambasted Trump for renegotiat­ing NAFTA praised him afterward” (Ibid).

So much for the Constituti­on or national sovereignt­y holding them back. And Trump fell for it.

The massive size of the agreement screams control. Liberty is defined by the limits of the government on the individual. The management of an entire country is housed in a Constituti­on of only four or five pages and a Bill of Rights of a single page — not 1,809.

A real free trade agreement could probably fit a single page and be noted for its absence of rules on trade — as it was in the early days of this republic. Let us instead disallow the rich from funding organizati­ons designed to end our Republic, destroy the Constituti­on or create a world government, all of which they presently do. Such used to be called treason.

Now there exists no evidence Trump really supports globalism except his USMC Agreement — everything else he has done demonstrat­es otherwise. He has clearly been duped. Getting him to disavow what he called “incredible” will not be easy, but he must if he sincerely decries world government and supports America First. If not, he will be credited with instigatin­g “the worst agreement ever negotiated” — a government over our own — and, in time, will be linked with the Rockefelle­rs and George Soros as having brought us world government.

Harold W. Pease, Ph.D., is a syndicated columnist and an expert on the United States Constituti­on. He has dedicated his career to studying the writings of the Founding Fathers and applying that knowledge to current events. He taught history and political science from this perspectiv­e for more than 30 years at Taft College. To read more of his weekly articles, visit www. LibertyUnd­erFire.org.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States