Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars: Expanding NAFTA

Daniel Taylor
Old-Thinker News
January 17, 2008

Old-Thinker News reported on the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in August of 2007, documenting an overlooked conference held by the center in 2002 which was dedicated to the discussion of a "North American Consciousness". The North American Consciousness - a mindset favorable to the integration of Canada, Mexico, and the United States - was discussed as being a necessity if integration was to be successful.

Another document has been found, again from the WWICS website, that discusses the creation of a "continental homeland security," a "North American parliament," and a "continental democracy" [between the U.S., Mexico, and Canada]. The information covered in the document will be very familiar to those who have been following North American Union developments.

Background on the WWICS

The Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, established in 1968, functions as a roundtable for globalist policy making and discussion. The current director of the WWICS is Lee H. Hamilton, former vice chairman of the 9/11 Commission. Interestingly, the center enjoys the financial support of the Rockefeller Brothers Fund and the Ford Foundation. Members of the Council on Foreign Relations and other globalists such as Thomas F. McLarty - from Kissinger-McLarty Associates - often contribute to WWICS round table discussions and conferences.

NAFTA at 10

Throughout the "NAFTA at 10: Progress, Potential, and Precedents" document, numerous references to the European Union are made. Learning from the mistakes and successes of the EU are vital, the conference panelists say, in the creation of an expanded NAFTA and a North American Community (modeled around the European Union). Many of the panelists argue that deeper integration must take place, while some cite the need for global governance to effectively manage worldwide economic integration.

The NAFTA at 10 conference was held in 2002, ten years after the original NAFTA agreement was signed.

Below are some of the outstanding excerpts:

"Anthony DePalma argued that NAFTA was a historic milestone. However, while the big idea behind the European Community was clear—the prevention of another European war—he wondered aloud about the binding common interest behind NAFTA. He suggested that there was no similar master plan in the case of NAFTA. Rather, the three NAFTA partners were stumbling forward in the direction of community and towards the idea of the interrelationship between international and domestic policies. DePalma posed the question of the trade-off between sovereignty and “continental democracy.” For example, while all three states submitted themselves to tribunals to resolve trade disputes, the tribunals themselves are not democratic in that they do not conform to norms of transparency. He posed the question of whether continental homeland security could be a new organizing idea around which NAFTA moves forward."

"Carlos Heredia argued that the NAFTA countries should pursue a strategy of convergence and called for steps to be taken with vision and leadership in the direction of a North American parliament and the development of institutions that will strengthen democracy."

"Alan S. Alexandroff then evaluated “Feasible Globalizations” by Dani Rodrik of Harvard University. Rodrik argued that global markets are unsustainable without global governance, and that if there is to be no governance, there is a need to reduce and slow ambitions for worldwide economic integration."

Model North American Parliament gatherings have already been taking place for student groups. As documented by Jerome Corsi, writing in World Net Daily,

A group supporting North American integration is preparing to hold its annual "North American Model Parliament" for students from the United States, Canada and Mexico… NAFI, according to the group’s website, is as a non-profit organization based in Montreal, dedicated to "address the issues raised by North American integration as well as identify new ideas and strategies to reinforce the North American region.

Economic integration and harmonization of rules and regulations is seen by many globalists as only a means to an end. L. Ronald Scheman, founder of the Pan American Development foundation and Senior Advisor to Henry Kissinger’s Kissinger McLarty Associates has a vision of a Greater America modeled around the European Union. Sheman writes in the globalist that he hopes to learn from EU architect Jean Monnet,

"To him, the strategy was clear. ‘This proposal [for a coal and steel community] has an essential political objective: to make a breach in the ramparts of national sovereignty, which will be narrow enough to secure consent — but deep enough to open the way toward the unity that is essential to peace [and we might add, for our purposes in the Americas, for development].’"

Jerome Corsi writes regarding the Transatlantic Common Market between the United States and the European Union that economic integration is seen by globalists as a steppingstone to greater objectives. Corsi cites an article carried in the Streit Council journal in 2007 by World Bank economist Domenec Ruiz Devesa which states,

"As understood by Jean Monnet," he continued, "economic integration must and will lead to political integration, since an integrated market requires common institutions producing common rules to govern it."

The march to total integration continues.

Related Articles:

The "North American Consciousness" and "European Identity"

Globalist think tank strategizes on "North American Consciousness"

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  1. Bruno on January 17th, 2008

    wow another article bob clark hasnt spammed that makes 2 today

  2. terry on January 17th, 2008

    I can’t even get a comment to appear.

  3. LW Gadsden on January 17th, 2008

    Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars?

    That’s hilarious. I guess you don’t need to be smart to be a scholar. If he was such an intelligent guy how did he become the biggest tool in American history? The guy set in place the very system that started the whole mess in this country.

    The bankers and the Jeckyl Island boys used him as a tool to pull the biggest con game this country ever saw.

  4. Doug on January 18th, 2008

    When does an individual first learn to become Treasous?, Is it before of after that first big paycheck and the compliment about how bright he is and what a wonderful futher he’s going to have at the CFR?

  5. Faolan Devyn Aodfin on January 18th, 2008

    LW Gadsden, just because you’re smart doesn’t mean you can’t be used. Smart people like everyone else are conned and manipulated and that doesn’t always mean the manipulators are more intelligent. It just means that the manipulators are just smart enough to get what they want.

    Plus, ever think that that he may at that particular time have actually thought the Fed would be a good thing for America and did not realise the full effects of what he had done until well after the he had done it? Sometimes opinions change because we make mistakes and see where we went wrong — for one: I used to be what would be called by some a radical leftist, or a liberal and now I’m a libertarian with “moderate conservative” views (but appearently according the mainstream i’m still nuts so no, people change there).

    My point is that people get played, but that doesn’t make them idiots. Before you make the statement that someone is an idiot — even if you do not like them — you should consider the meaning of the word and whether or not they fit that description. The last thing you want to do is underestimate your opponets and using that kind of language, even if you do not mean it in a literal sense, creates a mental construct which will affect the way you think about that person or concept.

    To give an example: President Bush. Most people think he is an idiot. But is he really? He may not be the brightest bulb in the case but he does see to get everything he wants. He was able to con America into giving up their civil liberties, under his reign he has helpped reallocate funds from the lower and middle class to the upper strata, he has waged two failed wars and unpopular wars, he has signed into law at ever turn measures to track and surveil the public. He gets away with everything he does, and most people DO NOT CARE. People don’t care that practically no one approves of him, congress, the “justice” system, or even our own military. People are not caring about rapid inflation and offshoring. In fact the only people who really seem to care other than the Truthers are the people who were either directly or indirectly affacted. That number is growing, but it’s going to take a lot for us as a people to stand up to our government and say “NO!”.

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    Student Health Insurance

    Very interesting opinions … You’ve certainly made me think.

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