August 29, 2006
NAFTA Superhighway: Highroad To National
Oblivion?
By
Patrick J. Buchanan
This is a "mind-boggling concept," exploded
Lou Dobbs. [Watch
him.] It must cause Americans to think our political
and academic elites have "gone utterly mad." What
had detonated the mild-mannered CNN anchor?
Robert Pastor, vice chair of the Council on Foreign
Relations Task Force on North America, had just appeared
before a panel of the Senate Committee on Foreign
Relations to call for erasing all U.S. borders and a
merger of the United States, Mexico and Canada in a
North American union stretching from Prudhoe Bay to
Guatemala.
Under the Pastor-CFR plan, the illegal alien invasion
would be solved by eliminating America’s borders and
legalizing the invasion. We would no longer defend the
Rio Grande.
"What we need to do," Pastor instructed,
"is forge a new North American Community. … Instead of
stopping North Americans on the borders, we ought to
provide them with a secure, biometric border pass that
would ease transit across the border like an E-Z pass
permits our cars to speed through tolls." [
A
North American Community Approach to Security,
June 9, 2005]
The Pastor-CFR project for "economic integration"
of Mexamerica is on the drawing board. North-south
highways and railways would be built to weld us together
as the American Union was welded together by the
Northern Pacific, Union Pacific and Southern Pacific,
and Ike’s Interstate Highway System.
Speaking in Madrid in 2002, Mexican President Vicente
Fox declared:
"Our long-range objective
is to establish with the United States … an ensemble of
connections and institutions similar to those created by
the European Union, with the goal of attending to future
themes as important as … the freedom of movement of
capital, goods, services and persons. The new framework
we wish to construct is inspired in the example of the
European Union." [Translation by Allan Wall:
Does Dubya Know About Fox’s Madrid Speech?,
Vdare.com, May 29, 2002]
Critical element of the Fox post-NAFTA agenda:
absolute freedom of movement for persons between Mexico
and the United States—a merger of the nations. Foreign
Secretary Luis Ernesto Debrez put it succinctly in April
2005. What Mexico is about is "complete integration"
of the two nations.
To appreciate what Fox, Debrez, Pastor and the CFR
wish America to merge with, consider a few excerpts from
the
State Department information sheet on Mexico.
While hundreds of thousands of illegal aliens marched
beneath Mexican flags in U.S. cities on May Day to
demand amnesty, Mexico’s constitution "prohibits
political activities by foreigners, and such actions may
result in detentions and deportations."
"
Crime
in Mexico continues at high levels, and it is often
violent, especially in Mexico City,
Tijuana, Ciudad Juarez, Nuevo Laredo (and)
Acapulco," State warns U.S. travelers. "Low
apprehension rates and conviction rates of criminals
contribute to the high crime rate."
"Women traveling alone are especially vulnerable.
… Victims … have been
raped, robbed of personal property or abducted and
then held while their credit cards are used at various
businesses and automatic teller machines. … Kidnapping,
including the kidnapping of non-Mexicans, continues at
alarming rates."
When Fox proposed his merger of America and Mexico in
a North American Union,
Robert Bartley, for 30 years
editorial page editor of the
Wall Street Journal, declared him a
"visionary" and
pledged solidarity: "He (Fox) can rest assured
that there is one voice north of the Rio Grande that
supports his vision … this newspaper."
The American people never supported NAFTA, and they
are angry over Bush’s failure to secure the border—but a
shotgun marriage between our two nations appears
prearranged. Central feature: a ten-lane, 400-yard-
wide
NAFTA superhighway from the Mexican port of Lazaro
Cardenas, up to and across the U.S. border, all the way
to Canada. Within the median strip dividing the north
and south car and truck lanes would be rail lines for
both passengers and freight traffic, and oil and gas
pipelines.
As author Jerome Corsi describes this Fox-Bush
autobahn, container ships from China would unload at
Lazaro Cardenas, a port named for the
Mexican president who
nationalized all U.S.
oil companies in 1938. From there, trucks with
Mexican drivers would run fast lines into the United
States, hauling their cargo to a U.S. customs inspection
terminal—in Kansas City, Mo. From there, the trucks
would fan out across America or roll on into Canada.
Similar superhighways from Mexico through the United
States into Canada are planned.
According to Corsi, construction of the Trans-Texas
Corridor, the first leg of the NAFTA superhighway, is to
begin next year.
The beneficiaries of this NAFTA superhighway project
would be the contractors who build it and the importers
and outlet stores for the
Chinese-manufactured goods that would come flooding
in. The losers would be U.S. longshoremen, truckers,
manufacturers and taxpayers.
The latter would pay the cost of building the highway
in Mexico and the United States, both in dollars and in
the
lost sovereignty of our once-independent American
republic.
Patrick J. Buchanan needs
no introduction to VDARE.COM
readers; his new book
State of Emergency: The Third World Invasion and
Conquest of America,
can be ordered from
Amazon.com.