And their government, which works for BushCo, not for their people,
 says "Come right in, we'll leave the light on!"
 
 The Plan to Disappear Canada
 'Deep integration' comes out of shadows.
 View full article and comments here
 http://thetyee.
 By Murray Dobbin
 Published: June 8, 2007
 
 TheTyee.ca
 
 If the machinations going on in this country regarding so-called "deep
 integration" were instead a communist conspiracy to take over the
 country (you will, of course, have to try hard to imagine this) the
 news media would be blaring the story.
 
 Pundits would pontificate, editorialists would erupt, security forces
 would be unleashed.
 
 Instead, a virtual conspiracy to make the country disappear through
 assimilation into the U.S. gets barely a mention.
 
 But news of the scheme -- formally called the Security and Prosperity
 Partnership of North America (SPP) -- is finally breaking out of the
 secret chambers of the ruling elite and the federal government. This
 is both good news and bad. It's good that ordinary citizens are
 finally getting a glimpse of the betrayal of their country. The news
 is bad because it reflects just how much of this scheme is already
 being implemented.
 
 Given the meetings of CEOs and politicians to advance the scheme
 politically, as well as all that must go into its actual
 implementation, there is simply too much activity to keep secret.
 
 Ten dots to connect
 
 Here are 10 developments in the plan to disappear Canada.
 
 1) Pesticides 'harmonized.
 even this did not go much beyond the CanWest chain) was the revelation
 that Canada was about to "harmonize" its regulations, setting limits
 for pesticide residue on fruits and vegetables. In 40 per cent of the
 cases, the U.S. allows for higher levels. Richard Aucoin, chief
 registrar of the Pest Management Regulatory Agency, which sets
 Canada's pesticide levels, said that Canada's
 higher levels were a "trade irritant."
 
 The downgrading of health protection had been a NAFTA initiative, but
 is being "fast-tracked" as part of the Security and Prosperity
 Partnership. This is just the tip of the iceberg. Some 300 regulatory
 regimes are currently going through the same process.
 
 2) Tory tirade.
 
 The next story that broke through the wall of media silence reported
 on the paranoid reaction of the Harper Conservatives to any criticism
 of the SPP. The occasion was hearings of the Commons International
 Trade Committee into the SPP, forced by the NDP.
 
 Gordon Laxer, head of Alberta's Parkland Institute, was testifying on
 the energy implications of the SPP, warning that eastern Canada could
 end up "freezing in the dark." He had barely started when the chair of
 the committee,Conservat
 his "irrelevant" testimony. The Committee members overruled Benoit --
 who promptly (and illegally) adjourned the meeting and stomped out.
 The NDP and Liberal members nonetheless continued without him.
 
 3) Council of corporate power.
 
 The SPP initiative began in earnest back in 2002 with the Canadian
 Council of Chief Executives (formerly the BCNI), the most powerful
 corporate body in the country. It continues it leadership role, but
 does not promote the scheme just in its own name. It instead has
 helped create several supportive bodies that now help drive the
 agenda. Included in these are the North American Competitive Council
 (NACC), which includes CEOs of the largest North American
 corporations, and which institutionalizes the exclusively corporate
 nature of the agreement. The NACC is the only advisory group to the
 three NAFTA/SPP governments.
 
 4) Secretive summit.
 
 The NACC at least is public. But much of what happens in building the
 elite consensus for deep integration is done in absolute secrecy or
 very privately, away from the prying eyes of the media. The most
 secretive of these was held last year from Sept. 12 to 14, in Banff
 Springs. As The Tyee reported, the gathering was sponsored by
 something called the North American Forum* and it was attended by some
 of the most powerful members of the North American ruling elite.
 
 Attendees, according to a leaked list that could not be confirmed,
 included Donald Rumsfeld, George Schultz (former U.S. Secretary of
 State), General Rick Hillier, Defence Minister Gordon O'Connor and
 Minister of Public Safety Stockwell Day. The media was not informed of
 the meeting and it was first revealed by the weekly Banff Crag &
 Canyon.
 
 Stockwell Day refused to even confirm he was there, but said that even
 if he was, it was a "private" meeting that he would not comment on.
 There is no better indication that these meetings, and the SPP itself,
 constitute a parallel governing structure -- unaccountable to any
 democratic institution or the public.
 
 5) 'No fly' coordination. Canada will have its own "no-fly" list just
 like our U.S. "partner."
 
 As the Council of Canadians pointed out: "The no-fly list is very much
 a Security and Prosperity Partnership initiative. 'The SPP Report to
 Leaders, August 2006' outlines 105 SPP initiatives. Initiative #93
 states, 'Develop, test, evaluate and implement a plan to establish
 comparable aviation passenger screening, and the screening of baggage
 and air cargo (for North America).'"
 
 Canada's privacy commissioner Jennifer Stoddart has raised a number of
 concerns about the plan including the fact that the list will be
 shared with the U.S., that "false positives" are a virtual certainty,
 and that there is no evidence put forward by the government that the
 list will improve airline security.
 
 6) Bye, bye Canadian dollar?
 
 David Dodge, the head of the Bank of Canada, told a Chicago audience
 that a single currency for North America "is possible." That would see
 a big chunk of Canadian sovereignty and the ability to guide the
 economy through monetary policy go out the window. It's not the first
 time Dodge has mused about abandoning the Canadian dollar - or deep
 integration.
 
 7) Water and oil giveaways.
 
 The deep integrationists clearly see Canadian water as a North
 American resource, not a Canadian resource. At yet another very
 private meeting, held in Calgary on April 27th under the auspices of
 yet another forum, it was made clear that water is on the table for
 negotiation.
 Discussion of bulk "water transfers" and diversions took place at a
 Calgary meeting of the North American Future 2025 Project (partly
 funded by the U.S. government). The meeting based its deliberations on
 the false notion that Canada has 20 per cent of the world's fresh
 water. Actual available supply amounts to only around six per cent --
 about the same as has the U.S.
 
 The water (and environment) meeting was preceded by another on April 26th
 talking about "North American" energy. The beneficiary of these discussions
 is pretty clear when you realize Canada has no national energy policy. We are
 the only energy exporting country in the world without a one.
 
 Gordon Laxer told the Parliamentary committee: "The National Energy
 Board wrote me on April 12: 'Unfortunately, the NEB has not undertaken any
 studies on security of supply.'" He was also told by the NEB that Canada does
 not maintain a 90 day energy reserve as other developed nations do. As Laxer
 points out, "Canada may be a net exporter, but it still imports 40 per cent of
 its oil -- 850,000 barrels per day -- to meet 90 per cent of Atlantic Canada's
 and Quebec's needs, and 40 per cent of Ontario's."
 
 Canada exports 63 per cent of its oil production and 56 per cent of its natural
 gas, percentages that can never decrease under NAFTA.
 
 8) NAFTA Superhighway.
 
 State governments in the U.S. are becoming increasingly alarmed at the
 prospects of deep integration. Earlier this year, Idaho became the
 first state to pass a legislative resolution directing the U.S.
 Congress to drop out of the SPP, which is referred to as the North
 American Union amongst U.S. opponents. Thirteen states in addition to
 Idaho are calling on Congress to abandon the SPP: Georgia, Arizona,
 Missouri, Illinois, Oregon, Montana, South Carolina, Oklahoma, Utah,
 South Dakota,  Tennessee, Washington and Virginia.
 
 Part of the opposition is focused on plans for a so-called NAFTA
 Superhighway: actually a corridor several hundred metres wide
 including rail lines, freeways and pipelines from Mexico to the
 Canadian border. There is a growing grass roots movement against the
 SPP in the U.S., but led by the right over the issue of compromising
 American sovereignty.
 
 9) Trade, Investment and Labour Mobility Agreement (TILMA).
 
 While U.S. states, concerned about state rights under an unaccountable
 "North American Union," are organizing against the scheme, Canadian
 provinces are either blithely unaware or knowingly complicit in the
 deal. More Canadians may be aware of TILMA -- the investors' rights
 agreement between B.C. and Albert -- than they are about the SPP, but
 in reality they are one and the same.
 
 TILMA is major piece of the deep integration, deregulation imperative
 and  fits hand in glove with the SPP. There is a similar, though more
 informal,  process evolving in the Atlantic provinces, called
 "Atlantica." And B.C. is now pushing the so-called Gateway Initiative,
 a kind of regional superhighway project that will see huge and
 environmentally disastrous
 expansion of ports, highways and pipelines to further supply the
 U.S.'s insatiable demand for resources and cheap Asian goods.
 
 10) The next SPP summit.
 
 The third leaders summit on the SPP will take place this August
 21-22nd in Montebello, Quebec, not far from Ottawa. By the time it
 does many more Canadian will be aware of it. Part of the reason that
 news of the SPP/deep integration issue is finally seeing the light of
 day is that opposition is growing and groups fighting the SPP are
 having an impact. The Council of Canadians, the CLC and the Canadian
 Centre for Policy Alternatives held an SPP teach-in in Ottawa last
 month and many civil society groups are now taking deep integration to
 their members.
 
 Demonstrations are planned for the summit. The NDP continues to press
 the government on SPP secrecy and the Green Party's Elizabeth May has
 said deep integration will be a focus of the party's election
 platform. It is hard to think of any other issue in modern Canadian
 history, especially one that will literally determine whether the
 country survives or not, that has taken so long to get public
 attention. I first wrote about it September, 2002.
 
 By the time the SPP summit has come and gone and the fall political
 season begins, deep integration, the most treacherous plan for the
 country yet devised by Bay Street, will be increasingly exposed. And
 by the next election, we could see a repeat of the great "free trade"
 election of 1988. This time we have to win.
 *
 Correction note: At 12:20 p.m. on June 4, we corrected the name of the forum.
 Related Tyee stories:
 'For Our Own Good, Give Canada Away'
 The 'deep integrationists' plan one happy continent, but we must teach
 the little ones.
 Secret Summit on Shared 'Security'
 Why was North America's power elite invited to Banff?
 Trade Debate BC Libs Don't Want
 Talk of TILMA deal censored in the legislature. But not in The Tyee.
 Murray Dobbin writes his State of the Nation column twice monthly for The
 Tyee.
 
 
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