Leading
Conservatives Denounce Bush on 'North American Union'
CNSNews | August
21, 2007
By Nathan Burchfiel
Ottawa, Ontario (CNSNews.com)
- President Bush is meeting with other world leaders in Canada this
week to establish, in part, a "New World Order" that subverts
national sovereignty, according to some leading American
conservatives who have taken a hard stance against the president
over the Security and Prosperity Partnership (SPP).
President Bush is meeting in Quebec Monday and Tuesday with Canadian
Prime Minister Stephen Harper and Mexican President Felipe Calderon
to discuss the SPP, which the U.S. government's Web site describes
as a cooperative effort among Canada, the United States, and Mexico
to "increase security and enhance prosperity ... through greater
cooperation and information sharing."
Yet Howard Phillips, chairman of the Conservative Caucus, said at a
news conference in Ottawa Monday that Bush is trying to develop a
"New World Order" of centralized world government controlled by
super-national bureaucracies. Phillips said some of the
bureaucracies already exist, including the International Monetary
Fund, World Bank and United Nations.
"George Bush and his daddy [former President George H. W. Bush] have
both used the term 'New World Order.' It was used by Woodrow Wilson.
It was used by Adolf Hitler. It was used by a number of people, and
the New World Order relates to the desire of many people in the
world to submerge national sovereignties to international
institution." (See
Video)
Other conservatives who joined Phillips at the news conference
included author and columnist Jerome Corsi; John McManus, president
of the John Birch Society; Tom DeWeese, president of the American
Policy Center; and Bob Park, founder of Veterans for Secure Borders.
The SPP meetings (the fourth since 2005) have afforded little access
to the media and no access to the general public except for leaders
of some large corporations taking part in the concurrent North
American Competitiveness Council. The secrecy has led activists on
both sides of the political aisle to develop ideas about what might
be happening behind closed doors.
Responding to protests stated in Ottawa Sunday by leftist,
anti-government, anti-corporate activists, Phillips acknowledged a
difference of approach. But, he said, "if we're all firing in the
same direction, let's work together."
Conservative author Jerome Corsi criticized supporters of the SPP
for labeling opponents "conspiracy theorists." (See Video)
"We're the Internet black helicopter conspiracy theorists?" asked
Corsi. "What's going on over in Montebello behind closed doors? Is
that not the real conspiracy?"
"Only to call us names does not answer the arguments we're making,"
he said. "We're called names because those supporting the Security
and Prosperity Partnership wish to keep their secret agenda being
advanced in secret, and we've ruined the party by exposing it."
Most recently, U.S. Ambassador to Canada David Wilkins called the
opposition to the SPP "conspiracy theories." In an editorial in the
Ottawa Citizen Monday, Wilkins said that "while conspiracy theories
abound, you can take it to the bank that no one involved in these
discussions is interested in, or has ever proposed, a 'North
American Union,' a 'North American super highway' or a 'North
American currency.'"
Wilkins further wrote that "security with prosperity remains the
defining vision of the leaders' meeting" and that "each [nation]
will continue to protect its own interests, but it makes sense, as
friends and neighbors, to sit down together and see what we might
accomplish better together."
Phillips responded by noting that Wilkins was appointed by Bush and
represents an administration that "does not have a reputation for
straight talking or accuracy ... ." And it’s high time for the SPP
organizers to "tear down the wall of silence and let the people see
what you are scheming to do," he said.
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