Mexico's Fox Wants European Union Here
Tells Texas Audience He Wants Integration To Speed Up
The former president of Mexico told a Texas audience he envisions a European Union-like plan working well across North America, and he would like the "integration" process to speed up. The comments raised red flags for officials with Americans for Legal Immigration PAC, who wrote, "Does everyone understand now why they have let over 15 million illegal aliens enter and remain in the U.S.?"
Former Mexican President Vicente Fox spoke in San Antonio March 27, talking about trade, the drug war immigration reform and other issues. According to the San Antonio Express, Fox expressed the hope that Canada, the United States and Mexico would function like the European Union.
"It's an extremely successful model," said Fox. "My vision is to speed up the process of further integration." His address was before the Congressional Hispanic Leadership Institute's Future Leaders Conference. The report said Fox acknowledged the difficulty of establishing such a union in the Americas because of opposition, but he noted the ascent to the White House of President Barack Obama and his administration.
"Hope is back again," Fox said. He said the North American Free Trade Agreement, which already is in place, has been a "success," raising the annual per capita income in Mexico from $3,500 to $8,500. On other issues, Fox admitted his own nation's citizens are involved in drug use, but agreed with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's statement that blamed the "insatiable" drug consumption in the U.S. for the cartel violence throughout the region. He also said he hopes Obama will follow up on previous attempts to provide "comprehensive immigration reform," which has included plans to legalize the millions of illegal aliens in the U.S. already. On the Express forum page, readers were outraged.
"If this country ever becomes part of a union of nations with Mexico, I'm moving to Australia. For all of you who love Mexico and want to wave the Mexican flag in the faces of true Americans, you should just go back across the border and be with your fellow countrymen so that you can all love Mexico together on the OTHER side of the border from the USA," said one. "REMEMBER THE ALAMO!!!!!" shouted another. "We need to keep our independence from such garbage as this. Fox is probably in cahoots with Abomination wanting to set up a socialist regime. Comrade Fox....not in my life time."
Yet another was succinct: "This is a BAD idea!" On the ALIPAC site, commenters were of a similar mind. "His extremely successful model is falling apart because of the deteriorating economic conditions, where successful countries have to prop up the poorest members of the EU, just to save the value of the euro," wrote one.
The move under the administration of President George W. Bush to implement comprehensive immigration reform was stymied when Washington was flooded with e-mails and telephone calls from Americans opposed to the plan.
But as WND reported, former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger openly called for the Obama administration to manipulate the current financial crisis to create a "new world order." Kissinger's commentary in the International Herald Tribune made clear globalists intend to utilize the current financial meltdown.
"The economic world has been globalized," Kissinger proclaimed. "Its institutions have a global reach and have operated by maxims that assumed a self-regulating global market." Rather than focus on domestic politics, Kissinger said the solution involves creating global political institutions to better govern and regulate global economic markets and institutions. WND also reported when Obama, then president-elect, appointed to his economic transition team a known socialist activist who previously lobbied for the creation of a North American Parliamentary Union, a governing body to run Mexico, Canada and the U.S.
The individual was former Rep. David Bonior, who has been honored by socialists in America. Bonior was a longtime critic of NAFTA, a trilateral trade bloc created by the U.S., Canadian and Mexican governments. But he argued that as long as NAFTA was in effect, a joint parliament should be formed to oversee the agreement.
"How do we democratize this globalization argument (NAFTA)?" Bonior has stated. "One of the ideas we came up with was forming a North American Parliamentary Union. A North America Parliament, with Mexico, Canada and the United States, with people – probably first appointed, but eventually elected like they are in the European Parliament – so we can begin to raise these issues of human rights, civil rights and labor rights and immigration, which never get talked about here.
Source: WorldNetDaily
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