Arizona State University leads the way on teaching on the borderless continent: How to be an a “North American”
Not enough Americans are asking “WHY” President Bush refuses to secure American borders in a war on terror.
Residents of planned union
to be ‘North Americanists’
Arizona State University teaches
how continent to be integrated
January 5, 2007
By Bob Unruh
© 2007 WorldNetDaily.com
Arizona State University is teaching that the U.S., Mexico and Canada need to be integrated into a unified superstate, where U.S. citizens of the future will be known as “North Americanists,” according to the taxpayer-funded “Building North America” program.
The program openly advocates for the integration of economic issues across the continent, and in many places goes further – such as the call for a common North American currency.
One teaching module made available online for professors to integrate into their teachings was written by George Haynal, senior fellow at the Norman Patterson School of International Affairs at Carleton University, and implied a joint military is required. Since the security of the continent “is a joint need; it should be supplied as a common enterprise.”
“Given the nature of the threats against our security in the current environment, the first task is to reinvent ‘borders.’ We must exercise the responsibility for protecting our society against external threats where we can do so most effectively, not where infrastructures happens to be in place,” he added. “Multilateral cooperation is going to be essential among governments.”
“It is clear, to me at least, that we must … move beyond NAFTA and do so with a purposeful determination,” he wrote.
Another teaching paper advocates the adoption of a unified North American currency, the “amero,” modeled after the euro currency of the European Union.
The programming the university is providing for help in teaching the new North American focus is just the latest evidence of the mounting campaign for a de facto North American Union. Although most in the establishment press are not covering the controversy, it has earned the opposition of a number of high-level voices including congressmen like Tom Tancredo, Virgil Goode and Ron Paul, and newsmen like CNN’s Lou Dobbs who has described the U.S. government’s actions in this effort as “Orwellian.”
The rest here.
More? Try this:
The ultimate goal of any White House policy ought to be a North American economic and political alliance similar in scope and ambition to the European Union,” opined an Atlanta Journal-Constitution editorial on September 7, 2001. “Unlike the varied landscapes and cultures of European Union members, the United States, Canada and Mexico already share a great deal in common, and language is not as great a barrier. President Bush, for example, is quite comfortable with the blended Mexican-Anglo culture forged in the border states of Texas, California and Arizona.”
La Times editorial on ‘Why not open the borders” here
D.A.’s June 2006 AJC column here.