Tuesday, August 01, 2006

touring....

U.S. Sen. joseph Lieberman continued his Tomorrow Tour through eastern Connecticut Tuesday, with stops in East Lyme, New London, Montville, Colchester and Norwich. The afternoon schedule includes stops at EB, Killingly, Willimantic and Plainfield. Thus far, the senator has been received well on the campaign trail,. But in an interview on the bus, Lieberman conceded this will be a difficult primary battle next Tuesday, with the outcome decided mostly by the number of voters going to the polls. He is hoping those who want to "vote for something" will turn out, brining the numbers higher - rather than allowing the choice for a Democratic nominee to be decided solely by those who only want to vote "against something."

2 Comments:

Blogger Connecticut Patriot said...

I recently attended a MoveOn.Org meeting at a home in Mansfield which included 15 people. My views on the wars in Irag and Iran, and on illegal aliens was quite the opposite of 13 of those attending. While our views ranged from one end of the spectrum to the other, with no middle ground, what we did have in common was that we were all united against Lieberman and his anti-American voting record. It is not that we are voting "against something", but, that we are voting against Lieberman.

7:30 AM  
Blogger Connecticut Patriot said...

I realize that the primary is major news in this state, and that the article I will post by Phyllis Schlafly does relate to the primary, it does matter because Lieberman is a member of the Council of Foreign Relations which is pushing for the Security and Prosperity Plan for America, Mexico, and Canada. Please read the article by Phyllis Schlafly and give me your thoughts on it. To me, it explains why Bush will not secure our border despite 9/11 happening almost 5 years ago now. Remember, 9/11 was brought to us by illegal aliens.

Immigration
Bush Adminstration Pursuing Globalist Agenda
by Phyllis Schlafly
Posted Jul 31, 2006
Related Stories
Minuteman Civil Defense Corps Responds to Washington Times
'Minutemen': Taking on America's Elite, Illegal Immigration Problem
Is There Another Country With an Illegal Immigration Problem?
The Reconquista Movement: Mexico's Plan for the American Southwest

The hottest issue at the grass roots is illegal immigration and what our government is not doing to stop it. The question most frequently heard is, "Why doesn't the Bush administration get it?"
Maybe the Bush administration doesn't want to stop the invasion of illegal immigrants and plans to solve the problem by just declaring them all legal through amnesty and guest-worker proposals. Maybe the Bush administration is pursuing a globalist agenda. Consider this chronology.
On March 23, 2005, President Bush met at his ranch in Crawford, Texas, with Vicente Fox of Mexico and Paul Martin of Canada in what they called a summit. The three heads of state then drove to Baylor University in Waco, Texas, where they issued a press release announcing their signing of an agreement to form the Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America.
On May 17, 2005, the Council on Foreign Relations issued a 59-page document outlining a five-year plan for the "establishment by 2010 of a North American economic and security community" with a common "outer security perimeter" to achieve "the freer flow of people within North America."
This document is full of language spelling out an "integrated" strategy to achieve an "open border for the movement of goods and people" within which "trade, capital, and people flow freely." The document calls for "a seamless North American market," allowing Mexican trucks "unlimited access," "totalization" (the code word for putting illegal immigrants into the U.S. Social Security system), massive U.S. foreign aid, and even "a permanent tribunal for North American dispute resolution."
Tying this document into the Bush-Fox-Martin March 23 Summit, the Council of Foreign Relations stated that the three men on that day "committed their governments" to the North American community goal, and assigned "working groups" to fill in the details.
On June 9, 2005, Senate Foreign Relations Chairman Richard Lugar, R-Ind., held a friendly committee hearing that featured task force member Robert Pastor, a professor at American University and author of the 2001 book "Toward a North American Community" (Institute for International Economics, $28). He revealed further details of the plan for a "continental perimeter," including "an integrated continental plan for transportation and infrastructure that includes new North American highways and high-speed rail corridors."
Pastor asserted that President Bush endorsed North American integration in the Guanajuato Proposal of February 16, 2001, in which Bush and Fox promised that "we will strive to consolidate a North American economic community." Bush followed up on April 22, 2001, by signing the Declaration of Quebec City in which he made a "commitment to hemispheric integration."
On June 27, 2005, Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff attended a North American Security and Prosperity Partnership meeting in Ottawa at which he said, "We want to facilitate the flow of traffic across our borders." The White House issued a press release endorsing the Ottawa report and calling the meeting "an important first step in achieving the goals of the Security and Prosperity Partnership."
In July 2005, the White House let it be known that it is backing a coalition called Americans for Border and Economic Security organized by former Republican National Committee Chairman Ed Gillespie. Its purpose is to conduct a political-style campaign to sell the American people on a guest-worker program wrapped in a few border-security promises and financed by coalition members who each put up $50,000 to $250,000.
On March 31 President Bush met at Cancun, Mexico, for a spring frolic with Fox and the new Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper. Their press release celebrated what they called the first anniversary of the partnership, and Bush demanded that Congress pass an immigration bill with a worker permit program.
On May 15 Bush made a nationally televised speech in which he enunciated the amazing non sequitur that we can't have border security unless we also have a "comprehensive" bill including legalization of illegal immigrants now in the United States and the admission of new so-called guest workers.
Thanks to the investigative work of Jerome R. Corsi, we have learned that the partnership's more than 20 working groups are already quietly operating in the North American Free Trade Agreement office in the U.S. Department of Commerce, which refuses to reveal the groups' members because, in the words of partnership spokeswoman Geri Word, the Bush administration does not want them "distracted by calls from the public."
Corsi discovered recently that the partnership issued a "Report to Leaders" on June 27, 2005, that shows the partnership's extensive interaction with government and business groups in the three countries.
On June 15, 2006, the partnership's North American Competitiveness Council, consisting of government officials and corporate chief executive officers from the three countries, met to "institutionalize the partnership and the North American Competitiveness Council, so that the work will continue through changes in administrations."
The Bush administration is using a series of press releases, without authority from Congress or the American people, to shift us into the North American Security and Prosperity Partnership with "a more open border for the movement of goods and people."

7:44 AM  

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