HIGHLY POTENT NEWS THAT MIGHT CHANGE YOUR VIEWS

economy

MUST SEE — The Truth About War With Syria

Stefan Molyneux
August 30, 2013

Stefan Molyneux discusses the principals of war, how they apply to the current Syrian crisis and the blatant hypocrisy of the United States government.

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VIDEO — Syrian TurmOil: War panic sends black gold prices to 2-year high

RT
August 28, 2013

Washington and London’s push for military intervention has taken its toll on the financial world. The threats have spurred oil and gold prices – while investors have rushed to pull their money from stock markets. RT’s Katie Pilbeam looks at how the rhetoric has affected the world economy. READ MORE: http://on.rt.com/9df190

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U.S. Economic Hegemony: Consolidation and Deepening of the Pacific Alliance Trade Bloc

Be Your Own Leader
August 22, 2013

By Dana Gabriel

In a short period of time, the Pacific Alliance has emerged as one of the leading economic integration projects in Latin America. It aims to succeed where others have failed by creating a gateway to Asian markets and building a Pacific-rim trade deal. The U.S. and Canada are both pursuing deeper ties with the group and have been granted observer status. This is part of efforts to revive and expand their presence in Latin America. In some areas of integration, the Pacific Alliance has surpassed NAFTA. By merging the two together, it could be used to fill the void left by the collapse of the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA).

The Pacific Alliance was officially launched by Chile, Colombia, Mexico and Peru in June 2012. Its objectives include to construct, “an area of profound market-driven economic integration that will contribute to the free movement of goods, services, capital and persons.” The group also seeks to, “become a platform for economic and commercial integration as well as political coordination with global outreach, particularly towards the Asia Pacific.” A key requirement in joining the Pacific Alliance is to have free trade agreements with all existing member states. Costa Rica recently received approval to become a permanent member. Other countries have also shown interest with a growing number requesting observers status. The goal of the Pacific Alliance is to go beyond traditional free trade deals and pursue even more liberalized economic policies.

The May 23, 2013 Pacific Alliance Summit in Cali, Colombia marked the next steps in the consolidation and deepening of the Latin American trade bloc. The presidents of the four founding member countries agreed to remove tariffs on 90 percent of the goods traded between them and to gradually eliminate duties on the remaining 10 percent. They also adopted measures to begin visa-free travel between member states and moved closer towards full labor mobility. In addition, the leaders announced the creation of a cooperation fund and ratified agreements to open up joint embassies and trade offices in Asia and Africa. They also pledged to continue to deepen regional financial integration. The stock markets of Chile, Peru and Colombia have already been merged together and Mexico is expected to join them within the next year. While other Latin American countries are seeking to curb U.S. influence, Pacific Alliance members have shown a willingness to maintain and increase ties with Washington.

Just days after the Pacific Alliance Summit, Vice President Joe Biden met with Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos where he praised the progress the economic bloc has made and also expressed interest in the U.S. joining as an observer country. On July 19, the Department of State announced U.S. participation as an observer in the group. While full membership may be far off, the U.S. is expanding cooperation with Alliance members. Over the years, there has been a steady erosion of U.S.-Latin American relations. Some analysts have pointed out that that both the U.S. and Canada’s grip on Latin America is loosening. This ties in with an article from Global Research which noted that the Obama administration is stepping up its strategy of regime change against the left-of-center governments in the region. The U.S. could use the Pacific Alliance as a means to recover political and economic influence in Latin America.

When Prime Minister Stephen Harper attended the Pacific Alliance Summit in May, it was expected that he would request full membership. Canada already achieved observer status back in November 2012. While Harper acknowledged their accomplishments, he said that it was too soon to decide whether Canada should join the trade bloc. During his trip, Harper also took the opportunity to meet with mining company executives. The Conservative government has been criticized for not putting enough emphasis on corporate accountability with regards Canadian mining operations in the region. Maude Barlow explained that, “The Pacific Alliance, like Canada’s existing trade and investment deals in Latin America, puts the profits of those companies above anything else. The deals, like the Alliance, have nothing to say about the environmental and human rights impact of mining in the region.” The Pacific Alliance appears to be another attempt to accelerate the privatization of natural resources. It goes against the efforts of some Latin American countries that have joined together to fight the growing problem of investor-state privileges found in NAFTA-style trade agreements. These rules allow foreign corporations to sue for any potential profit losses related to government policies.

A recent article by Eric Farnsworth advocated linking NAFTA with the Pacific Alliance. He recommended that the leaders from both trade groups, “should consider meeting to forge a pragmatic economic agenda for cooperation. This offers an important opportunity to kick-start a common agenda with willing partners that has languished since the FTAA.” Farnsworth also described how, “building out a NAFTA-Pacific Alliance economic relationship would improve the collective regional approach toward the Asia-Pacific region, which currently includes precisely the same Western Hemisphere nations within APEC and the Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP) negotiations except Colombia. It would also offer a means to improve market efficiencies and update NAFTA without the need to re-open or re-negotiate its provisions.” There is an overlap between the Pacific Alliance and the much larger TPP trade talks. Both initiatives seek to bridge the Americas with Asia and create Pacific-based trade blocs. With the possibility of TPP negotiations dragging on and the difficulty the deal might have getting ratified by the U.S. Senate, the Pacific Alliance could open new doors to trade with Asian countries sooner.

In Latin America, there is a growing divide over the future of continental political and economic integration. Some countries have banded together to resist U.S. imperialism and any attempts to destabilize the region. There is also a move to end the destructive cycle of investment treaties and replace it with an alternative economic structure that better respects the sovereignty of nation states. The Pacific Alliance stands as a counterbalance to some of the other regional integration efforts that are trying to protect against the dangers of globalization. It is designed to signal a commitment to free trade and open markets to its neighbours and to the rest of the world. In many ways, the Pacific Alliance represents a resurgence of the failed U.S. initiated FTAA which was part of an agenda to consolidate corporate control.

Related articles by Dana Gabriel:
Using the TPP to Renegotiate and Expand NAFTA
Canada and Mexico to Join U.S. in NAFTA of the Pacific
Building Blocks Towards an Asia-Pacific Union
Beyond NAFTA: Shaping the Future of North American Integration

Dana Gabriel is an activist and independent researcher. He writes about trade, globalization, sovereignty, security, as well as other issues. Contact: beyourownleader@hotmail.com Visit his blog at Be Your Own Leader


New Health Minister To further Promote Agenda 21 Implementation

by Terry Wilson
Canadian Awareness Network

August 19, 2013

Nearly one year ago I wrote about sustainable development being repackaged as a health issue.

Health Canada And Agenda 21
“At a recent United Nations event that we covered at the McMaster Innovation Park in Hamilton, the panel was discussing how climate change and environmental issues had to be repackaged as health issues. “Quote” because they effect human health. Climate change has gone from a environmental issue, to a poverty issue, and now it is a health issue. All within a year.

Since that event I have been looking into the health industry in Canada, to see if they are implementing policies that back this new re branding and this is what I have found.

Health Canada our main federal health institution has implemented a sustainable development strategy. Which reads exactly like any other sustainable development protocol. With goals that include:

Theme 1: Addressing Climate Change and Air Quality
Theme 2: Maintaining Water Quality and Availability
Theme 3: Protecting Nature
Theme 4: Shrinking the Environmental Footprint – Beginning with Government”

They even use an almost exact duplicate of a graph that the United Nations uses to promote agenda 21.

Continue Reading

Now the new health minister is showing how she plans to move that agenda forward.

New health minister says public health care must innovate to be sustainable

The best way to maintain and strengthen Canada’s medicare system is to invest in innovation and research, Canada’s new health minister says.

“Our policy challenge – one which I plan to lead in my tenure as health minister – [is] improving our system in a way that will maintain the integrity of our publicly-funded system but capture productivity gains so our system is sustainable,” Rona Ambrose told delegates to the Canadian Medical Association annual meeting in Calgary on Monday.

“Innovation is very important when it comes to the long-term sustainability of our health care system.”

Ms. Ambrose, in her first speech since being appointed to the health portfolio, described herself as a “policy wonk” who has immersed herself in the issue of health innovation.

She was vague, however, on what sort of innovation she wanted to promote, other than pointing to the importance of technology, “improving the efficiency of the health delivery system and incentives for more cost-effective health care interventions.”

The minister described the federal government as the “largest single investor in Canadian health innovation,” notably with $1-billion in annual funding for the Canadian Institutes for Health Research.

Ms. Ambrose also stressed that innovation is an area “worthy of federal leadership and an area where I believe we can make gains together. “The consequences of not acting are staggering.” She said details will be worked out in discussions with the provinces and territories.
Continue Reading

New face, same agenda. Can we really be surprised?


Is The Ontario Government Using Slave Labour?

by Terry Wilson
Canadian Awareness Network
August 15, 2013

When the topic of forced labour or slave labour is discussed, countries like China and other similar totalitarian regimes are what most people invision. We definitely do not think of Ontario or anywhere in Canada. But is that a misconception?

In my short stay at the Central East Corrections Center in Lindsay Ontario, I made sure to observe how the state operates when it is given full control. I saw many many things that made my stomach turn, but none as much the prison work programs.

Inmates in the general prison population where given the chance to do work in the kitchen, doing laundry, and doing grounds keeping. The inmates in protective custody could work in a factory.

While working for the outside grounds keeping I noticed a sign on the factory that said Trilcor. So I asked around about what that was and what they do in the factory. I was told that they make license plates and do sewing. Here is what the ministry of community safety and corrections states about Trilcor:

Trilcor Industries was established in 1991.

The Trilcor name comes from the words “trillium”, Ontario’s provincial flower, and “corrections”.

By providing inmates with the opportunity to work at meaningful jobs, the program provides cost effective, rehabilitative work experience for offenders. In the process, they learn valuable skills that will serve them well upon release. A regular work schedule teaches offenders accountability, responsibility and teamwork.

Trilcor’s products are marketed to government organizations at the federal, provincial and municipal levels, as well as school boards and not-for-profit organizations. Ontario’s correctional facilities also use a number of Trilcor’s products. This provides the Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services with direct cost savings.

You can see all of the products they make HERE.

I will use the license plates that the inmates produce to illustrate what bothered me so much about it. The inmates working to make the plates are payed one chocolate bar a week. A chocolate bar for 35-40 hours of work. Now the inmates are not forced to work. They do have a choice, so it cannot be compared to forced labour in a physical sense. But being in jail is so mind numbingly boring that the ability to do anything seems like it was sent from heaven. Many inmates work to save themselves mentally.

Being payed a chocolate bar a week to produce license plates that the government charges $85 for others to buy. In my opinion is slave labour. What do you think?


Main Stream Media Using Paywall/Metering System’s A Victory For Alternative Outlets Or The Beginning Of the Internet 2?

by Terry Wilson
Canadian Awareness Network

August 13, 2013

Nearly one year ago, we noticed that the Hamilton Spectator had begun charging a monthly fee to access their online content. Offering the ability to view six online news articles a month for free with the option to subscribe to their publication to view more. The Waterloo Region Record, Globe and Mail and National Post have also implemented the same “paywall” systems to their websites.

The parent corporations, Torstar and Postmedia have also shut down YourMississaugaBiz and YourHamiltonBiz. Both those websites where short lived “paywalled” small business news websites. Bob Hepburn, a spokesman for Torstar stated: “It’s a business decision based on the economic conditions,” Source

As of today Canada’s largest main stream propaganda outlet, the Toronto Star has begun the “paywalled” or metered access system to their website. “This marks a major transition for the Star that will help us provide, in print and online, the best and most comprehensive package of news and information in Canada,” Star publisher John Cruickshank wrote in a brief article in the paper.

The first month of digital access costs 99 cents, then $9.99 a month plus HST after that, but will be free for home subscribers who meet certain conditions. Source

I do enjoy the spin that John Cruickshank is pushing as the reason for this change, but let’s face the facts. In the era of independent and alternative online news, offering information for free. The main stream is economically failing. The CBC, Sun news, and scores of other main stream propaganda outlets are barely keeping a float. Mostly relying on government subsidies to survive.

Are these new fee’s are nothing more than the three corporations who own all main stream media in Canada Source, attempting to maintain their monopoly because of the huge rise of independent news outlets?

Our could it be a step into the direction of the “internet 2″ system. Which you can learn about in the below video.

At this point it is to early to say if this is a move towards independent media replacing the propaganda centers, or a move to more corporate control. But one thing is for sure. We will remain as vigilant as ever to bring you all of the developing information.


VIDEO — Forest Gardening Explained Part Two – Jo Homan

108morris108
August 2, 2013

This is a new field and not all the answers are known
See part one for a good introduction: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gypurU…
http://ediblelandscapeslondon.org.uk