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Is the North American Union a Figment of the Imagination? John Perna The evidence of ongoing plans to build a North American Union is in plain sight, yet a pattern of ridicule is being used to create the appearance that there no such thing. Follow this link to the original source: "The amero conspiracy" There has never been a more brilliantly incoherent article written by a journalist than that penned recently by Drake Bennett for the Boston Globe on the small matter of the North American Union. In the article, Bennett does a fine job of laying out the evidence that, apart from the normal legislative process, internationalists are carefully building a system through which to merge the three nations of North America. After laying out this evidence very thoroughly and with great lucidity, Bennett tells readers that it amounts to nothing. You see, the NAU is only a myth, a manifestation of a "social anxiety" felt only by those who, feeling inferior in some way, have conflated their concerns about their place in the country with concern about the country over all.
(Article continues below) Really, that's what Bennett said. Translated from psycobabble into English, what he meant to say was: "All of you bumpkins out their worried about the NAU, it's all in your head. Now go spend some quality time on introspection and pay no attention to the man behind the curtain." The Boston Globe article is part of a pattern of ridicule that is being used to create the appearance that there is no such thing as the North American Union -- despite the evidence. The following video is another example. The video includes actual footage from a meeting that took place in the Province of Manitoba, Canada on Nov. 20, 2007. It also includes actual footage of George W. Bush ridiculing fears about the North American Union during a press conference at the Montebello SPP summit held earlier this fall. As a counterbalance to such doublespeak, see the following video of Ron Paul at the CNN-YouTube debate. A clearly condescending question about the North American Union and the Council on Foreign Relations was directed at Paul. To the chagrin of the CFR members on the stage, Ron Paul did not flinch, but did a fine job of explaining the threat posed by the internationalist efforts to merge the nations of North America.
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