"free trade"GannonFan wrote:Since you're probably related to Hawley and/or Smoot, I know any talk of free trade and free trade agreements get's your ear's perked up. But really, "one world government" and "loss of freedom"? Even for you, that hyperbole is, well, hyperbolic. That's almose expansdos-worthy right there.kalm wrote:
If we want to talk one world government and loss of freedom stuff we really need to discuss Trans Pacific Partnership.
The one world government bit was satire aimed at the black helicopter - UN is taking over crowd.
But back to the TPP. I suppose you have no problem with a corporation suing the U.S. and states over domestic regulations that hurt their business and the case be decided in an international court? You probably have no issues with the Obama administration keeping the TPP negotiations secret? Why do you hate transparency, democracy, and sovereign rights?
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/01/1 ... 77495.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;Chomsky argues that much of the negotiations concern issues outside of what many consider trade, and are focused instead on limiting the activities governments can regulate, imposing new intellectual property standards abroad and boosting corporate political power.
“It’s called free trade, but that’s just a joke," Chomsky said. "These are extreme, highly protectionist measures designed to undermine freedom of trade. In fact, much of what's leaked about the TPP indicates that it's not about trade at all, it’s about investor rights.”
The Obama administration is treating the precise terms of the deal as classified information, blocking many Congressional staffers from viewing the negotiation texts and limiting the information available to members of Congress themselves. The deal's only publicly available negotiation documents have come to light through document leaks. Recent documents have been published by WikiLeaks and HuffPost.
According to these leaked documents, the TPP would empower corporations to directly challenge laws and regulations set by foreign nations before an international tribunal. The tribunal would be given the authority to not only overrule that nation's legal standards but also impose economic penalties on it. Under World Trade Organization treaties, corporations must convince a sovereign nation to bring trade cases before an international court. Chomsky said the deal is an escalation of neoliberal political goals previously advanced by the WTO and the North American Free Trade Agreement.
A marxist professor defending Alexander Hamilton's ideas.







