Listen to SPP briefing with Corsi, Farah
Special teleseminar looked inside North America summit

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Posted: September 1, 2007
1:00 a.m. Eastern



© 2007 WorldNetDaily.com



The leaders of the United States, Canada and Mexico conferred over the Security and Prosperity Partnership

Would you like to know what really happened at the secret meeting in Quebec during which President Bush and his Mexican and Canadian counterparts hammered out details aimed at further integrating the three North American nations?

Listen to a teleseminar session recorded Wednesday with best-selling author and WND reporter Jerome Corsi, who was on-scene in Quebec during the whole summit. The session was hosted by WND founder and Editor Joseph Farah.

Listen to teleseminar:
(please go to the source link below)


From the protests to the proposals to the portents for America, Corsi provides the inside scoop on this ongoing threat to the nation's sovereignty and independence.

Corsi, a Harvard Ph.D. and WND staff reporter, is the author of "The Late Great U.S.A: The Coming Merger with Mexico and Canada." Just weeks after its July 4 release, readers put the book – which exposes government plans to promote integration of the U.S., Mexico and Canada – on the New York Times best-seller list.

Corsi's previous books have included "Unfit for Command," which became a No. 1 New York Times best-seller and a decisive influence in the 2004 election.

In "The Late Great USA," Corsi shows how the Security and Prosperity Partnership, or SPP, an agreement signed in 2005 by President George W. Bush, Paul Martin of Canada and Vicente Fox of Mexico, is nothing less than a full-frontal assault on American sovereignty.

Says Corsi, "Bush's goal to create a North American Union – with no borders, a shared currency, and utterly no voice for average Americans in their own futures – is the real reason he won't enforce immigration laws."

During a press conference at the conclusion of last week's trilateral summit in Quebec, Bush was asked by Fox News if he would be willing to categorically deny that there is a plan to create a North American Union, or that there are plans to create NAFTA Superhighways.


"The Late Great USA," which was criticized by President Bush at the conclusion of the SPP summit in Quebec

But Bush sidestepped the question, and instead ridiculed those arguing that the European Union model of gradually integrating nations into a larger continental union is being used in North America.

He called it an old political scare tactic, to try to create a wild conspiracy and then demand that those who "are not engaged" prove that it isn't happening.

"I'm amused by the difference between what actually takes place in the meetings and what some are trying to say takes place," Bush responded. "It's quite comical, actually, when you realize the difference between reality and what some people are talking on TV about."

Harper joined in. There's not going to be any NAFTA Superhighway connecting the three nations, he said, and it's "not going to go interplanetary either," he said.

But ridicule, counters Corsi, is the "last resort of someone who is losing an argument." Such tactics, he adds, "underestimate the intelligence of people listening, and people realize that the argument wasn't answered."

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