It's now
leaking out that there was more going on than met the eye at the Security and
Prosperity Partnership (SPP) Summit in Montebello, Canada in August. The three
amigos, Bush, Harper and Calderon, finalized and released the "North American Plan for
Avian & Pandemic Influenza."
The "Plan" (that's what they call it, with a capital P) is to use the excuse
of a major flu epidemic to shift powers from U.S. legislatures to unelected,
unaccountable "North American" bureaucrats.
This idea was launched on September 14, 2005 when Bush announced the "International
Partnership on Avian and Pandemic Influenza." He was then speaking to
the United Nations General Assembly in New York.
We might have thought that idea had some merit because the Influenza
Partnership called for "transparency in reporting of influenza cases in humans
and in animals" and the "sharing of epidemiological data and samples." That's
very different from the SPP, where transparency has always been conspicuously
avoided like the plague.
This year's SPP summit in Canada morphed the Influenza Partnership into the
North American Plan. Now we discover that the Plan is not only about combating a
flu epidemic but is far-reaching in seeking control over U.S. citizens and
public policy during an epidemic.
The Plan repeatedly features the favorite Bush word "comprehensive"; it calls
for a "comprehensive, coordinated North American approach." The Plan would give
authority to international bureaucrats "beyond the health sector to include a
coordinated approach to critical infrastructure protection," including "border
and transportation issues."
The Plan is a wordy 44-page document, much of which sounds innocuous. It is
helpful to exchange information about disease and take precautions against
letting foreign diseases enter the United States.
However, self-government and sovereignty are at risk when control over these
matters is turned over to a newly created North American body headed by the
representative of another country. It's an additional problem when the entire
Plan is a spin-off of the Security and Prosperity Partnership, an arrangement
created in secret solely by White House press releases, without Congressional
approval or even oversight.
The 2007 Plan acknowledges that it is based not only on the Influenza
Partnership, but also on the guidelines, standards and rules of the World Health
Organization (WHO), the World Organization for Animal Health (OIE), the World
Trade Organization (WTO), and the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA).
The Plan sets up a "senior level Coordinating Body to facilitate the
effective planning and preparedness within North America for a possible outbreak
of avian and/or human pandemic influenza under the Security and Prosperity
Partnership (SPP)." The Plan identifies this SPP Coordinating Body as
"decision-makers."
The Plan then (ungrammatically) states: "The chair of the SPP Coordinating
Body will rotate between each national authority on a yearly basis." Thus, a
foreigner will be the "decision-maker" for Americans in two out of every three
years.
What powers will this foreign-headed Coordinating Body exercise? The Plan
suggests that these include "the use of antivirals and vaccines; ... social
distancing measures, including school closures and the prohibition of community
gatherings; ... isolation and quarantine."
Will this foreign-headed Coordinating Body respect the First Amendment "right
of the people peaceably to assemble"? Or will the rules of the Plan, SPP, WHO,
OIE, WTO, and NAFTA take precedence?
In evaluating the Plan, it is instructive to recall the Model
State Emergency Health Powers Act (EHPA), an anti-epidemic plan launched
by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) on October 23, 2001.
Designed to be passed by all state legislatures, the model bill was primarily
written by Lawrence O. Gostin, a former member of Hillary Clinton's discredited
Task Force on Health Care Reform, and was promoted by the Bush Administration
during its first year.
The proposed EHPA would have given each governor sole discretion to declare a
public health emergency and grant himself extraordinary powers. He would have
been able to restrict or prohibit firearms, seize private property and destroy
it in many circumstances, and impose price controls and rationing.
Governors would have been given the power to order people out of their homes
and into dangerous quarantines. Children could have been taken from their
parents and put into public quarantines.
Governors could even have demanded that physicians administer certain drugs
despite individuals' religious or other objections. EHPA was based on the
undemocratic concept that decision-making by authoritarian bosses and unelected
bureaucrats is the way to go in time of crisis.
EHPA roused a nationwide storm of protest because it was an unprecedented
assault on the constitutional rights of U.S. citizens, as well as on our
principles of limited government, and so it never passed anywhere in its
original text. Will similar totalitarian notions now bypass legislatures and be
forced upon us by SPP press releases?
Further reading:
North American
Union
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