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McCain
Supports North American Integration, League of Democracies
"Ours can be the first completely democratic hemisphere, where trade
is free across all borders, where the rule of law and the power of
free markets advance the security and prosperity of all."
Old-Thinker News | April 15, 2008
By Daniel Taylor

Republican
Presidential candidate John McCain has openly declared his
supportive stance on the Security and Prosperity Partnership in a
March 2008 speech to the Los Angeles World Affairs Council.
An article by Kat McConnell on
The Conservative Voice website comments on McCain's statements,
"McCain's World
Affairs speech must rightfully be considered his "coming out"
speech in which he unflinchingly revealed his true globalist
nature and his mission as a foot soldier in the New World
Order."
McCain's
March 2008 World Affairs Council
speech stated in part,
"With globalization, our
hemisphere has grown closer, more integrated, and more
interdependent. Latin America today is increasingly vital to the
fortunes of the United States. Americans north and south share a
common geography and a common destiny. The countries of Latin
America are the natural partners of the United States, and our
northern neighbor Canada.
Relations with our southern neighbors must be governed by mutual
respect, not by an imperial impulse or by anti-American
demagoguery. The promise of North, Central, and South American
life is too great for that. I believe the Americas can and must
be the model for a new twenty-first century relationship between
North and South. Ours can be the first completely democratic
hemisphere, where trade is free across all borders, where the
rule of law and the power of free markets advance the security
and prosperity of all."
John McCain's globalist stance
also came to light in a speech he gave to the Hoover Institution. A
transcript for this speech is
carried on the Council on
Foreign Relations website. Going further than just a more
"integrated" and "interdependent" North America, McCain stated in the May 2007 speech that
he desires a "...worldwide League of Democracies" that would form an
"...international order of peace based on freedom." The new league
would accompany the United Nations. He stated,
"This League of Democracies
would not supplant the United Nations or other international
organizations. It would complement them. But it would be the one
organization where the world's democracies could come together
to discuss problems and solutions on the basis of shared
principles and a common vision of the future. If I am elected
president, I will call a summit of the world's democracies in my
first year to seek the views of my democratic counterparts and
begin exploring the practical steps necessary to realize this
vision."
A McCain presidency will surely bring
more globalist policy and a further move towards North American
Integration and world governance. These policies are becoming
increasingly unpopular, however. Globalist think tanks
have
admitted that the United States remains the largest
obstacle to building a North American Community. Will a new president
succeed in selling these plans to America?
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