Posted on 07/05/2006 5:21:34 AM PDT by conservativecorner
NASCO has altered the organizations website homepage, apparently in direct response to the North American Union series we have published here, including discussion of NASCO and NAFTA Super-Highways.
NASCO appears to be reacting from recent publicity deriving from our argument that NASCO actively supports the goals of their members, including the Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) and the Kansas City SmartPort. TxDOT plans to start the first segment of the Trans-Texas Corridor (TTC) as early as next year and the Kansas City SmartPort plans to house a Mexican customs operation within their Inland Port design. These are new infrastructure developments along the North American NAFTA Super-Corridor that NASCO as a trade organization was created to support.
A box has been inserted to the left of the NASCO map on the homepage, emphasizing the following:
This map is not a blueprint or plan of any kind. The Infrastructure depicted on this map is not drawn to scale. The highways shown EXIST today, and have been enlarged to highlight the NASCO Corridor focus area. The rail lines have been placed on the map to show NASCOs multimodal approach.
The subtitle on the home page still reads Secure Multi-Modal Transportation System, evidently referring to the automobile, truck, and railroad nature of the NASCO Super-Corridor described in the top title on the page. By so adding to the homepage, NASCO appears engaged in a public relations marketing effort to defuse concerns that the organization supports any new NAFTA Super-Highway development that would include TTC features.
This modification to the homepage echoes an email the author received from Tiffany Melvin, NASCOs Executive Director, on June 23, 2006, in which she wrote:
If the map were drawn to scale, it would be very difficult to see our focus area. The map is designed for marketing purposes, to highlight the highways we are focusing on. It is for our Coalition. Thats it.
An insert box has been placed on the homepage in the Atlantic Ocean area east of Massachusetts, reading NASCO Myths Debunked. We understand that our articles are among the myths intended to be debunked. The first line of text in the 4-page document linked to the debunked box reads: There is no new, proposed NAFTA Superhighway. The next paragraph seems to say the NAFTA Super-Highway already exists -- it is evidently the current I-35:
As of late, there has been much media attention given to the new, proposed NAFTA Superhighway. NASCO and the cities, counties, states and provinces along our existing Interstate Highways 35/29/94 (the NASCO Corridor) have been referring to I-35 as the NAFTA Superhighway for many years, as I-35 already carries a substantial amount of international trade with Mexico, the United States and Canada. There are no plans to build a new NAFTA Superhighwary -- it exists today as I-35.
The debunked text even wants to de-emphasize the Super in the NASCO Super Corridor name. As Ms. Melvin expressed in a June 22, 2006 email to the author:
We have been using the name SuperCorridor since 1996. It does not mean huge, mega highway. We use Super in the sense of more inclusive than a specialized category (dictionary definition). Like Superman was not a huge, giant four football field wide man. He was MORE than a man. We are MORE than a highway coalition. We work to promote the use of multiple modes of transportation. We work on economic development along the corridor. We work on environmental issues. We work on networking inland ports. We work on developing business relationships for our members.
Perhaps NASCO would be well advised to review the Trans-Texas Corridor website of its member TxDOT agency. There the 4,000 page Environmental Impact Study (EIS) clearly describes the 1,200 foot new Super-Highway that TxDOT plans to build parallel to I-35. Page 4 of the EIS Executive Summary shows an artists rendition of the full build-out of the TTC-35 concept, an automobile-truck-railroad corridor with a utility space for energy pipelines and electronic circuits, along with tower electricity strung out on the perimeter. No artists conception of the TTC drawn by the TxDOT bears any resemblance to the current I-35 in Texas or anywhere else.
This TTC-35 description belies NASCOs contention that the organization does not support the constructing any new Super-Highway infrastructure.
Perhaps NASCO wants to advance the argument that no state north of Texas will continue the TTC-35 project to connect through Oklahoma City with the Kansas City SmartPort, continuing north toward Duluth, or that TTC-35. As we have already shown, the investment bankers and international capitalists who are funding the development of TTC-35 can be expected to develop extend this NAFTA Super-Highway north, whether NASCO or the states north of Texas have the funds or current plans to do so.
From a public relations point of view, NASCOs emphasis that the NASCO Super-Corridor only involves existing highways, truck routes, and rail lines is a strategy consistent with a desire to stay below the radar of public awareness, so as to avoid criticism that might otherwise stop or impede NASCOs true mission -- to support the development of a NAFTA Super-Highway, either through enhancements to the existing north-south corridor along Interstate Highways 35/29/94 (the NASCO Corridor), or any Super-Highway enhancements its members initiate, including the TTC and the Mexican customs facility in the Kansas City SmartPort.
Today, there are some 5,000 miles of interstate highway in the U.S. and the TxDOT is proposing a full build-out of the TTC network that will build some 4,000 miles of TTC Super-Highways in Texas over the next 50 years. The TTC project at full development will involve the removal of as much as 584,000 acres of productive Texas farm and ranchland from the tax rolls permanently, while displacing upwards of 1 million people from their current residences. The 11 separate corridors planned will permanently cut across some 1,200 Texas roads, with cross-over unlikely for much of the nearly quarter-mile corridor planned to be built. Our research shows that dozens of small towns in Texas will be virtually obliterated in the bath of the advancing TTC behemoth. Reviewing statistics such as these, we can see why NASCO might prefer a low profile, preferring to stay below the radar of public scrutiny.
We also note that George Blackwood, NASCO President, attended the January 10-11 meeting in Louisville, Kentucky, held by the Council of the Americas and the North American Business Committee to conduct a Public/Private Sector Dialogue on the Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America. A key finding of this meeting was that associations in the U.S. organized to promote particular corridors needed since the dawning of SPP in Waco, Texas, on March 23, 2005, to coordinate their efforts in a less provincial style, more reflective of the North American regional orientation of SPP itself:
For instance, conversation at the Louisville forum raised the potential for commonalities and/or synergies between disparate transportation efforts in the US Midwest (the SuperCorridor initiative), the North American West (CANAMEX Corridor), and in the Southeast United States and Mexico (the Gulf of Mexico Trade Corridor initiative). Before SPP, there was no obvious mechanism through which to promote coordination of these discrete activities.
The Louisville SPP meeting also advised the establishment of bilateral or trilateral commissions to facilitate border and cross-border infrastructure.
While the NASCO debunking text is correct in asserting that NASCO is a trade organization, not a government organization, NASCO officers appear deeply involved in working with federal and state departments of transportation, local and state governments, and regulatory agencies in promoting the goal of developing a Super Corridor structure for integrating the U.S., Canada, and Mexico into a corridor-dimensioned transportation system to promote NAFTA trade. NASCO trade organization professionals evidently are much more comfortable working in professional SPP conferences and dealing with government bureaucrats in the closed confines of their offices than answering the questions that public citizens are openly discussing on the Internet.
The NASCO debunking text continually asserts that a primary NASCO concern is transportation security, much as SPP itself asserts that the North American Partnership is put in place to promote security and prosperity, two goals SPP could assume no one would object to pursuing. The idea seems to be that NASCO wants to present itself as only concerned about security and efficiency as the volume of traffic on the existing NASCO SuperCorriror of existing interstate highways gets expanded under NAFTA.
NASCOs debunking text asserts that the organizations mission is develop (NOT BUILD) the worlds first international, integrated and secure, multi-modal transportation system along the International Mid-Continent Trade and Transportation to improve both the trade competitiveness and quality of life in North America.
Given this, we have a challenge. Lets see NASCO come forward and repudiate the TTC-35 plans of their TxDOT member, because clearly the TTC-35 plan to build 4-football-field-lengths wide of NAFTA Super-Highway corridors is inconsistent with NASCOs goal as expressed in the debunking text of only using existing transportation infrastructure. We also challenge NASCO to come forward and repute the Mexican customs facility plans of its Kansas City SmartPort member. Otherwise, we will assert that NASCO is continuing to say one thing for public relations effect, while doing something quite different -- quietly supporting their members as the members build the new and improved NAFTA Super-Highway infrastructure along the NASCO Corridor.
Do subscribers at least get a free Scary Map?
Here we go again. Barry Goldwater 1964 speech.
http://www.americanrhetoric.com/speeches/barrygoldwater1964rnc.htm
I believe that we must look beyond the defense of freedom today to its extension tomorrow. I believe that the communism which boasts it will bury us will, instead, give way to the forces of freedom. And I can see in the distant and yet recognizable future the outlines of a world worthy of our dedication, our every risk, our every effort, our every sacrifice along the way. Yes, a world that will redeem the suffering of those who will be liberated from tyranny. I can see -- and I suggest that all thoughtful men must contemplate -- the flowering of an Atlantic civilization, the whole of Europe reunified and freed, trading openly across its borders, communicating openly across the world.
Now, this is a goal far, far more meaningful than a moon shot.
It's a -- It's a truly inspiring goal for all free men to set for themselves during the latter half of the twentieth century.
I can also see -- and all free men must thrill to -- the events of this Atlantic civilization joined by its great ocean highway to the United States. What a destiny! What a destiny can be ours to stand as a great central pillar linking Europe, the Americas, and the venerable and vital peoples and cultures of the Pacific. I can see a day when all the Americas, North and South, will be linked in a mighty system, a system in which the errors and misunderstandings of the past will be submerged one by one in a rising tide of prosperity and interdependence. We know that the misunderstandings of centuries are not to be wiped away in a day or wiped away in an hour. But we pledge, we pledge that human sympathy -- what our neighbors to the South call an attitude of "simpatico" -- no less than enlightened self'-interest will be our guide.
And I can see this Atlantic civilization galvanizing and guiding emergent nations everywhere.
The land of the ancient Hebrews, known as Palestine and Trans-Jordan, will be united as a demilitarized republic called Hebrewland.
Federal Highway Administration, National Priority Corridors
Corsi can't even get his numbers correct but spews false info. There are more than 5,000 miles of interstate roadways in the US. Hell Texas has over 3000 miles. I think it is over 40,000 nationwide.
[queue Invasion of the Body Snatchers theme music]
Shouldn't this have a "Jerome Corsi Alert"?
Interstate 10 is well over 2,000 miles, just by itself.
That's just one evil road.
Details!
I'm not sure if your selection is on-point, but even assuming that it is, that makes Goldwater the great-grandfather, Reagan the grandfather, and "stick-the-tail-on-the-donkey" the father.
And most of them have major traffic problems. But... saying "Hey, the interstate system has served us well but it's showing some age. Maybe it's time to revamp parts of it and plan for the next 50 years" makes you into an evil conspirator, not just a person with the most basic common sense and ability to look/plan ahead.
No, but I thought about "low life scum suckers willing to sell out this country to make a buck".
Where they serve kosher corndogs on a stick!
Wow! I thought you liked Corsi. Now he's a low life scum sucker, willing to sell out this country to make a buck, just because he's touting this nonsense to sell books?
So, road construction is really about profiteering? Or is it more about class warfare?
Are you suggesting Corsi is a free-trader? [chortle]
How dare you imply Corsi is selling his country out! He's just suckering paranoids. Sheesh.
Hebrewland must have the most awesome flume ride, with the parting of the sea and all.
But the rules of the park are set in stone.
*rotflol*
yer killin me here.
You can ride every ride for free, but only if you get an "Oy!" ticket.
I guess you wanted to sell the 2 Houston toll roads for profit. I'll bet Cintra tried to buy that "cash cow".
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