"America's trade policies are connected to our
broader economic, political, and security aims.
This intellectual integration may confound some
trade scholars, but it follows in the footsteps of
the architects of reconstruction after 1945."
Robert Zoellick
Robert Zoellick is a traitor within who has worked
under the American flag for the enemies of
America. To understand how he and the communist
conspirators have worked against the interests of
the United States, one must go back to the Reagan
Administration.
James Baker III was the Treasury Secretary during
the Reagan Administration. Robert Zoellick
was his protege. James Baker showed his true
colors when he became a co-chair to
Mikhail
Gorbachev's State of the World Forum which is
located at the Presidio in San Francisco.
The fact that a communist organization is located
at one of America's premier military posts (former
now) is highly symbolic and significant.
Further support
for the communist conspiracy working within the
Reagan administration comes from Charlotte Iserbyt
in her book, "The Deliberate
Dumbing Down of America [1]
“The Effective Eighties”
saw President Ronald Reagan,
who had accused the Soviet
Union of being an “Evil
Empire,” signing education
agreements with the Soviet
Union—agreements which are
still in effect—and setting up
a Task Force on Private Sector
Initiatives in the White House
which, in effect, started the
ball rolling for
public-private partnerships
(corporate fascism) which are
at the heart of the Carnegie
Corporation/Marc Tucker/New
American School Development
Corporation’s school-to-work
agenda. It is ironic that the
U.S. Department of Education,
under the stewardship of a
Republican administration,
effectively transformed the
essential character of the
nation’s public schools from
“teaching”—the most
traditional and conservative
role of schools—to “workforce
training”— perceived as
liberal and “progressive.”
On
January 1, 2000, the Council on Foreign Relations
posted an article written by Zoellick, "Campaign
2000: A Republican Foreign Policy". The
date posted was not an accident. When one
studies these psychopaths, one sees a pattern of
using special dates and symbols. Was it prescient
of Margaret Thatcher to warn of 'expecting the
unexpected'? Not really - since
Zoellick was a signer of PNAC. She may not
have known the exact date of the next 'Pearl
Harbor', but she most certainly was aware there
would be one.
AN ERA OF CHANGE
At the opening of the twentieth century, the United States began a quest similar to today's. The rise of American power, revolutions in technology, and great clashes abroad set the stage for a historic transformation. Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson dominated the age, as they debated and labored to promote their visions of America's role in a new international system. In 2000, the world is again in an era of rapid change, reminiscent of a century ago. The vitality of America's private economy, the preeminence of its military power, and the appeal of the country's ideas are unparalleled. But as former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher cautioned her colleagues, we must "expect the unexpected." A primary task for the next president of the United States is to build public support for a strategy that will shape the world so as to protect and promote American interests and values for the next 50 years.
At the end of the Cold War, President George Bush built on Ronald Reagan's legacy by beginning to adapt American foreign policy to the challenges of changed circumstances. Recognizing the importance of economic ties, his administration negotiated the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), supported a free-trade agreement with Chile as a step toward free trade throughout the western hemisphere, and promoted the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) group to bind U.S. economic interests across the Pacific. The United States then employed these regional initiatives to bring the global trade talks of the Uruguay Round to the edge of conclusion. Those initiatives have created the most powerful movement toward free trade in history. |
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