OBAMA SECRETLY SIGNING AWAY U.S. SOVEREIGNTY.
Shock plan regulates food, medicine, financial markers, Internet freedom
Posted on October 15, 2013 at 11:00 PM EST
Source kleinonline
By Aaron Klein
Despite
the government shutdown, the Obama administration has continued secret
negotiations to complete what is known as the Trans-Pacific Partnership,
or TPP.
The
expansive plan is a proposed free-trade agreement between the U.S.,
Australia, Brunei, Chile, Canada, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand,
Peru, Singapore and Vietnam.
The
agreement would create new guidelines for everything from food safety
to fracking, financial markets, medical prices, copyright rules and
Internet freedom.
The
TPP negotiations have been criticized by politicians and advocacy
groups alike for their secrecy. The few aspects of the partnership
leaked to the public indicate an expansive agenda with highly limited
congressional oversight.
A
New York Times opinion piece previously called the deal the “most
significant international commercial agreement since the creation of the
World Trade Organization in 1995.”
Last week, the White House website released a joint statement with
the other proposed TPP signatories affirming “our countries are on
track to complete the Trans-Pacific Partnership negotiations.”
“Ministers
and negotiators have made significant progress in recent months on all
the legal texts and annexes on access to our respective goods, services,
investment, financial services, government procurement, and temporary
entry markets,” the White House said.
The
statement did not divulge details of the partnership other than to
suggest a final TPP agreement “must reflect our common vision to
establish a comprehensive, next-generation model for addressing both new
and traditional trade and investment issues, supporting the creation
and retention of jobs and promoting economic development in our
countries.”
Secrecy
In
February, the Open the Government organization sent a letter to Obama
blasting the lack of transparency surrounding the TPP talks, stating the
negotiations have been “conducted in unprecedented secrecy.”
“Despite
the fact the deal may significantly affect the way we live our lives by
limiting our public protections, there has been no public access to
even the most fundamental draft agreement texts and other documents,”
read the letter.
The missive was signed by advocacy groups such as OpenTheGovernment.org, Project On Government Oversight, ARTICLE 19 and the Global Campaign for Freedom of Expression and Information.
The
groups warned issues being secretly negotiated include “patent and
copyright, land use, food and product standards, natural resources,
professional licensing, government procurement, financial practices,
healthcare, energy, telecommunications, and other service sector
regulations.”
Lack of oversight
Normally free -trade agreements must be authorized by a majority of the House and Senate, usually in lengthy proceedings.
However,
the White House is seeking what is known as “trade promotion authority”
which would fast track approval of the TPP by requiring Congress to
vote on the likely lengthy trade agreement within 90 days and without
any amendments.
The
authority also allows Obama to sign the agreement before Congress even
has a chance to vote on it, with lawmakers getting only a quick
post-facto vote.
A number of lawmakers have been speaking out about the secret TPP talks.
Sen.
Ron Wyden, D-Ore., recently proposed legislation requiring the White
House to disclose all TPP documents to members of Congress.
“The
majority of Congress is being kept in the dark as to the substance of
the TPP negotiations, while representatives of U.S. corporations – like
Halliburton, Chevron, PHRMA, Comcast, and the Motion Picture Association
of America – are being consulted and made privy to details of the
agreement,” said Wyden.
However, Obama has so far refused to give Congress a copy of the draft agreement.
Regulates food, Internet, medicine, commerce
The TPP is “more than just a trade deal,” wrote Lori Wallach and Ben Beachy of Public Citizen’s Global Trade Watch in a New York Times op-ed last June.
“Only 5 of its 29 chapters cover traditional trade matters, like tariffs or quotas.
The
others impose parameters on nontrade policies. Existing and future
American laws must be altered to conform with these terms, or trade
sanctions can be imposed against American exports.”
Wallach and Beachy spotlighted several leaks in the proposed TPP text, including one that would regulate the price of medicine.
“Pharmaceutical
companies, which are among those enjoying access to negotiators as
‘advisers,’ have long lobbied against government efforts to keep the
cost of medicines down. Under the agreement, these companies could
challenge such measures by claiming that they undermined their new
rights granted by the deal.”
Amnesty International USA warned draft
TPP provisions related to patents for pharmaceuticals “risk stifling
the development and production of generic medicines, by strengthening
and deepening monopoly protections.”
Another
leak revealed the TPP would grant more incentives to relocate domestic
manufacturing offshore, Wallach and Beachy related.
Jim Hightower, a progressive activist, wrote the TPP incorporates elements similar to the Stop Online Piracy Act.
Hightower wrote the
deal would “transform Internet service providers into a private, Big
Brother police force, empowered to monitor our ‘user activity,’
arbitrarily take down our content and cut off our access to the
Internet.”
Indeed,
Internet freedom advocacy groups have been protesting the TPP, taking
specific issue with leaked proposals that would enact strict
intellectual property restraints that would effectively change U.S.
copyright law.
The Electronic Frontier Foundation argued the
TPP would “restrict the ability of Congress to engage in domestic law
reform to meet the evolving IP needs of American citizens and the
innovative technology sector.”
In
a petition signed by over 30 Internet freedom organizations, the group
warned the TPP would “rewrite global rules on intellectual property
enforcement.”
With additional research by Brenda J. Elliott.
When
the defense of liberty becomes a crime, tyranny is already in force. At
that point, failure to defend liberty makes slavery a certainty.
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