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Your trusted TOBB Steering Committee has officially launched its next mission, combining freedom-loving leaders from Canada, the USA, and Mexico. It's time to join forces to bring substantive changes to our three nation's most pressing issues. Our "We the People" nonpartisan campaign will declare independence and sovereignty. It's called the North America Alliance (NAA).
JUDEO-CHRISTIAN VALUES
The North America Alliance will restore God's rightful place at the core of political and cultural issues. Our countries were founded on recognizing the rule of Law and God's supremacy.
BORDER SECURITY
We will work together to ensure that "We The People" are involved in a transparent border security plan that respects human life and allows cities to preserve traditional values. Our current leaders have proven ineffective and excessively secretive in allowing more than ten million immigrants to enter our nation illegally. The people of our three nations will now come together to solve our immigration challenges.
The Declaration of North America (DNA) was announced on January 10, 2023, by the leaders of Mexico, the United States, and Canada, Presidents Andrés Manuel López Obrador, Joseph R. Biden, and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. This declaration represents a concerning example of high-minded rhetoric and platitudes without the backbone of practical constitutional policymaking based on laws in accordance with the Constitution. This agreement, penned during the 10th North American Leaders' Summit in Mexico City, epitomizes the pitfalls of progressive governance—focusing on lofty ideals while neglecting any semblance of Constitutional authority. Additionally, the immediate and practical needs of national security and independent economic stability of each State and sovereign governance are ignored.
Diversity, equity, and inclusion is foundational to the strength, vibrancy, and resilience of our countries. We focus on providing marginalized communities opportunities for their full, equal, and meaningful participation in our democracies and economies. To advance these objectives, President López Obrador, President Biden, and Prime Minister Trudeau reiterated their joint commitment to protect civil rights, promote racial justice, expand protections for LGBTQI+ individuals and deliver more equitable outcomes to all.
In partnership with Indigenous Peoples, we will promote innovative and sustainable solutions that honor traditional knowledge, foster Indigenous-led growth an,d drive job creation. We will continue our cooperation to build societies where Indigenous women and girls can live, learn, and lead without fear through the Trilateral Working Group on Violence Against Indigenous Women and Girls. Indigenous women from all three countries will convene in the coming weeks to facilitate discussions about priorities and best practices including in areas of political, economic, and social development. The three countries also reaffirm our commitment to gender equality and empowerment of women and girls, in all their diversity by aiming to improve financial and political support for women’s and girl’s rights.
The DNA's heavy emphasis on DEI seems more about following popular trends and “Woke” Culture than recognizing the true purpose of government; ensuring everyone’s individual right is protected. It is not an individual right to publicly exercise their homosexuality and impose this acceptance on others. It is a state constitutional statement that any “religious belief or practice does not excuse licentious behavior. Our country and our history have always been based on decency and moral behavior, not indecency and victimization of our youth. It is indicative of an agenda that prioritizes ideological platitudes over generally accepted social norms. The plan lacks clear methods to put these ideas into action effectively. Without detailed steps, there's a risk that important issues affecting disadvantaged groups are reduced to simple slogans, rather than being actively addressed and improved. Again, governments purpose is not to identify and what they believe to be a “disadvantaged group” and then create equality. This is a dangerous statement in support it this idea.
Mexico, the United States, and Canada recognize the critical nature of taking rapid and coordinated measures to tackle the climate crisis and respond to its consequences. This includes achieving our respective 2030 nationally determined contributions under the Paris Agreement, and working together and with other countries to keep a 1.5-degree C temperature limit within reach. To promote buy-in for ambitious cuts to emissions, we will come together to align approaches on estimating the social cost of greenhouse gas emissions.
We will continue to implement and build on commitments from the 2021 North American Leaders’ Summit on climate mitigation, adaptation, and resilience, while renewing our focus on reducing methane emissions from all sources, with a new focus on waste methane.
We will explore standards to develop hydrogen as a regional source of clean energy. We will move swiftly to accelerate the energy transition by deploying clean energy solutions, increasing the production and adoption of zero-emission vehicles in North America and transitioning to cleaner fuels. In partnership with Indigenous Peoples, we reiterate our pledge to protect biodiversity, to work toward ending deforestation, and doing our part to conserve 30 percent of the world’s land and waters by 2030.
The leaders' commitments to aggressive environmental and climate policies. Are destructive and taking away from rightful state control. (Again, if this isn’t an authority of the feds, but reserved to the states, why would we give them an out asking them to define what they want? This weakens the argument that they have no authority to do it in the first place.) The shift toward an unsustainable push for rapid emission reductions and other environmental measures threatens vital industries, particularly those dependent on fossil fuels
The commerce clause is clear, to “regulate commerce AMONG the several States. This is how we trade among ourselves to maintain fairness in commerce among us. Not what we produce or how we produce it. The narrative around sustainable development is manipulated to advance a green agenda that disregards economic realities. Also, the push towards electric cars doesn’t consider the millions who can’t afford them and the environmental damage from disposing of old batteries, and mining Cobalt and Lithium and the damage all this does to the environment. In total, this again is not an authority under an unconstitutional EPA the president or Congress. We the People will NOT convey any authority to the Government that they don’t have.
We seek to deepen our regional capacity to attract high-quality investment, spur innovation, and strengthen the resilience of our economies, recognizing the benefits brought by the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement. To boost regional competitiveness, the three countries will seek to forge stronger regional supply chains, as well as promote targeted investment, in key industries of the future such as semiconductors and electric vehicle batteries, which will be critical to adadvancinglectric vehicle development and infrastructure. We will convene public-private dialogues and map out supply chains to address common challenges and opportunities.
Critical minerals are an essential component in accelerating North America’s clean energy transition. Each country will review and map out existing and potential reserves of critical mineral resources in the region while taking care of the environment, respecting local communities, and adhering to high ethical standards.
To support innovation, job creation, and workforce development, the three governments commit to working with the private sector, civil society, labor, and academia across North America to foster high-tech entrepreneurship, promote small and medium-sized enterprises, and strengthen technical education. We will also consider trilateral approaches to promote sustainable, inclusive jobs and develop the workforce to meet our climate commitments.
The agreement encourages closer economic ties between countries. Good relations are a positive which we support. However, this removes state sovereign decision-making and forces compliance with dictates of external forces outside local sovereign control and authority. It exposes our economy to more risks from global shifts and pressures, removing local state authority bring in companies that want to be creative and, innovative. Free enterprise and free market are the foundations of our country. This move towards more dependency removes state economic strength and makes our supply chains more vulnerable to external unelected forces. Additionally, the plan seems to favor big corporations, possibly at the expense of smaller businesses and the general workforce.
Today marks the six-month anniversary of the Los Angeles Declaration on Migration and Protection, a bold new framework for regional responsibility-sharing that 21 leaders endorsed on the margins of the Ninth Summit of the Americas. The three countries of North America each made ambitious commitments under the Los Angeles Declaration, including working together to advance labor mobility in North America, particularly regarding regular pathways, and have been delivering on these commitments.
Since June, Mexico, the United States and Canada have collectively welcomed record numbers of migrants and refugees from the Western Hemisphere under new and expanded labor and humanitarian programs. Today, we affirm our joint commitment to safe, orderly, and humane migration under the Los Angeles Declaration and other relevant multilateral frameworks. This includes assisting host communities and promoting migrant and refugee integration; providing protection to refugees, asylum seekers, and vulnerable migrants; strengthening asylum capacity in the region; expanding and promoting regular pathways for migration and protection; addressing the root causes and impacts of irregular migration and forced displacement; and collaborating to counter xenophobia and discrimination against migrants and refugees.
Now more than ever, we need to identify and address the root causes of irregular migration and forced displacement. Mexico, the United States, and Canada commit to supporting countries across the Western Hemisphere to create the conditions to improve quality of life, especially in marginalized communities that are vulnerable to both forced internal and regional migration and displacement. To that end, we will continue to work together and with our respective private sectors to promote responsible business practices, implement obligations under the USMCA and international labor conventions, and cooperate to eradicate the use of forced and child labor in our supply chains.
The DNA's approach to migration is clearly NOT an authority of the federal government. Again, the States are sovereign and have the authority to decide who, when, and how many enter their borders. The only authority granted to the federal government was Article I, Section 8, Clause 4, to establish a standardized system of Naturalization; how to become a citizen. By failing to address the current crisis at the border, the agreement enables continued disregard for the rule of law, a lack of constitutional authority, and fosters conditions likely to exacerbate strains on local resources and adds to community tensions. Critical issues caused by the neglect by the states to secure their borders and by the current administration committing treason by assisting this invasion the past three years include the unchecked entry of millions into the U.S., including violent criminals and terrorists. As stated before, this is a direct cause of an increase in crime, dangerous levels of fentanyl and deaths related to it, and an increase of poverty.
Trilateral health cooperation will focus on launching an updated North American Plan for Animal and Pandemic Influenza (NAPAPI) to improve prevention, preparedness, agility, and to provide rapid response to health emergencies in North America. The North American Health Security Working Group will develop and launch a new, revised NAPAPI as a flexible, scalable, and cross-sectoral platform to strengthen regional prevention, preparedness and response to a broader range of health security threats that include influenza and beyond. As we emerge from the acute phase of the COVID-19 pandemic, we also recognize that resilient health systems, including a strong health workforce, are the foundation upon which effective pandemic preparedness and response will be built. We will continue efforts to build stronger and more resilient health systems that meet the broad range of health needs in our countries.
The proposal to enhance health system responses across three nations is overly ambitious and underprepared. There is considerable doubt about the capacity of these countries to execute such grand plans effectively, likely leaving the U.S. to shoulder disproportionate costs and responsibilities. What makes this all so wrong, is the fact that the federal government has no authority over the health and wellness of the States nor the citizens. This is a direct violation of authority and sovereignty of the people and the states. The initiative seems more like an attempt to showcase international cooperation for defining leadership on a power struggle.
Mexico, the United States, and Canada will focus on strategies to bolster our shared continental security against domestic, regional, and global threats, including cyber threats. Security cooperation will continue to abide by our common understanding that respect for human rights and the rule of law contribute to a more secure North America. Our security cooperation includes actions to disrupt criminal actors and associated crimes across our shared borders, including money laundering, child sexual exploitation, firearms and human trafficking. We also are taking a consistent approach to the collection, use, processing, retention, and protection of Passenger Name Record (PNR) data to strengthen our shared security perimeter and the safety of our citizens, including advocating for the global adoption of standards and recommended practices of the International Civil Aviation Organization on PNR data.
We will continue our North American Drug Dialogue and further advance our cooperative international efforts to address the growing global synthetic drug threat as the United States takes the chair in 2023. We will enhance trilateral work to address the use of precursor chemicals in the production of illegal substances in North America and to disrupt drug trafficking, as well as strengthen public health approaches to prevention, harm reduction, treatment, and recovery.
As both natural and human-induced hazards and disasters increase risks to vulnerable populations, we will continue to work together to share training and best practices to keep our people safe and address emergencies including natural and other disasters. Recognizing the differentiated impact disasters have on women and girls, we aim to integrate a gender perspective in these efforts.
While the DNA talks about enhancing regional security, it alarmingly overlooks the critical issues of human rights abuses by security forces, the effectiveness of cross-border law enforcement cooperation, and the protection of privacy against increased surveillance measures. This oversight suggests a superficial approach to security that could ultimately compromise both individual rights and collective safety. The federal government is responsible for “Foreign threats” and the states are independently responsible for interna security. No authority for federal spying on the citizens of the states or the State itself was nor would ever be granted. This is another clear example of overreach by the executive branch of government.
The commitments made during this summit are rooted in a shared vision for a more equitable, just, inclusive, resilient, secure, and prosperous North America and a shared responsibility to achieve more equitable outcomes responsive to the needs and aspirations of our citizens. As we work to implement these commitments in the upcoming year, we seek to model a democratic and sustainable path based on trust to promote inclusive prosperity and security. Mexico, the United States, and Canada look forward to building on this progress at the eleventh NALS (NALS XI), to be hosted by Canada.
The Declaration of North America is rooted in advancing Government’s Power and control over
We the People, and not in the Best Interest of the People.
Government is a creation of the people for our protection of our rights being victimized by each other. The term “People” in the constitutions is a defining word separating the citizen from government. They are two distinct and separate entities and “We the People” only defines we are separate from the government we created. The DNA inherently gives the Government unconstitutional powers and does not separate the People’s rights from Government Authority.
In all this, we ask that everyone know and understand what our United States Constitution, as well as what government can and can not do.
Only those debts and laws made “pursuant” to this constitution and “treaties made” shall be made pursuant to this Constitution. Meaning, only from authorities granted. If they make a law, or the president declares something, it isn’t law if the constitution doesn’t grant it. And the president has no executive power over the people or our industry. If the federal government isn’t granted an authority, or the states are not prohibited by the constitution, they are reserved to the states respectively, or THE PEOPLE. That is the 10th amendment.
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