View Full Version : TPP passed (temporarily)
Fanna
5th October 2015, 14:56
fight this. It is not too late. Congress still has a say. Idk if that will help, but it is a possibility. So keep fighting. Call someone, let all your friends know.
Ny times (http://nytimes.com/2015/10/06/business/trans-pacific-partnership-trade-deal-is-reached.html)
Erich
6th October 2015, 00:18
Keep in mind when they say 40 percent of the world economy that is only based on the current system that depends on shipping junk back and forth, oil, and so on...when that structure evaporates the numbers change drastically. So, sign away fools. They are actually excluding themselves from a more productive system developing.
Michelle Marie
6th October 2015, 00:36
Keep in mind when they say 40 percent of the world economy that is only based on the current system that depends on shipping junk back and forth, oil, and so on...when that structure evaporates the numbers change drastically. So, sign away fools. They are actually excluding themselves from a more productive system developing.
Truly, the old systems are being replaced. Whether they know it or not, whether they believe it or not, or whether they like it or not. Everyone has a choice -- evolve or not.
Laws that support the minority are not sanctioned and don't fall into lockstep with Universal Laws and forces.
Truth outs. Balance happens. Empowerment happens!
Celebrate!
MM
cursichella1
7th October 2015, 05:12
The latest from Jon Rappoport on the TPP:
The TPP: a monster too big to fail?
by Jon Rappoport
October 6, 2015
"For every President, there comes a moment when he does what he has been put into office to do. All prior bets and decisions are off the table. They carry no freight. He knows this. He knows he has no excuses. He has no one to blame. He must win. He must succeed. If he fails, he falls. He falls hard. The electorate? His colleagues, friends, and advisors? His flock of adoring supporters? All dust in the wind. He must do this one thing. He must go as deep and as dark and as crazy as he has to, in order to pull off the crime he was sent in to commit." (The Underground, Jon Rappoport)
I have written extensively about the Trans-Pacific Partnership Treaty and its destructive effects.
Now that all 12 nations have agreed to the text, the US Congress must vote on it. Since the Congress has already granted Obama fast-track authority, no committees will discuss it; no filibustering is permitted; no changes can be made to the text.
Again I stress: Obama was put in the White House to make TPP and similar treaties come to fruition. Failure is not an option.
Obama's mentor on foreign policy, Zbigniew Brzezinski, is David Rockefeller's right-hand man. And David is Globalism personified.
The TPP elevates mega-corporations beyond even their present status: In a nutshell, any threats against international corporate piracy would be adjudicated in private corporate tribunals---so the outcome is completely predictable.
And as with all other Globalist trade treaties (NAFTA, CAFTA, GATT, etc.), more jobs in industrialized nations will move to countries where slave labor is standard operating procedure.
Obama was never about creating more jobs in America. He was and is about Globalism.
Otherwise, there was no way he could have advanced beyond the Illinois State Senate, in his artificial career.
The pressure on him now is enormous. With fiery bits of protest against the TPP springing up in the US Senate and House, with Trump and Bernie railing against the Treaty, Obama is counting his chickens (votes) every day.
His people are on the phones, holding private meetings with Representatives and Senators, coordinating their strategies with corporate lobbyists.
It's all hands on deck. Deals are being struck. Promises are being made. Markers are being called in.
"You want a bridge? You want a tunnel? You want your boy to get into Harvard? You want a new hooker? You want these juicy photos of you to remain hidden? You want the cocaine thing to go away forever? You want that house in the Bahamas?"
Whatever it takes. The TPP must pass.
You can bet the NSA is in on this one. They've been spying on Congressional members for years. Because those members might be terrorists? Are you kidding? Whatever NSA has on recalcitrant Representatives and Senators can now be used to twist their arms.
And members of Congress know that, if by some chance the TPP fails to pass, and they helped to defeat it, they'll be prime targets the next time Obama tries to ram it through. They'll be naked in the rain, alone, at the mercy of greater forces.
For Obama, for David Rockefeller, for Brzezinski, for the Trilateral Commission, the CFR, Bilderberger, and the presidents and premiers and prime ministers of the 12 TPP countries, this is The Big One.
Then...there is this little thing called the Internet. New torpedoes from independent news sites are hitting the TPP every day. It turns out that the world is not entirely asleep. What a revelation. In the old days, the TPP would have passed without a whisper or a whimper. But now...
And as the unemployment situation-disaster grows worse in a number of industrial nations---in large part owing to past Globalist trade treaties---it's become harder to sell the next great treaty that will further sink workers and economies. Unions are feeling the squeeze. How can they support the TPP when their millions of members see the looming horror show?
The primary lie about Globalism is obvious to anyone who has eyes. How can our august leaders pretend that shutting down domestic factories and businesses and sending all those jobs to distant nations is a good thing? How can these leaders tell us that the ability to buy cheap imports is a wonderful outcome, when millions of people here at home have been thrown out of work?
The Globalists are sitting at the table shoving in all their chips on a bet that is a transparent bluff---and the question is, who is going to call them on it?
Obama is aging rapidly in the Oval Office. He has been told many times, from above, that this, the TPP, is his moment. This is when he pays off his debt to those who put him in the Presidency. This is not a Ferguson moment or a Charleston moment or an immigration moment or a Common Core moment or a Syria moment or a gun-control moment. This is his moment to sell a supreme number-one lie. This is a test of his political skills and his allegiance to the forces of destruction.
This is it.
He is supposed to take off his mask behind the scenes and make his bones.
At that level, the TPP has nothing to do with he-said he-said or rational argument. It has to do with how far Obama will go to earn his position in the mob and avoid the consequences of failure.
The Globalist bosses intend to rule the planet. The TPP is their next big step. They're not in the business of promoting losers.
You can find this article and more at NoMoreFakeNews.com (http://www.nomorefakenews.com)
Jon Rappoport
t2016
7th October 2015, 07:24
I believe it is related to the change of Ring of Fire
Members of TPP: Brunei, Chile, New Zealand, Singapore, Australia, Canada, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, Peru, United States, Vietnam
TargeT
8th October 2015, 20:14
Yup... Government gone wild.... This seems to have taken our world governance from "Tip-Toe-Totalitarianism" to Leap Frog.... (read text from the TTP released early (accidentally?) in the link below)
TPP Also Locks In Broken Anti-Circumvention Rules That Destroy Your Freedoms
from the sad-to-see dept
We already wrote about how New Zealand has released some of the details about the finalized TPP agreement before the official text is released. The one we discussed is forcing participants into a "life plus 70 years" copyright term, even as the US had been exploring going back towards a life plus 50 regime like much of the rest of the world. That won't be possible any more.
Another issue revealed in the New Zealand announcement is that the TPP will similarly lock in an anti-circumvention clause. In the US, we have a really problematic anti-circumvention law in Section 1201 of the DMCA, which says it's against the law to circumvent "technological protection measures" even if for reasons that are perfectly legal and non-infringing. This has created a huge mess that threatens innovation in all sorts of problematic ways. It takes away our freedom to tinker with devices that we own. It also makes it illegal to do things that pretty much everyone agrees should be perfectly legal.
Earlier this year, some in Congress introduced a bill to fix Section 1201. However, that may not be possible after the TPP is agreed to. Again, the details matter, but here's what New Zealand has to say about this issue:
New Zealand has, however, agreed to extend its existing laws on technological protection measures (TPMs), which control access to digital content like music, TV programmes, films and software. Circumventing TPMs will be prohibited but exceptions will apply to ensure that people can still circumvent them where there is no copyright issue (for example, playing region-coded DVDs purchased from overseas) or where there is an existing copyright exception (for example, converting a book to braille).
So, yes, it appears there will be certain exceptions allowed, but again that gets the equation entirely backwards. At best, circumvention should be considered legal as the default, and the problem should only come in if the circumvention was done for the purpose of actual infringement. Starting from the position of "no circumvention" and then backdooring in "exceptions" massively hinders innovation by requiring permission before certain innovations are allowed.
Given how important this kind of innovation has been for the tech sector, it's disappointing in the extreme that the USTR has decided to lock this in and block all kinds of important innovations from moving forward. Once again, the USTR seems focused on protecting legacy industries while hamstringing innovative industries.
https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20151006/17213732458/tpp-also-locks-broken-anti-circumvention-rules-that-destroy-your-freedoms.shtml
Powered by vBulletin™ Version 4.1.1 Copyright © 2026 vBulletin Solutions, Inc. All rights reserved.