WELCOME TO OPINIONS BASED ON FACTS (OBOF)
&
THINGS
YOU MAY HAVE MISSED (TYMHM)
YEAR ONE
YEAR TWO
YEAR THREE
YEAR FOUR
OBOF YEAR FOUR INDEX
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OBOF TYMHM PART 14-01
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Jan. 02, 2014
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OBOF TYMHM PART 14-02
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Jan. 09, 2014
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OBOF TYMHM PART 14-03
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Jan. 15, 2014
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OBOF TYMHM PART 14-04
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Jan. 24, 2014
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OBOF TYMHM PART 14-05
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JAN 30, 2014
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OBOF TYMHM PART 14-06
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Feb. 06, 2014
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OBOF TYMHM PART 14-06 EXTRA
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Feb. 09, 2014
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Agenda
1. Is the TPP dead? Have we won?
2. TPP opponents go after fence
setting lawmakers.
Is the TPP Dead? Have We Won?
Dennis Trainor, Jr.
Acronym TV / Video Interview
Published: Tuesday 4 February
It has been 20 years since NAFTA, (North American free
Trade agreement) went into effect with the promise of more equality, more jobs,
and a better, more prosperous and peaceful world for all of us.
Given that NAFTA has contributed to a world that is a
negative image of what was sold to us, it is no surprise that the global elite
and the Obama administration have been negotiating the Trans-Pacific
Partnership in secret.
While
the corporately controlled mainstream media ignore the implications
of the TPP story, independent media and activists have come together as
part of a growing movement of movements to organize, educate, and resist
the fast track authority so important to the
Obama administration.
Have we won? Is
the TPP dead?
"The
social movement opposed to the TPP has done an excellent job stopping the
current version of fast track introduced by Sen. Max Baucus"
notes Kevin Zeese an organizer with Flush the TPP and Popular Resistance, but be cautions:
"This week Baucus will be confirmed as the new US ambassador to China and Sen. Ron Wyden will take
his place. This creates a new risk.
Sen. Wyden is a believer in corporate trade agreements. His constituents call him a “Free Traitor.”
He has said he did not support the Baucus bill, but we understand he may
be working on a ‘new and improved’ fast track. This could be the greatest
risk that we face in stopping fast track and stopping the TPP. We need to
be clear to all members of Congress NO FAST TRACK is acceptable. The
Constitution has the appropriate balance between Congress and the
president. We need the full checks and balances of Congress over ObamaTrade.
So get ready for the next round — NO FAST TRACK is acceptable"
~~~
As
Trans-Pacific Partnership Falters, Opponents Go After Fence-Sitting Lawmakers
James Trimarco
Yes! Magazine / News Report
Published: Tuesday 4 February 2014
Eric Ross spent much of the morning on Friday, January 31
standing on an overpass above Interstate 90 in Bellevue , Wash. ,
holding a 30-foot-wide banner that read: "Stop Reichert's NAFTA. Flush the
TPP. Vote No on Fast Track."
The "Reichert" called out in Ross' sign is
Congressman Dave Reichert, R-Wash., and at issue is his active support of the
Trans-Pacific Partnership, a sprawling deal that would change the way
international trade is conducted in 12 countries around the Pacific Rim,
including the United States, Canada, Mexico, Vietnam, Peru, Australia, and
Japan.
As opponents of the TPP frequently point out, the deal
isn't just about trade: leaked sections of the text, which is not available to
the public, reveal that the TPP would also lead to significant changes to
policy areas such as intellectual property rights (especially on the Internet),
the creation and enforcement of environmental protections, and the labeling and
marketing of agricultural products.
Opponents of the deal say that the TPP would roll back
the gains of almost every people's movement, especially those concerned with
labor and the environment.
Ross says he received wide support for his banner,
judging by the number of honks he heard from the vehicles passing beneath. An
organizer with the Vashon Island-based organization Backbone Campaign, he says
that illustrates that the work he and others have done to educate the public
about the TPP over the past few years is starting to pay off.
For the past 18 months, it was negotiated with
essentially no media coverage, and activists had to teach their own
representatives what the TPP was," Ross said. "But it isn't as secret as it used to
be."
All
eyes on fast track
On Friday, that secrecy
took another hit as opponents gathered in more than 50 cities across North
America in a noisy, colorful, continent-wide day of rallies, marches, and
teach-ins. Events were held in New York , Toronto , and Mexico
City , but smaller towns turned out as well. People marched and rallied in Red Deer,
Alberta, held a press conference in Fresno, Calif., and protested in the
downtown office of Republican Congressman Charlie Dent in Allentown, Pa.
The Allentown
rally was intended to put pressure on Mr. Dent not to support Trade Promotion
Authority. Also known as "fast
track," this is special legislation that would allow the Trans-Pacific
Partnership to move more quickly through the United States legislature.
Lawmakers would get to vote yes or no on the deal, once it is approved by the
trade representatives of the 12 negotiating countries, but would be prevented
from altering any of its specificities.
Critics of fast track say that it harms democracy by
putting unelected trade negotiators and corporate advisers in charge of trade
policy, while specifically excluding input from elected representatives. Some call it unconstitutional, since the United States
Constitution grants only Congress the right to make trade agreements.
Events on Friday showed a new focus on demanding that
elected representatives commit to opposing fast-track legislation. The march and rally in San
Francisco , for example, criticized California Democratic Congresswoman Nancy
Pelosi, who has refused to state her position on the fast-track bill since it
was introduced by Senator Max Baucus, D-Mont., on Jan. 9.
In Washington state,
volunteers with the Backbone Campaign entered the offices of U.S.
Representative Dave Reichert, a Republican who actively supports fast track
through the "Friends of the TPP" caucus, and issued him a "spineless citation." Democrats Suzan
DelBene, Dennis Heck, Derek Kilmer, and Rick Larsen also received
"spineless citations" for taking no position on the issue, while
fellow House Democrat Jim McDermott received a thank-you letter (with an
illustration of a spine, of course). McDermott has pledged to oppose fast track.
Their positions matter because the TPP would almost certainly
be approved if Senator Baucus' fast-track bill passes, Lynne Dodson,
secretary-treasurer for the Washington
State Labor Council, told the crowd
gathered in Seattle
on Friday.
"No trade deal has ever been defeated once it got to
fast track," she said.
Cause
for celebration
Eric Ross told YES!, that he saw Friday's gathering in Seattle 's Westlake
Center as more of a
celebration than a protest because, after years of hard work, the TPP’s
momentum appears to be breaking down.
Two major chapters
of the document's text were published by Wikileaks in December and
January,
resulting in renewed and largely critical media coverage of the deal.
Next, right on the
heels of the second leak, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid told reporters on Jan. 29 that he opposes
fast-track legislation and might refuse to bring the bill to a vote.
That led writer
David Cay Johnston to wonder whether the TPP was now
"dead:" "If Reid stands firm," he wrote in Al
Jazeera, "it means new trade deals are likely to be worked out in the
open, where the people and their elected politicians can debate the
merits."
The TPP is also
suffering from problems internal to its negotiations, which failed to meet the December 2013 deadline set
for them by President Barack Obama. Talks in Singapore last December were bogged
down over disputes about protections for agricultural products, among other
issues, and no final agreement emerged.
In the wake of that
failure, Japanese Economic and Fiscal Policy Minister Akira Amari told reporters that negotiators should
meet again this month.
"The upcoming meeting is very important," Amari
said, "as it will be held before U.S. midterm congressional
elections in November."
Amari's statements indicate that Japanese negotiators
will push for a deal to be hammered out before stateside electioneering begins
in the summer.
For opponents of the TPP, that means that the time to act
is now. If Friday's events were any indication, this vibrant movement seems
likely to build on the victories it's already earned.
James
Trimarco wrote this article for YES! Magazine, a national, nonprofit media
organization that fuses powerful ideas with practical actions. James is web editor at YES! and you can follow
him@JamesTrimarco.
~~~
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