nafta, tpp, tpip, tisa

Windship

VIP Member
May 27, 2014
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If the people knew about what is in these agreements....
and tisa is being done in secret. nafta =North America. tpp=asian market, tisa eliminates all gov jobs to privatization.
Our sovereignty is gone...democracy is gone...they dissapeared as we bickered about abortion and last nights episode of entertainment tonight.
tisa is being designed and passed in secret. We wont even know when it goes into effect. If you havent watched this video...youd better....
 
I look at the threads before this one and its a pity that these 3 trade deals are going to change the world dramatically if they all go through. Theses trade deals
DWARF everything we talk about here and this thread has fallen back to page 7 in less than one day....wow. and without even one single comment. I highly suggest you watch this vid or watch it again. this crap...this corporate takeover is death to the pursuit of life, liberty and happiness.
 
The tpp is signed and tweaking it they say will take years(while they learn new ways of screwing the world)and tisa= trade investment services agreement. Tisa is going to privatize gov and services and put the small gov contractor out of business. If you want gov out of the way and corporate running everything....ur gonna get it.
 
I dont blame the shills for not wanting to talk about this.
 
World trade tribunals run by corporate lawyers who's decisions supersede US law!!
 
The trade tribunals bypass The U.S. legislative branch, the judicial branch and the presidential branches of our government!!
 
foreign companies can move here and bring their own labor at THEIR labor rate!! How can American workers compete with that!!
 
Foreign corporations will be able to pollute US water/ground/air or else huge fines will be imposed.
 
BUSINESS NEWS | Thu Feb 4, 2016 2:49am EST
Trans-Pacific Partnership trade deal signed, but years of negotiations still to come

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U.S. President Barack Obama (at the head table, 5th L) holds a meeting with Trans-Pacific Partnership leaders alongside the APEC Summit in Manila, Philippines, November 18, 2015. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
By Rebecca Howard | WELLINGTON

The Trans-Pacific Partnership, one of the world's biggest multinational trade deals, was signed by 12 member nations on Thursday in New Zealand, but the massive trade pact will still require years of tough negotiations before it becomes a reality.

The TPP, a deal which will cover 40 percent of the world economy, has already taken five years of negotiations to reach Thursday's signing stage.

The signing is "an important step" but the agreement "is still just a piece of paper, or rather over 16,000 pieces of paper until it actually comes into force," said New Zealand Prime Minister John Key at the ceremony in Auckland.

The TPP will now undergo a two-year ratification period in which at least six countries - that account for 85 percent of the combined gross domestic production of the 12 TPP nations - must approve the final text for the deal to be implemented.

The 12 nations include Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore, the United States and Vietnam.

Given their size, both the United States and Japan would need to ratify the deal, which will set common standards on issues ranging from workers' rights to intellectual property protection in 12 Pacific nations.

Opposition from many U.S. Democrats and some Republicans could mean a vote on the TPP is unlikely before President Barack Obama, a supporter of the TPP, leaves office early in 2017.

U.S. Trade Representative Michael Froman has said the current administration is doing everything in its power to move the deal and on Thursday told reporters he was confident the deal would get the necessary support in Congress.

In Japan, the resignation of Economics Minister Akira Amari - Japan's main TPP negotiator - may make it more difficult to sell the deal in Japan.

There is wide spread grassroots opposition to the TPP in many countries. Opponents have criticized the secrecy surrounding TPP talks, raised concerns about reduced access to things like affordable medicines, and a clause which allows foreign investors the right to sue if they feel their profits have been impacted by a law or policy in the host country.

In New Zealand on Thursday more than 1,000 protesters caused traffic disruptions in and around Auckland and police said a large number of police have been deployed.

ALSO IN BUSINESS NEWS
Chile's Foreign Minister Heraldo Munoz predicted "robust democratic discussion" in his South American nation.

Australian Trade Minister Andrew Robb said the agreement would be tabled next week in parliament. Opposition to the deal in Australia has been building, but Robb was confident it would be approved, despite the government not control the Senate.

Canada's new government signed the deal on Thursday, but Trade Minister Chrystia Freeland has said "signing does not equal ratifying."

She emphasised that the government committed itself to a wide-ranging consultation on the TPP during its election campaign and that process was currently underway.

Secretary of the Economy for Mexico, Illdefonso Guajardo, said the TPP would be voted on before the end of 2016, while Malaysia said the deal had already been approved, although some legislative changes were still needed.
 
No, its not...lol...where is the link?
TTIP might never happen, Britain's international trade secretary admits
Germany’s vice-chancellor Sigmar Gabriel said late last month that TTIP had failed “but no one is really admitting it”. France’s trade minister also suggested that negotiations were not proceeding to plan and should stop, while France President Francois Hollande has said he would not accept the deal in its current form.

The Official James Petras website » Rebellion in the Suites: Tax Collectors and Businesspeople
In demanding an end to negotiations with the US over the trans-Atlantic trade deal, the French minister for foreign trade summed up his country’s position: “There is no political support from France for those negotiations. . . the Americans give nothing or just crumbs”. Throughout Europe politicians of the Left and Right have pointed out that closer ties with the US undermine their business deals with Russia and China, dilute environmental protection and abolish workers’ rights.
 
Ok check this..."already signed into law". The tpp is already here and the 62 families that run the world dont give a fuck what a few people say no matter who they are.
 
Ok check this..."already signed into law". The tpp is already here and the 62 families that run the world dont give a fuck what a few people say no matter who they are.
Your fear mongering is counterproductive to the cause.
 
the tpp FORCES US workers to compete with 28 to 60 cent an hour labor in third world countries.
 

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