Imagine this.....Goods come into Mexico, are loaded onto trucks by Mexicans. They are driven by Mexicans to a MEXICAN Inland Port in Kansas City where they are inspected and then put back on the trucks and driven straight through to Canada. Not a single US dockworker, truck driver or shipping unloader ever touches this stuff.
The companies are getting their labor for cheap in Mexico, and because of lax labor laws are allowed to work themselves to death. Meanwhile, profits from this road go to Mexico, Canada and Spanish and American Corporations. Meanwhile over 1 million acres of land have been taken away from landowners to make these corporations happy. The mexican standard of living stays the same, and the US standard of living goes down.
http://www.spp.gov/this is the government agency that is sponsoring the project.
They are putting sovreign Mexican land on US soil here:
http://www.kcsmartport.com/sec_news/media/articles/ajt_052305.htmI will pick from a WorldNetDailey story (forgive the source, but they are outraged about this as I am):
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The documents make clear that Mexico demanded Kansas City pay all costs.
To date, the Kansas City Council has voted a $2.5 million loan to KC SmartPort to build the Mexican customs facility in the West Bottoms near Kemper Arena on city-owned land east of Liberty Street and mostly south of Interstate 670.
"Kansas City, Mo., is leasing the site to Kansas City SmartPort," Tasha Hammes of the development council wrote to WND last month. "It will NOT be leased to any Mexican government agency or to be sovereign territory of Mexico."
Yet, an e-mail written June 21, 2004, by Chris Gutierrez, the president of the KC SmartPort, stated that the Mexican customs office space "would need to be designated as Mexican sovereign territory and meet certain requirements."
Even more recently, an e-mail dated March 10 of this year was sent by Gutierrez to a long list of recipients that left no doubt that KC SmartPort has not yet received federal government approval to move forward with the Mexican customs facility. Gutierrez informed the e-mail recipients that the processing a critical form, designated "C-175," needs approval by the U.S. Customs and Border Protection before the form is passed to the State Department for final approval. The processing and approval of the C-175 application is holding up the final approval of the Mexican customs facility.
In the same memo, Gutierrez reported on a recent meeting in Washington: "Both sides (U.S. and Mexican officials) met several weeks ago and the 'document' or as the U.S. refers to it the 'C-175' is near completion. This document is the basis for the procedural, regulatory, jurisdictional, etc. for the project. It defines what will happen and how and what laws, etc. allow this to happen. Both sides have put a lot of effort into this document."
Gutierrez appeared concerned that the intensive lobbying done by KC SmartPort could be a wasted effort if the final U.S. government approvals were not completed before Mexico elected a new president this week.
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