'Secrets of the Invasion'
Why America's government invites rampant illegal immigration
Whistleblower Magazine, May 01, 2006
It's
widely regarded as America's biggest problem: Between 12 and 20 million aliens –
including large numbers of criminals, gang members and even terrorists – have
entered this nation illegally, with countless more streaming across our
scandalously unguarded borders daily.
The issue polarizes the nation, robs citizens of jobs, bleeds taxpayers,
threatens America's national security and dangerously balkanizes the country
into unassimilated ethnic groups with little loyalty or love for America's
founding values. Indeed, the de facto invasion is rapidly transforming America
into a totally different country than the one past generations have known and
loved.
And yet – most Americans have almost no idea what is really going on, or why
it is happening.
While news reports depict demonstrations and debates, and while politicians
promise "comprehensive border security programs," no real answers ever seem to
emerge.
But there are answers. Truthful answers. Shocking answers.
In its groundbreaking May edition, WND's acclaimed monthly Whistleblower
magazine reveals the astounding hidden agendas, plans and people behind
America's immigration nightmare.
Titled "ALIEN
NATION," the issue is subtitled "SECRETS OF THE INVASION: Why government
invites rampant illegal immigration." Indeed, it reveals pivotal secrets very
few Americans know. For example:
Did you know that the powerfully influential Council on Foreign Relations –
often described as a “shadow government" – issued a comprehensive report last
year laying out a five-year plan for the "establishment by 2010 of a North
American economic and security community" with a common "outer security
perimeter"?
Paul Martin, George W Bush and Vicente Fox
Roughly translated: In the next few years, according to the 59-page report
titled "Building a North American Community," the U.S. must be integrated with
the socialism, corruption, poverty and population of Mexico and Canada. "Common
perimeter" means wide-open U.S. borders between the U.S., Mexico and Canada. As
Phyllis Schlafly reveals in this issue of Whistleblower: "This CFR document
asserts that President Bush, Mexican President Vicente Fox and Canadian Prime
Minister Paul Martin 'committed their governments' to this goal when they met at
Bush's ranch and at Waco, Texas, on March 23, 2005. The three adopted the
'Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America' and assigned 'working
groups' to fill in the details. It was at this same meeting, grandly called the
North American Summit, that President Bush pinned the epithet 'vigilantes' on
the volunteers guarding our border in Arizona."
The CFR report – important excerpts of which are published in Whistleblower –
also suggests North American elitists begin getting together regularly, and
presumably secretly, "to buttress North American relationships, along the lines
of the Bilderberg or
Wehrkunde
conferences, organized to support transatlantic relations." The Bilderberg
and Wehrkunde conferences are highly secret conclaves of the powerful. For
decades, there have been suspicions that such meetings were used for plotting
the course of world events and especially the centralization of global
decision-making.
Did you know that radical immigrant groups – including the League of United
Latin American Citizens (LULAC), the Mexican American Legal Defense and
Educational Fund (MALDEF), the Movimiento Estudiantil Chicano de Aztlan (MEChA)
and the National Council of La Raza (La Raza) – not only share a revolutionary
agenda of conquering America's southwest, but they also share common funding
sources, notably the Ford and Rockefeller foundations?
''California is going to be a Hispanic state," said Mario Obeldo, former head
of MALDEF. "Anyone who does not like it should leave." And MEChA's goal is even
more radical: an independent ''Aztlan,'' the collective name this organization
gives to the seven states of the U.S. Southwest – Arizona, California, Colorado,
Nevada, New Mexico, Texas and Utah. So why would the Rockefeller and Ford
foundations support such groups? Joseph Farah tells the story in this issue of
Whistleblower.
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