A couple days ago, I expressed opposition to Obama’s request for fast track authority for the TPP (Trans Pacific partnership) trade agreement. I felt frustrated, because I like to be able to explain why I oppose something. Since TPP remains secret, the only direct evidence I have to go on is leaks and rumors. However, there is lots od indirect evidence, which Katrina vanden Heuvel has covered quire well.
Last Wednesday, House minority leader Nancy Pelosi repeated in no uncertain terms her opposition to granting President Obama authority to seek “fast-track” approval of the Trans-Pacific Partnership, a mammoth “free trade” deal the US has been negotiating in secret since the days of George W. Bush. Fast-tracking the TPP—which Senate majority leader Harry Reid also opposes—would allow the administration to submit the treaty for an up-or-down vote, thus protecting it from any debate or discussion or amendments. Without that authority, the administration would have to take into account the vehement objections of labor unions and other opponents of the treaty, who rightly note that the pact—the text and scope of which have been zealously guarded from public scrutiny—would likely do irreversible harm to American workers and consumers; fast-tracking the TPP would allow its corporate backers and their congressional allies to run roughshod over the treaty’s opponents and avoid a much-needed debate.
If all this sounds familiar, it should: a common nickname for the TPP is “NAFTA on steroids,” and it is worth recalling now how clear it was twenty years ago (to anyone who cared to look) that NAFTA would have precisely the horrific impact on American industry, as well as on the global environment, that it has indeed had. In The Nation, writer after writer warned about NAFTA’s pernicious consequences, in terms that could easily be applied—with perhaps even more force—to the TPP today.
In our March 29, 1993 issue—after NAFTA had been signed by President George H.W. Bush but before Congress approved it—Noam Chomsky wrote in “Notes on NAFTA: ‘The Masters of Mankind’”:
One consequence of the globalization of the economy is the rise of new governing institutions to serve the interests of private transnational economic power. Another is the spread of the Third World social model, with islands of enormous privilege in a sea of misery and despair. A walk through any American city gives human form to the statistics on quality of life, distribution of wealth, poverty and employment…Increasingly, production can be shifted to high-repression, low-wage areas and directed to privileged sectors in the global economy. Large parts of the population thus become superfluous for production and perhaps even as a market, unlike the days when Henry Ford realized that he could not sell cars unless his workers were paid enough to buy cars themselves.
While President Obama has laudably dedicated the remainder of his term to reversing the alarming inequality that has gripped the country in recent decades, his push for TPP seems to demonstrate an insufficient historical awareness of the consequences of free-trade agreements… [emphasis added]
Inserted from <The Nation>
Photo credit: IB Times
This is just the beginning of a very extensive article, and I strongly recommend clicking through to read it in its entirety.
The reason to oppose fast track authority tor TPP is precisely that we do not know exactly what it contains. Before it becomes law it is critical that we have the opportunity to analyze it, debate it, and make whatever changes are needed to guarantee that American workers are not the victims of vulture capitalists, as they are under NAFTA.
6 Responses to “TPP NO!”
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When something is as well hidden as the contents of TPP, it can't be because it is good for us. If it was beneficial, they would be touting its wonderful properties. No one at all is doing that. Wonder why?
Nafta destroyed any noncoal jobs in this area. We had a shoe factory, two sewing factories, and American Standard plumbing factory. All closed and sent the jobs to Mexico. We have no idea what is inTPP, but the leaks have indicated it will do more harm than NAFTA. I am totally against it.
The scariest part of the TPP right now is the secrecy. How can one evaluate something that the details are unknown? . . . oh that's right. Evaluation and discussion is not allowed!
Amen to all three of you!!
The devil is in the details…