The Case Against Ratifying the Trans Pacific Partnership (michaelgeist.ca)
An anonymous reader writes: For the past two and a half months, Canadian law professor Michael
Geist has been writing a daily series on the trouble with the
Trans Pacific Partnership. The 50 part series wrapped up today with
the
case against ratifying the TPP. While the focus is on
Canadian issues, the series hits on problems that all 12 countries
face: unbalanced intellectual property rules, privacy risks, dangers
to the Internet and technology, cultural and health regulation, and
investor-state settlement rules that could cost countries billions
of dollars.
All hail our hallowed corporate overlords...
oh wai....
We need to kill nafta 2.0 as the first one killed a lot of jobs and with the investor-state settlement rules even more can be cut.
After WTO, NAFTA, et al, I'd say its safe to assume that TPP is designed and built to expedite the globalist race to the bottom, to the detriment of everyone but the oligarchs and their bootlickers.
Scruting the inscrutable for over 50 years.
Look, that racist Hitler-Trump doesn't like TPP, so you are automagically a racist (like Bernie Sanders) if you don't like it.
Don't be a racist, do what Obama would do, support TPP.
AntiFA: An abbreviation for Anti First Amendment.
Is there anything actually good about the TPP?
Don't waste your vote! Vote for whoever you want, unless you live in a swing state it won't matter anyways
You can't contradict the wealthy and powerful and stay alive long.
TPP is a secret agreement, developed by parties who are financially biased to make such an agreement, without any discourse or dialogue outside of interested parties.
The lies of NAFTA, having been exposed as lies, have much to do with why this is being done in secret. NAFTA was not developed by party, it was developed in much the same way. Except that people were able to question the alleged benefits before ratification. The so called "naysayers" who warned about not just NAFTA, but many other treaties and Acts have been proven right far too often.
I certainly appreciate the attorney's 50 days/reasons and the detail he goes into. I just don't think it's necessary for at least the US, who needs Congressional approval for a treaty. (I don't know Canada's laws, perhaps they have similar.) Any member of Congress that approves this "treaty" should be impeached, jailed, banished, or some other nice form of punishment for treason.
-The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.
The TPP's biggest problem is that it's too big. The treaty covers too much ground any good part is drowned out by the bad, like fine wine mixed with moonshine. Maybe that's the way the authors intended it, a bait-and-switch, where the putative benefits are trumpeted while the potential harm is played down.
ratify the TPP: you have overtly agreed to endorse and promote a system of economic and social inequality predicated on global trade and abusive protectionist copyright. in the coming years you will witness among many windfalls of this endorsement the slow death of your local industries, increasing unemployment, skyrocketing incarceration rates, increased drop-out rates and narcotics dependency in once thriving communities. Your card for arguing stricter drug legislation was spent 30 some years ago at the behest of Washington, and so you have no choice but to champion a legislatively suicidal position --rational albeit-- of addiction treatment, recovery, and community building efforts that will inevitably fail as the TPP works against the interest of entrepeneurs and small business that are and were the lifeblood of the very townships you seek to rescue.
refuse to ratify the TPP: legislative forces will balk, hit pieces will be crafted in the rags you once called independent sources of journalism, and your re-election campaign will find new suffering in opponents with stern short term but absent longterm domestic and foreign policy riding a wave of ephemeral populism. Titans of industry will craft the next TPP and pump cash into their next statesman, and you or your party will need to reiterate, recuse, or condemn your past indiscretions. a distinct lack of heroin overdosed 15 year olds will go duly noted in the annuls of your countries history. somewhere a welder will retire with a meaningful pension and take up either macromet or deck building as a hobby..
Good people go to bed earlier.
Don't worry, the Liberals will ratify it, they already signed the thing. They're busy backpedaling on their promises, one by one (Anyone smoking dope without a worry yet? No?). The only thing I expect to happen is to take away the below-average income people's benefit (the one that rich people don't actually care about, but the liberals advertised it as such, the one that gives below-average single income households with children up to $2000 in tax breaks) because that's money in the bank.
Weird, too, since dope laws doesn't require waiting for a budget to pass, but taking away below-average income benefits does, though in the world of government everything is backwards.
Hopefully the people in this country will slowly realize that they've been sold a lie. Though you'd think they'd have gotten it with the teflon man's "I WILL REPEAL THE GST!"
And, for the record, no, the conservatives and NDP aren't any better either, so don't waste your time calling me a booster for those shit parties, either.
... At least not one that anyone would honestly express outside of the back room and off the record.
The thing is a joke. Trash it and move on.
I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
There needs to be massive outcry from Google to stop this. As well as Street Demonstrations.
I think you mean Trump supporters. Nice to know they'll attach anyone they think *might* be a terrorist...
I'm amused by the notion that somehow free speech 'lost' in Chicago. In point of fact, free speech is what *happened* in Chicago.
the first truly global power
Only if we ignore the Chinese, Mongolians, and English. At various times in their history, they too were the dominate global powers of their day (with the Mongolians dominant to the point that they had two significant military defeats on the battlefield over a half century period). And the English both at their peak and currently have the ability to globally project military power.
What kept these powers from being being Brzezinski's first "truly global power"? The same sort of institutional and infrastructural limitations that will keep the US from being the first "truly global power" too.
For example, if the Mongolian empire could have kept its shit together for a couple of centuries, we'll all be speaking some derivative of Mongolian now. But they couldn't. They didn't have the infrastructure, technology, or culture to maintain such a vast empire for more than a human lifespan.
While the US is in a good position now, it's just not that powerful a position. It's relatively weak economically and militarily. The EU, China, and Japan are close enough economically that the US just can't throw its weight around in trade treaties. Similarly, Russia and China are close enough militarily that the US can't throw around its weight that way. Both the EU and Japan can build their militaries as well to be credible counters too.
Then there's the institutional obstacles. Even if we ignore the considerable public opposition to empire-building, we still have a rather corrupt and profoundly inefficient military procurement system. In a world where future global military adventures will be fought and frequently won with technology and where even small wars cost a lot for the US, this is a lethal flaw which I think will knock the US out of superpower status sooner or later.
There's also the incompetence of many of the political leaders of the US. For example, between Presidents G. W. Bush and Obama, the US almost lost Iraq to ISIS. If that had happened, I believe the US would have effectively lost superpower status since a lot of the hegemony that the US maintains is based on relationships and credibility.
The 1% get showered with gold, the 99% with Tea PeePee.
"Fascism should more properly be called corporatism because it is the merger of state and corporate power." -- Mussolini
This article is a Canadian perspective, but it's instructive to see how others see us. The whole point of TPP seems to be to ratify US corporate monopolies that have up to now only been enforced within the US. If TPP is ratified, all of the signatory countries get US-style intellectual property oppression, US-style high pharma prices, and a surveillance state to replaces Internet freedom.
Where the giga-rich wipe their asses with the rest of us!
'The Economy' is a giant Ponzi scheme whose most pitiable suckers are the youngest among us and the yet-unborn.
Yes all of those were criticized but they still passed. I don't know why it has to be done in secret because even if it's done in the open nobody can do anything about it, people don't get to vote on these things
Twinstiq, game news
looks like you are not yet old enough to vote anyway
"The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
anyone can explain how ms. Freeland, who seems like a left-wing anti-plutocrat, signed this deal? I thought she was kind of hot with her wide-hipped sturdy build, but now I don't know anymore.
Earlier this year, I wrote to my Senators and Congressman to urge them to vote against it. Senator Klobuchar told me that it probably wasn't going to come up for consideration until November, and at that time she would be [vague statement]. US citizens: don't get too burned out in the Presidential race to forget to apply a little pressure in Congress at that time.
"When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
(Trump, as vile as he is, should not be silenced by mob action no matter how disgusting his views ... he should be countered by intelligent speech that decries and exposes his bigotry, not forced to cancel appearances. Way to play into his hands, Bernie supporters),
What evidence is there that the anti-Trump protesters were Bernie supporters?
From what I see on all the discussion boards, the Bernie supporters are most concerned and angry about Hillary, not Trump. Heck, a bunch of Bernie supporters have even claimed they're going to vote for Trump if Hillary wins the Dem nomination! (Who knows what they'll really do; a bunch of Hillary supporters said the same thing about Obama in 2008 but voted for him anyway.)
I think blaming the Bernie supporters for anti-Trump protests is probably disingenuous. They could be a diverse crowd of supporters of other candidates (or just Dems), or they could be a high concentration of Hillary voters, which is what I suspect personally. Polls show that Bernie has the most appeal across the entire population, and in a fair runoff-type election between all the surviving candidates now (D and R), Bernie would actually win. It's pretty easy to understand why: he's the least hated. Lots of people hate Trump and Hillary, along with the other GOP candidates; Bernie just isn't all that disliked by anyone. Hillary is the Dem who has the most to worry about in a direct race against Trump, so it stands to reason that it's her supporters who are probably most active against Trump.
is clear... that's about it? cease fire,, in the moms we trust
57,361 CNY is $8,824.97 US.
That's at the bottom here in the USA.
I guess you mean the middle for Third World countries. And it's gonna get worse too. Viet Nam and every other SE Asian country is out for that "great" Chinese pie.
For us Americans, it's a destruction of our living standards. All because more than half of the World's population of 7.2 billion are dirt poor compared to us and are willing to do the work for pennies on the dollar. And the World's economy isn't expanding fast enough to raise all boats - it's a negative sum game for us. The industrialization of the poor World is coming out of the Western workers hide.
And it is breading a LOT of resentment.
You'll see a lot of familiar names.
Here is how much each senator was paid by each backer for fast tracking.
Here's a Hillary specific one about donations to her campaign, since it came up early in the search.
The first 2 charts I found linked in this excellent Guardian story.
Some key excerpts:
the first truly global power
Only if we ignore the Chinese, Mongolians, and English.
I was going to make pretty much the same point. I would also include Spain (and possibly the French, though on the fence there) along with the UK, and I question your inclusion of the Mongolians and the Chinese (while they have had extraordinarily large empires, I would not call them "global" since neither one (as far as I know) had any presence in the western hemisphere). But regardless of the minutiae, the point remains that the US is decidedly NOT the first global power.
What part of "shall not be infringed" is so hard to understand?
while they have had extraordinarily large empires, I would not call them "global" since neither one (as far as I know) had any presence in the western hemisphere
What was there in the Western hemisphere worth having a presence over? And there certainly wasn't a military power over in the New World capable of giving a small Mongolian army a challenge.
There's also the incompetence of many of the political leaders of the US. For example, between Presidents G. W. Bush and Obama, the US almost lost Iraq to ISIS. If that had happened, I believe the US would have effectively lost superpower status since a lot of the hegemony that the US maintains is based on relationships and credibility.
I think in Obama's case, he didn't want commit and embroil American ground forces in yet another middle east adventure considering how poorly the last one went. In the end, the strategy of funding and training allies to fight in a proxy has proved to be the right thing to do with ground forces slowly taking ground away from ISIS. American fighting ISIS would make excellent propaganda material to get more fighters. Fighting other muslims is not going to be a attractive.
That said it is regrettable the kind of things that has happened to places under ISIS power and I wish there was something more than we can do about it a despotic army laying waste to all around them and committing human right atrocity in the name of God.
What was there in the Western hemisphere worth having a presence over? And there certainly wasn't a military power over in the New World capable of giving a small Mongolian army a challenge.
The point is immaterial. You can't be a "global" power if you don't even know half the globe exists. If you're going down that rabbit hole, there are more empires you can add to the list (at least Rome, probably the Dutch) and it's starting to become a fairly meaningless definition.
As far as "what was there worth having?" ask the Spanish--they found one or two things worth keeping.
What part of "shall not be infringed" is so hard to understand?
I think in Obama's case, he didn't want commit and embroil American ground forces in yet another middle east adventure considering how poorly the last one went. In the end, the strategy of funding and training allies to fight in a proxy has proved to be the right thing to do with ground forces slowly taking ground away from ISIS. American fighting ISIS would make excellent propaganda material to get more fighters. Fighting other muslims is not going to be a attractive.
Obama did anyway. A slow grind like this favors the guerrillas. Eventually they'll evolve to become a greater threat. It also opened up the path to Russian interference in Syria.
That said it is regrettable the kind of things that has happened to places under ISIS power and I wish there was something more than we can do about it a despotic army laying waste to all around them and committing human right atrocity in the name of God.
There was. Simply not entirely leaving would have been one such thing. The US didn't need to leave a huge presence.
And Persian and Macedonian.
I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
Well, I'm not going to vote for Trump, but I believe Hillary supports the TPP, while Sanders may not. So if Sanders gets the nomination I'll vote Democrat, but if it's Hillary I'll pick some other party. Probably the Greens, but perhaps the Libertarian (I haven't read their platform this time around...I like SOME Libertarian positions). Not that either has a chance, but I couldn't stomach voting for a TPP supporter.
I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
because it will finally liberate Canadians from the 'supply-managed' diary monopoly that results in Canadians paying 2x what Americans pay for milk, cheese and yogurt.
Do you know what's ironic? In South Korea they protest free trade agreements with the West too! But it's not the factory workers that protest, it is the farmers, fighting American beef and corn. There are whole elaborate campaigns about "eating Korean produced food" and how it's healthier and safer, complete with demonizing American produce (mad cow disease, etc)... perfectly paralleling the many buy American campaigns that demonizing foreign manufactured goods.
Do you know what's even more ironic? The Slashdot readership are the _WINNERS_ of the TPP... but you are so mindlessly committed to anti-capitalist ideology that you can't see that none of the countries on the list are competitive in anything software related, meaning _YOUR_ market expands, while simultaneously the things you buy become cheaper.
Not only that, but none of them are saying anything about the GMO takeover of essential oils such as castor oil, argan oil benefits, and black seed oil. Once the reality hits that we're destroying our environment then we'll really see the worth in bickering back and forth in useless topics and ignoring the ones that really matter. And to top it off, Hillary doesn't stand a chance in 2016.
Top natural remedies:
Statistically, it all comes out in the wash, everything the other countries give up will be comped in other areas. Your individual lives have no meaning.
Trespassing (yes, the venue was private property and the protesters/goons were there under false pretences and refused to leave when told), and then rioting to prevent Trump from being heard is not "free speech", it's depriving someone else of their free-speech and in this case, a federal crime (section C-1B, Trump is protected by Secret Service)
How would you react if people came to an event you were hosting and started shouting you down and rioting and then claimed it was all under their "free speech".
Besides, I thought you Trumpophobes didn't believe in free speech anyway. Or is that only when it's someone else's speech that you don't like?
The TPP is an expression of American Empire for American Corporate citizens. Human citizens do not factor much in the parts of the TPP I have read (I only managed roughly 1000 pages) where law is referred to as "nullification", "obstruction" and "impediment". I can't see it being good for any nation that signs, even the US. While I was reading it, I found it was overwhelming in its reach.
What I think we are seeing can be best described as "extra-national corporate hedgemony" where nationality isn't as important as having dominance over a nations court system, which is the core of the treaty in the ISDS provisions. The taxpayer is thus co-erced into compensating the company to maintain profit margins for having to obey the law, of which the taxpayer is now *obliged* to do whilst providing a plan as to when the law will be wound back and removed.
There is no concern with common law, which is isolated, only *anything* to do with trade (including labour) where it is framed in such a way that corporate citizens can mold it, with plenty of time to do so. That's in the anti-corruption provisions - which is kind of ironic considering it is making something legal that was illegal.
Empire is irrelevant under the TPP, as is Nationality, more like a Corpocracy driven by a hidden autocracy to whom the wealth is funneled.
My ism, it's full of beliefs.
"(the US)... it's just not that powerful a position. It's relatively weak economically and militarily"
The USA spends more militarily than the next 12 countries combined and several times more than all the rest of the list combined, whilst having an economy smaller than china or the combined EU and a mindset that economic growth is infinite (it isn't. Even single digit percentage growth is impossible to maintain across 100 years. Economies always hit limits and all economists who came up with the fundamental theories acknowledged this even if their disciples haven't)
Letting the military tail wag the political dog is a fast way of tipping the country down the shitter. It happened to the russians (SDI was a success story not for its technology but because it scared the USSR into overspending on its military and then imploding) and it has happened to many empires in the past (the British empire was a success mostly because it avoided war as much as possible(*) and failing to do so (ww1) was what killed it).
(*) At its peak size the british army was smaller than the prussian police force. Trading brings prosperity so the vast majority of the population of colonies weren't inclined to rock the boat very much, vs other empires which needed standing armies simply to force the colonies to remain inside the empire.
The expanding militarism and unsustainable military spend of the USA, coupled with rising mercantilism will eventually result in the edifice collapsing(**). TPP seems to be a way of exporting mercantile policy to the rest of the world, but most of the rest of the world is well aware that mercantilist policies were followed for centuries before finally being abandoned over 200 years ago because of their downsides.
(**) It's hard to build or maintain "essential" infrastructure in a mercantile environment and the lack of maintenance of that infrastructure is starting to show across the entire USA, with money that should be going into education + R&D being diverted to military vanity projects which are unlikely to ever provide any economic or societal benefits.