ApatheticNoMore
6-18-12, 3:34pm
How about those leaks we've gotten recently on the Trans Pacific Partnership? It seems this law is a very direct attack on the whole idea of democracy and the ability to collectively make laws to address community problems etc..
It will:
- Limit how U.S. federal and state officials could regulate foreign firms operating within U.S. boundaries, with requirements to provide them greater rights than domestic firms
- Allow foreign firms to demand compensation for the costs of complying with U.S. financial or environmental regulations that apply equally to domestic and foreign firms.
- Establish a two-track legal system that gives foreign firms new rights to skirt U.S. courts and laws, directly sue the U.S. government before foreign tribunals and demand compensation for financial, health, environmental, land use and other laws they claim undermine their TPP privileges
http://obrag.org/?p=62251
Big picture: national and state and local environmental laws are going to start falling afoul of this trade agreement (as will perhaps other laws like worker protections). The ability of a nation or state or locality to even control someting really basic like pollution even by strong majority consensus is going to start falling afoul of this trade agreement. This is the worldwide destruction of being able to control anything democratically, that IS the BIG BIG PICTURE. The average person will be left with no voice to even stop their local communities from having their environments destroyed. Instead of companies paying the price of their pollution (externalities) the taxpayer will have to pay the price of the corporations complying with environmental regulations!! Their right to pollute is taken as the default and their victims right to not be poisoned by pollution non-existent. That's completely backward! The big picture is again the death of being able to control almost anything democractically even on a small scale (your local community - regulating pollution say) because trans-national laws (this trade agreement) upsurp that ability. Financial regulation is going to fall afoul of this trade agreement, but some regulation is little more than taxpayer protection since we have seen the extent of which we have to bail out their errors. The favoritism of foreign firms (the foreign firms won't have to comply with the U.S. laws the U.S. firms will) will lead to the increasing dependence on foreign firms over local. You can not write that kind of naked FAVORITSM into a law without expecting the favored party to benefit over the unfavored one. And the unfavored ones are U.S. businesses in the U.S.. When the ultimate result of this appears is it going to be dismissed as just the result of the "free market", when it was basically written into law?
This is in some ways a coup. It is writing laws at a level far above national laws (by people we never voted for - noone voted for the people sitting on the trade talks) that will invalidate the laws we do have because every single one of our laws at any level of government can be "appealed" to the international trade body whose ultimate law seems to be "anything corporations want". The leak reveals that the congressperson in charge of the committee for these kind of trade agreements DID NOT KNOW THE DETAILS of the trade agreement because it was hidden. Congress as useless as they are in the best of times, has been kept entirely in the dark! And congress is one of the few branches of government by which the people might have had a say. We don't have 3 branches of government here. Congress in the dark, the judicial powerless anyway (since none of this stuff will be run through our judiciary, it is all appealed to a trade body). Does anyone looking at the big picture (this, the presidents killings wiht no congressional oversite, the non-declared wars etc. etc.) believe we actually live in the government at all detailed in I don't know .. the Consitution ... or frankly in a representative government at all?
And this is all entirely independent of what you think of trade. Trade IMO has plusses and minuses but what this trade agreement is dealing with is NOT the stuff of trade (which is mostly discussions of eliminating tarriffs and quotas and so on - in my mind and I think in most people's minds). This is a coup disguised as a trade agreement that eliminates democratic lawmaking. I can't do this justice, you need to do the research on this.
It will:
- Limit how U.S. federal and state officials could regulate foreign firms operating within U.S. boundaries, with requirements to provide them greater rights than domestic firms
- Allow foreign firms to demand compensation for the costs of complying with U.S. financial or environmental regulations that apply equally to domestic and foreign firms.
- Establish a two-track legal system that gives foreign firms new rights to skirt U.S. courts and laws, directly sue the U.S. government before foreign tribunals and demand compensation for financial, health, environmental, land use and other laws they claim undermine their TPP privileges
http://obrag.org/?p=62251
Big picture: national and state and local environmental laws are going to start falling afoul of this trade agreement (as will perhaps other laws like worker protections). The ability of a nation or state or locality to even control someting really basic like pollution even by strong majority consensus is going to start falling afoul of this trade agreement. This is the worldwide destruction of being able to control anything democratically, that IS the BIG BIG PICTURE. The average person will be left with no voice to even stop their local communities from having their environments destroyed. Instead of companies paying the price of their pollution (externalities) the taxpayer will have to pay the price of the corporations complying with environmental regulations!! Their right to pollute is taken as the default and their victims right to not be poisoned by pollution non-existent. That's completely backward! The big picture is again the death of being able to control almost anything democractically even on a small scale (your local community - regulating pollution say) because trans-national laws (this trade agreement) upsurp that ability. Financial regulation is going to fall afoul of this trade agreement, but some regulation is little more than taxpayer protection since we have seen the extent of which we have to bail out their errors. The favoritism of foreign firms (the foreign firms won't have to comply with the U.S. laws the U.S. firms will) will lead to the increasing dependence on foreign firms over local. You can not write that kind of naked FAVORITSM into a law without expecting the favored party to benefit over the unfavored one. And the unfavored ones are U.S. businesses in the U.S.. When the ultimate result of this appears is it going to be dismissed as just the result of the "free market", when it was basically written into law?
This is in some ways a coup. It is writing laws at a level far above national laws (by people we never voted for - noone voted for the people sitting on the trade talks) that will invalidate the laws we do have because every single one of our laws at any level of government can be "appealed" to the international trade body whose ultimate law seems to be "anything corporations want". The leak reveals that the congressperson in charge of the committee for these kind of trade agreements DID NOT KNOW THE DETAILS of the trade agreement because it was hidden. Congress as useless as they are in the best of times, has been kept entirely in the dark! And congress is one of the few branches of government by which the people might have had a say. We don't have 3 branches of government here. Congress in the dark, the judicial powerless anyway (since none of this stuff will be run through our judiciary, it is all appealed to a trade body). Does anyone looking at the big picture (this, the presidents killings wiht no congressional oversite, the non-declared wars etc. etc.) believe we actually live in the government at all detailed in I don't know .. the Consitution ... or frankly in a representative government at all?
And this is all entirely independent of what you think of trade. Trade IMO has plusses and minuses but what this trade agreement is dealing with is NOT the stuff of trade (which is mostly discussions of eliminating tarriffs and quotas and so on - in my mind and I think in most people's minds). This is a coup disguised as a trade agreement that eliminates democratic lawmaking. I can't do this justice, you need to do the research on this.