The following story is taken from The SPOTLIGHT newspaper,
published weekly in Washington, D.C. by Liberty Lobby.
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 One World Government Approved 

 The consent of representatives of 116 nations, including the United 
States, to the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade is another giant step 
toward establishing a world government, according to administration officials. 
 
 EXCLUSIVE TO THE SPOTLIGHT 
 BY JIM TUCKER 

 The General Agreement on Tarriffs and Trade (GATT), if approved by Congress 
on its fast track path, would lead to the creation of the World Trade Office 
(WTO). This world governing body would have the power to intervene in member 
nations' internal affairs, superseding Congress, the administration, and, 
most importantly, the Constitution itself. 

 But public opposition to the recently approved North American Free Trade 
Agreement (NAFTA)--which won passage only after the Clinton administration 
shamelessly bought votes from legislators and defied the will of the 
people--will undoubtedly resurface when details of the much-farther-reaching 
GATT agreement become public knowledge. 

 An analysis of the agreement prepared by the White House reveals that all 
nations are pledged to remove "licensing barriers" to membership in 
professions and trades. 

 If the WTO decides, for example, that New York's licensing requirements for 
nurses constitute a "barrier" to nurses from other countries, it could order 
changes to this "unfair" practice. 

 U.S. Trade Representative Mickey Kantor, briefing the press, said how the 
North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and the Asian-Pacific Economic 
Community (APEC) will "fit in" with GATT is still "to be decided." 

 But it is already "decided," according to a member of his entourage who 
thought he was speaking not to a journalist, but an enthusiastic advocate of 
a "world without borders." 

 In the years ahead, after all nations have completed the ratification and 
legislative actions, the WTO will be "associated with the United Nations," he 
said. But, to avoid problems of "nationalism," he said, the plan to transform 
the WTO into a UN agency "must not become public" yet. 

 "You can't achieve everything in your first agreement," Kantor said. 

 The administration will move "expeditiously to expand NAFTA" throughout the 
Western Hemisphere, beginning with immediate talks with Chile, Kantor said, 
and also strive to make APEC a "visible organization like NAFTA." 
 Kantor's words, and those of his staff, followed the script laid out in 
recent years by the Bilderberg group and Trilateral Commission, drafted at 
their annual secret meetings. 

 These secret, interlocking groups, led by David Rockefeller and the 
Rothschilds of Britain and Europe, have long worked to make the UN the de 
facto, instead of a de jure, world government. 

 Their agenda calls for the evolution of NAFTA into an American Union 
similar to the European Union, where provincial parliaments will impose laws 
on the United States over the heads of the president and Congress (SPOTLIGHT, 
June 24, 1991). 

 APEC is to become the "Pacific Union," the third great region of the world 
organized for the convenience of global administration by the UN. 

 Both world shadow government groups, which always work in concert, are also 
pressing for a UN standing army that could enter any nation to enforce the 
numerous treaty provisions regarding the regulation of trade. (SPOTLIGHT, 
June 8, 1992.) 

 They are also pressing for an "independent source" of UN revenues, such as 
a per-barrel levy on oil. 

 When the UN has its own armed forces that can be sent anywhere at the whim 
of the Security Council to impose its will, and when the world government has 
independent means of financing its ventures, Old Glory will be in threatened 
as it has not been since 1776. 

 The reason GATT, the most far-reaching free-trade agreement in history, is 
so threatening to U.S. sovereignty is that, in its enforcement provisions and 
regulatory role, it is, in effect, managing world trade. As The SPOTLIGHT has 
said so many times in the past, you can't have free trade without a world 
government, and you can't have a world government without free trade. 

 In the summer of 1995 Congress will decide, in a simple up or down vote, 
whether to agree to submit to the provisions of the GATT as approved by 
member nations just recently. This gives patriots and nationalists plenty of 
time to win their lawmakers over to the side of national sovereignty, and to 
make sure they vote in accordance with the Constitution. 

