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THIS BOOK BEGAN when I coauthored Minutemen: The Battle
to Secure America's Borders.
My research revealed the true extent of the illegal immigrant
invasion occurring across America's wide-open border with Mex-
ico. I wrote extensively of the criminal gangs and drug cartels
exploiting our open borders and examined statistics and quoted
experts, arguing that allowing Mexico's impoverished millions to
cross our borders illegally creates an economic threat to our
lower-skilled workers and places a severe strain on America's
middle class. One chapter was devoted to Los Angeles County
Deputy David March—killed in cold blood by Armando Arroyo
Garcia, an illegal alien with a criminal record who had been de-
ported three times before the shooting. I documented that Hez-
bollah terrorists who entered the United States through Mexico
are in federal prison today, prosecuted for sending money back to
Hezbollah terrorists in Lebanon.
I realized something was terribly wrong when the Bush ad-
ministration took no action against the thousands of illegal immi-
grant protestors and their supporters who marched on May Day
2006 in American streets under the Mexican flag. The only con-
clusion I could reach was that the Bush administration was leav-
ing our border with Mexico and Canada wide open because that
was the way the Bush administration wanted the borders.
As I worked on Minutemen, I came to suspect that President
Bush had made a fundamental policy commitment when he
agreed to the Security and Prosperity Partnership of North Amer-
ica at a summit meeting with Mexico and Canada on March 23,
2005. More than a declaration of friendship by neighboring coun-
tries, the agreements made at the Waco summit were perhaps the
reason our borders with Mexico and Canada have remained so
porous.
The argument made in The Late Great USA is that policy mak-
ers in the three nations and multinational corporations have
placed the United States, Mexico, and Canada on a fast track to
merge together economically and politically.
The goal of this book is to bring the North American integra-
tion argument into the arena of full public discourse, where the
evidence can be examined, while the pros and cons are debated.
A public debate is the only way to avoid seeing a North Ameri-
can Union created through a stealthy, incremental process in
which our public policy makers are intentionally less than candid
about their true intentions.
I believe that an informed American public will fight to retain
American sovereignty, rejecting the globalist determination to
merge the United States, Mexico, and Canada on the way to a
borderless "free trade" world. Publishing this book will test
whether American patriots remain who will resist the movement
toward a North American Union.