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Open letter to readers: Today and tomorrow

By Lynda Waddington | 11.17.11

Wednesday was a difficult day for The American Independent News Network, which is the larger entity that operates The Iowa Independent. Our chief executive and founder announced two of our sister sites would close and their content would be moved to The American Independent.

ACS lockout continues; plan emerges to repeal sugar protections

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By Virginia Chamlee | 11.15.11

A recently introduced bill could have far-reaching impact on the U.S. sugar industry, including American Crystal Sugar, a farmer-owned cooperative that locked out 1,300 Midwest workers on Aug. 1.

Cain campaign: Farmers know more about regulations than EPA

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By Andrew Duffelmeyer | 11.15.11

The chairman for Herman Cain’s Iowa effort says the campaign “relied more on the word of farmers than Washington regulators” in deciding to run an ad containing claims the Environmental Protection Agency says are false.

Mathis wins, Democrats maintain Senate control

Liz Mathis
By Lynda Waddington | 11.08.11

The Iowa Senate will remain under the control of a slim 26-25 Democratic majority when it reconvenes in January 2012.

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PR: Nation should work to address veterans’ challenges

By Press Release Reprints | 11.11.11

BRUCE BRALEY RELEASE — As US involvement in Iraq and Afghanistan ends, it’s more important than ever that our nation works to address the challenges faced by the men and women who fought there.

PR: Honoring veterans, help in hiring

By Press Release Reprints | 11.11.11

CHUCK GRASSLEY RELEASE — A difficult job market is challenging the soldiers, sailors and airmen who have protected America’s interests by serving in the Armed Forces.

PR: In honor of America’s veterans

By Press Release Reprints | 11.11.11

TOM LATHAM RELEASE — No one has done more to secure the freedom enjoyed by every single American than our veterans and those currently serving in the armed services.

PR: Honoring and supporting our nation’s veterans

By Press Release Reprints | 11.11.11

DAVE LOEBSACK RELEASE — Veterans Day is an opportunity to reflect on the service of generations of veterans and to honor the sacrifices they and their families have made so that we may live in peace and freedom here at home.

King sees some truth in far-fetched North American Union conspiracy

By Douglas Burns | 09.22.08 | 6:14 am

At his next town hall meeting, U.S. Rep. Steve King, R-Iowa, may very well tell us that he woke up in a hotel room in New Orleans in a bathtub full of ice, missing a kidney, victim of an organized ring of organ thieves.

Amero coin design by Dan Carr, www.amerocurrency.com

The odds that King will buy into the greatest urban legend of all time greatly increased last month when he told constituents that he was connecting the dots on another popular conspiracy theory: the creation of a North American Union, a border-blurring confederation of the United States, Canada and Mexico.

The North American Union theory takes various forms depending on who’s doing the talking or blogging. Some incarnations involve a “superhighway” linking the nations, others a common currency often called the “amero.”

Rather than dismiss the idea the St. Louis Post Dispatch calls an “urban legend” — as Republicans like U.S. Sen. Kit Bond of Missouri have done — King gives it credibility by saying he can see a case for the plan appearing, dot by dot.

“My own view is that if you look at all of the signals that are there, look at the evidence that exists and all the dots, and you connect the dots, you can draw that picture,” King said at an Aug. 19 town hall meeting at Cronk’s Cafe Restaurant & Lounge in Denison.

From the exhaustive Post Dispatch story on the North American Union theory:

Forget conspiracy theories about JFK’s assassination, black helicopters, Sept. 11, 2001. This is the big one.

We’re talking about the secret plan to build a superhighway, a giant 10- to 12-lane production, from the Yucatán to the Yukon. This “SuperCorridor” would allow the really big part of the plan to take place: the merging of the governments of Canada, the United States and Mexico. Say goodbye to the dollar, and maybe even the English language.

Texas Congressman Ron Paul famously trafficked in doom-and-gloom predictions about a superhighway and a union of the three nations in the Republican presidential primaries. Federal and state trade and highway officials said Paul’s claims were a paranoid fantasy.

U.S. Rep. Steve King

U.S. Rep. Steve King

A Boston Globe story about the North American Union’s emergence as an issue at GOP town hall meeting described it this way: “If you haven’t heard about the NAU, that may be because its plotters have succeeded in keeping it secret. Or, more likely, because there is no such thing.”

King acknowledged that such a plan, which would involve ceding some national sovereignty, would be hard to accomplish surreptitiously. But he said he sees signs of a developing union in official U.S.-Mexican counter-terrorism discussions.

“The idea is to not worry so much about our interior border but to take our security out to our ocean borders,” King said.

King said any notion he had of waving off the issue of a North American Union as a joke vanished about a year ago when he heard former Mexican President Vicente Fox speak at Buena Vista University in Storm Lake.

“I actually have notes in my briefcase out in the vehicle from Vicente Fox’s speech,” King said.

It is telling that — of all the papers on all the issues that a congressman sees — King would take these “notes” along on a campaign swing.

“He [Fox] painted a picture of a North American Union,” King recalled. “And I listened to it and I thought this is the first time I’ve heard somebody of that stature talk so openly about an idea that will be rejected by the American people.”

Fox, who served as Mexican president from 2000 to 2006, no doubt gave North American Union-believers grist for their mills. I covered Fox in Storm Lake last October and this how I reported that portion of his remarks:

In the bigger picture, Fox advocated an economic system for the Americas that he envisions as operating something akin to the European Union. He said the United States clearly has a labor shortage and that a younger Mexico with a “mature” United States, in the demographics of age, have complementary economies. What’s more, Fox said, many of the Hispanics working in this nation and hailing from foreign places just want to make enough to live more comfortably in their homelands and aren’t viewing America as anything more than a wage-earning weigh station.

But it is a stretch to go from big-picture, lecture-circuit, book-selling speeches (where Fox also sought to make news by endorsing Hillary Clinton) to King’s dot-to-dot conspiracy involving current lawmakers and bureaucrats in all three nations.

King even buys into North American Union blogger-conspiracy theorists’ beliefs that a distribution area is being built in Kansas City to facilitate a superhighway of tri-nation traffic (peddled by, for instance, Jerome Corsi).

“You look at the location in Kansas City that looks like it’s going to be a distribution warehouse that is port of entry, those things are pretty compelling,” King said.

Comments

  • primus

    God what a crackpot.

    • Peggy2

      I agree – Burns is really out there.

  • Peggy2

    What is this, the fifth or sixth story Burns has written based on King's August 19 town hall meeting?

    I feel compelled to send Doug some AAA batteries for his hand-held audio recorder – he must lull himself to sleep every night with Steve King's voice, conjuring up visions of his next hatchet piece.

  • PatriotFlag

    What is this guy doing. Looks like he is going to drop in columns against Rep. King at various times
    over the next month and a half. If Rep. King says he has those notes in his brief case you better believe
    him. For some reason Doug Burns dislikes Rep. King and I can only believe it is because Doug Burns
    is a left wing Liberal which I know he hates to be labeled as he feels he is a good non-biased reporter but we all know better.

  • daddysteve

    Plans for a “superhighway” didn't exist? Then what land appropriation did the locals vote down in Texas? What was the Canadian Parliament debating this year? Better dig a little deeper, Doug.

  • riverdog9

    Call it what it is.

    It a crackpot conspiracy theory promoted by the John Birch Society, Jerome “Swiftboat” Corsi, Ron Paul, and the militia movement. That Steve King believes it says that he is truly on the delusional far right fringe of American politics. There is no basis in fact whatsoever for this theory, but white supremacists and their camp followers, like Michelle Malkin and Lou Dobbs, use this to get their ignorant and bigoted fans all worked up.

    The Southern Poverty Law Center discusses these wackos here: http://www.splcenter.org/intel/intelreport/arti…

    • Peggy2

      Aren't you Who?bler's webmaster?

      • riverdog9

        I am no one's webmaster. The only things I try to master are facts.

        I notice that you tend to take aim at the messenger rather than engage on the message in your comments here. Today is no exception. You have attacked Burns, but are silent on what, exactly, is inaccurate in what he wrote. Did he quote King accurately, so far as you know? Did you read at any of the links he included? Do you share King's beliefs, as quoted here? If so, why?

        Here is an excerpt from the SPLC article that I cited. You might want to read the whole thing, then encourage Congressman King to focus his attention on real problems next time you see him.

        “The 'North American Union'
        Since 2005, the dominant conspiracy theory animating the anti-immigration movement has been the so-called “North American Union,” described as a plot to surrender American sovereignty in a planned merger with Canada and Mexico. The plotters are typically said to be various foreign leaders, President George W. Bush and his “neo-conservative” allies, and an array of leading American liberals.

        If the John Birch Society (JBS) and others pushing this theory are to be believed, President Bush began ceding American sovereignty on March 23, 2005, at a meeting in Waco, Texas, with Canadian Prime Minister Paul Martin and Mexican President Vicente Fox. The meeting ended with the signing of what was called the Security and Prosperity Partnership (SPP), which set up a series of working groups to study cooperation in transportation, energy, aviation, the environment and more.

        Most people familiar with the SPP understand that it is a benign and slow-moving attempt to coordinate trade and security policies in a bid to improve the lives of citizens in all three countries. But to the conspiracy theorists, it is a plot that will end with Mexico sending millions more of its citizens to the United States, international courts that overrule American justice, hate crime laws that will send anti-gay Christian preachers to prison, and more. The plotters are said to include the militia bogeyman of the Council of Foreign Relations and are supposedly directed by American University Professor Robert Pastor.

        Lately, the paranoia about the SPP process has become so intense that a proposed highway linking Canada, Mexico and the United States is seen as part of evil machinations that will end with the Mexican government seizing control of the key Missouri River port in Kansas City. Other conspiracy theorists fear that a new currency, the “Amero,” will displace good, old-fashioned American dollars.

        The leader in “educating” the public about the North American Union (NAU) plot has been the [John Birch Society], which says “politicians and internationalists” in America are “effectively destroying the United States.” In fact, the long dormant group has been reanimated by the theory, assigning writer Mary Benoit to cover it relentlessly in the JBS magazine The New American. JBS has allied itself on this issue with Howard Phillips, leader of the anti-immigrant Constitution Party, and added nativist leader Chris Simcox of the Minuteman Civil Defense Corps to its speakers bureau.”

        There is also the Google if you would like to add to your knowledge.

        • Peggy2

          Burns has proven himself to be a biased journalist time and time again. I have no use for his trumped up articles.

          • riverdog9

            Translation: I got nuthin'.

          • Peggy2

            Correction: I don't care. And neither does anybody else in the Fifth District.

  • daddysteve

    riverdog9, I reiterate. What was going on in Canada? What was going on in Texas? Dig deeper. Get away from the neocon rags you get your news from.

    • riverdog9

      No, you dig deeper. If you have any facts to back up your theories, post links to reputable sources that support what you are saying, which is what Doug Burns did.

      You and Peggy have been flinging accusations of bias at a reporter who took the trouble to write about what King said, then investigate the underlying facts and report on those, with sources that he disclosed. So far, all I have read here is a lot of empty nonsense about how terrible Burns is, but not one word to contradict any fact he cited.

      It reminds me of the Steven Colbert line about how “the facts have a well-known liberal bias.” Or the anonymous administration official who declared to Ron Suskind that there was something called “the reality-based community,” which would witness them making up their own reality.

      The game's up, folks. Bush is leaving, finally. And taking his Cheney and his torture and his eavesdropping on Americans with him. We will see whether the Fifth District of Iowa “doesn't care,” and retains one of Bush's loyal footsoldiers to represent their very pressing and serious economic interests in the Congress of the United States.

  • daddysteve

    riverdog9- I agree, you won't find any official using the term ” North American Union” . Of course they don't use the words torture and kidnapping either. It's called “extraordinary rendition”. I guess torture doesn't exist. I guess corporate welfare doesn't exist because they call it “lobbying” . The Consumer Price Index and GDP aren't manipulated, they're “adjusted heuristically” . The military is never guilty of murder, it's only collateral damage. Politicians don't pander, they “move to the center” . If you really want to get your tin-foil in a bunch then check out “chemtrails”. There's a conspiracy I've been observing in the sky for months.now.

  • watcher68

    Ladies and gentlemen, the corridor plans are not fiction. Please look at www dot Canamex dot org. Spelled out here just in case there are link blockers on this comment site.

  • watcher68

    Ladies and gentlemen, the corridor plans are not fiction. Please look at www dot Canamex dot org. Spelled out here just in case there are link blockers on this comment site.

  • watcher68

    Ladies and gentlemen, the corridor plans are not fiction. Please look at www dot Canamex dot org. Spelled out here just in case there are link blockers on this comment site.

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