In January of 1996 Council on Foreign Relations member President Bill
Clinton wrote :

“Fair trade among free markets does more than simply enrich America;
it enriches all partners to each transaction. It raises consumer
demand for our products worldwide; encourages investment & growth;
lifts people out of poverty & ignorance; increases understanding; and
helps dispel long-held hatreds. That’s why we have worked so hard to
help build free-market institutions in Eastern Europe, Russia, and the
former Soviet republics. That’s why we have supported commercial
liberalization in China-the world’s fastest-growing market. Just as
democracy helps make the world safe for commerce, commerce helps make
the world safe for democracy. It’s a two-way street.

In the coming years, we must continue to negotiate to lower trade
barriers and insist that our trade partners play by fair trading
rules. As we continue to work to open new markets, we must ensure the
protection of our workers & our environment, as well as seek to
advance labor and improve environmental conditions in developing
countries.” (Source: Between Hope and History, by Bill Clinton, p. 36
Jan 1, 1996)

On November 15, 1999 Council on Foreign Relations Member Margret
Warner moderated a discussion on the trade deal struck between China
and the U.S. and how it might pave the way for China's entry into the
World Trade Organization. The discussion took place on Council on
Foreign Relations member Jim Lehrer’s a Public Broadcasting Service TV
show A Newshour with Jim Lehrer. The discussion included Council on
Foreign Relations member Kenneth Lieberthal, Council on Foreign
Relations member Robert Kapp, Liu Xiaoming, deputy chief of mission at
the Chinese embassy in Washington; and Robert E. Scott, an
international economist at the Economic Policy Institute in
Washington.

Council on Foreign Relations member Kenneth Lieberthal, was special
advisor to CFR member President Bill Clinton and senior director for
Asia affairs at the National Security Council. Lieberthal had just.
returned from the negotiations in China.

Council on Foreign Relations member Robert Kapp was president of the
U.S.-China Business Council, which represented more than 250 American
companies doing business in China. Two companies on the USCBC’s
membership list are The Scowcroft Group, an international advisory
company  managed by Council on Foreign Relation member Brent
Scowcroft, former National Security Advisor to U.S. President Council
on Foreign Relations member George H.W. Bush and Council on Foreign
Relations member Gerald Ford (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
The_Scowcroft_Group ) (2); and Kissinger Associates, Inc., a New York
City-based international consulting firm, founded and run by Council
on Foreign Relations member Henry Kissinger, Council on Foreign
Relations member Brent Scowcroft, and Council on Foreign Relations
member Lawrence Eagleburger (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
Kissinger_Associates ).(3)

Liu earned a master's degree in international relations from the
Fletcher School of Law and Foreign Affairs of Tufts University in
1983. The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy is the oldest school in
the United States dedicated solely to graduate studies in
international relations.. Every Fall, the school enrolls approximately
450 full-time students. The Fletcher School employs 30 tenured or
tenure-track faculty. Council on Foreign Relations member  Stephen W.
Bosworth, the U.S. special representative for North Korea policy, is
the current dean of The Fletcher School. CFR member Peter Ackerman is
the Chairman of the Fletcher School and sits on the schools
International Management Advisory Group. (http://www.sourcewatch.org/
index.php?title=Peter_Ackerman) The Fletcher School employs 30 tenured
or tenure-track faculty. Seventeen faculty members are Council on
Foreign Relations members.(1,2).

Robert E. Scott “joined the Economic Policy Institute as an
international economist in 1996. Before that, he was an assistant
professor with the College of Business and Management of the
University of Maryland at College Park. His areas of research include
international economics and trade agreements and their impacts on
working people in the U.S. and other countries, the economic impacts
of foreign investment, and the macroeconomic effects of trade and
capital flows.” (http://www.epi.org/pages/economist/#scott). “The
Economic Policy Institute, a nonprofit Washington D.C. think tank, was
created in 1986 to broaden the discussion about economic policy to
include the interests of low- and middle-income workers. Today, with
global competition expanding, wage inequality rising, and the methods
and nature of work changing in fundamental ways, it is as crucial as
ever that people who work for a living have a voice in the economic
discourse.” (http://www.epi.org/pages/
about_the_economic_policy_institute/ )

Council on Foreign Relations member Kenneth Lieberthal, Council on
Foreign Relations member Robert Kapp, and Council on Foreign
Relations  educated Liu Xiaoming argued for admitting China to the
WTO. Robert E. Scott argued against saying it would be bad deal for
middle-income Americans and their families. You can see a transcript
of the show and listen to the audio at 
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/asia/july-dec99/wto_11-15.html
.

On May 1, 2000 Council on Foreign Relations member NY Times Reporter
David E. Sanger moderated a discussion at the Council on Foreign
Relations Headquarters with Max Baucus, member, U.S. Senate. CFR
member Sanger opened the discussion saying, “Thank you all for joining
us and for this interesting session with Senator Baucus who, as you
all know, is one of the leading proponents in the Senate of Permanent
Normal Trading Relations with China. We are only about three weeks
away now from the first scheduled vote which will be in the House; it
seems like a good time to begin this discussion.” You can read the
transcript of the discussion at 
http://www.cfr.org/publication/3647/why_pntr_for_china_cant_fail.html
.

On July 2nd 2000 Council on Foreign Relations member President Bill
Clinton wrote :

After 13 years of negotiations, the Administration concluded a
landmark agreement for China’s entry into the World Trade
Organization. China agreed to grant the U.S. significant new access to
its rapidly growing market of over one billion people, while we have
agreed simply to maintain the market access policies we already apply
to China by granting it permanent Normal Trade Relations. The U.S.-
China agreement slashes Chinese tariffs on American goods; opens
China’s markets to American services, and contains safeguards against
unfair trading practices. China’s membership in the WTO will spur
economic reforms in China, open China to information and ideas from
around the world, and strengthen the rule of law in China.

The Administration [also] secured commitments from Asian Pacific
nations to eliminate barriers to open trade in the region by 2020 for
developing countries and 2010 for industrialized countries. Over the
next two years, 15 sectors will be identified for tariff reductions.
( Source: WhiteHouse.gov web site Jul 2, 2000 ).

On February 16, 2000  Robert E. Scott published Issue Brief #137 The
High Cost of the China-WTO Deal Administration's own analysis suggests
spiraling deficits, job losses. The Brief states “China's entry into
the WTO, under PNTR with the U.S., will lock this relationship into
place, setting the stage for rapidly rising trade deficits in the
future that would severely depress employment in manufacturing, the
sector most directly affected by trade. China's accession to the WTO
would also increase income inequality in the U.S. Despite the
Administration's rhetoric, its own analysis suggests that, after China
enters the WTO, the U.S. trade deficit with China will expand, not
contract. The contradiction between the Administration's claims and
its own economic analysis makes it impossible to take seriously its
economic argument for giving China permanent trade concessions.”

On April 4, 2008 as the presidential campaign heated up in the United
States Robert E. Scott debated  Daniel J. Ikenson, associate director
of the Cato Institute’s Center for Trade Policy Studies. The subject
of the debate was whether the next U.S. president should get tougher
with China on trade. The debate took place at the Council on Foreign
Relations Headquarters.  Scott  said, “The gains from trade between
the United States and China have flowed to a very small segment of
both countries’ elites. The gap between the value of what U.S. workers
produce and what they receive has widened dramatically, partly because
deregulated trade has suppressed the real wages of all non-college
educated workers (about 70 percent of the labor force). Between 1980
and 2005, U.S. productivity rose 71 percent while real compensation
(including benefits) of non-supervisory workers rose just 4 percent.
This measure includes all the benefits of globalization received by
these workers. Most of the benefits of growth since 1980 have been
captured by the top 10 percent, especially the top 1 percent, of U.S.
workers. The problem is not trade, per se, but the current trading
system which has encouraged a race-to-the bottom in wages and labor
standards.

The systematic suppression of workers’ rights has reduced Chinese
wages by 47 percent to 85 percent according to a recentlabor-rights
petition, and the problems are worsening. Occupational illness and
injury rates have never been higher in Chinese manufacturing. Workers
are frequently forced to go unpaid, and their complaints and protests
are often met with violent government responses.

Fueling China’s vast trade surplus with the United States is its very
high savings rates, nearing 50 percent of GDP in recent years.
Conventional wisdom is that Chinese workers save excessively because
China’s pension and public health systems are so poor. However,
household savings recently declined to 16 percent of GDP.  Business
savings, on the other hand have soared to nearly 24 percent of GDP and
government savings exceeded 10 percent according to the IMF.

Thus, globalization’s benefits in China are reaped by an elite cadre
who own and operate private and public enterprises. Their savings are
piling up in the net worth of the rapidly expanding business empires
under their control…” (http://www.cfr.org/publication/15888/
should_the_next_us_president_adopt_a_tougher_stance_on_trade_policy_with_china.html
 )

On October 14, 2010, The NY Times reported, “The United States trade
deficit widened in August, with the politically charged imbalance with
China reaching its highest mark on record, according to government
figures released Thursday.” ( 
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/15/business/economy/15econ.html?_r=1).
To put this in perspective when CFR member Clinton was considering
promoting China’s entry into the WTO the total trade deficit of the
entire year was 68 Billion dollars in 2010 our trade deficit is 201
Billion dollars and the year is not over.  (http://www.census.gov/
foreign-trade/balance/c5700.html#2010 ).

On October 7, 2010, The International Business Times reported, “Trade
deficit with China costing the U.S. 500k jobs this year… Between 2001
and 2008 alone, China displaced 2.4 million U.S. jobs, and 60 percent
of those were in the manufacturing sector…” Since China joined the
World Trade Organization in 2001, the U.S. has lost 5.5 million
manufacturing jobs and unemployment is at 9.6%. (
http://www.ibtimes.com/articles/69697/20101007/trade-deficit-with-china-costing-the-u-s-500k-jobs.htm
)

Wake up people, Robert E. Scott is right, globalization’s benefits are
being reaped by a small group of elites. You are not part of the
group. The group has names, the names include the Council on Foreign
Relations, They Royal Institute of International Relations, the
Canadian Institute of International Affairs, the New Zealand Institute
of International Affairs, the Australian Institute of International
Affairs,  the South African Institute of International Affairs, the
Indian Institute
of International Affairs, the Netherlands Institute of International
Affairs, the Japanese Institute of Pacific Relations, the Chinese
Instituteof Pacific Relations, and the Russian Institute of Pacific
Relations, the Bilderbergers, and the Trilateral Commission.



(1) Fletcher School CFR member Faculty members : CFR member Jeswald W.
Salacues (http://fletcher.tufts.edu/faculty/salacuse/default.shtml ),
CFR member Michael J. Glennon, Professor of International Law (http://
fletcher.tufts.edu/faculty/glennon/default.shtml ). CFR member Eileen
F. Babbitt Professor of International Conflict Management Practice,
CFR member Amar Bhidé, CFR member Thomas Schmidheiny Professor of
International Business, CFR member John Allen Burgess Adjunct
Professor of International,CFR member, CFR member Antonia Handler
Chayes Professor of Practice of International Politics and Law,
Daniel W. Drezner Associate Professor of International Politics
(http://www.cfr.org/bios/5471/daniel_w_drezner.html ), CFR member
Steven Dunaway Adjunct Senior Fellow for International Economics
(http://www.cfr.org/bios/15102/steven_dunaway.html ), , CFR member
Leila Fawaz Issam M. Fares Professor of Lebanese and Eastern
Mediterranean Studies, CFR member Michael J. Glennon Professor of
International Law, CFR member Alan K. Henrikson Associate Professor of
Diplomatic History, CFR member Robert Pfaltzgraff Shelby Cullom Davis
Professor of International Security Studies, CFR member William A.
Rugh The (CFR member) Edward R. Murrow Visiting Professor Public
Diplomacy, CFR member Jeswald W. Salacuse CFR Henry J. Braker
Professor of Commercial Law, CFR member G. Richard Thoman Visiting
Professor of International Business, and CFR member David A.
WirthVisiting Professor of International Law.

(2) The Fletcher School and Johns Hopkins University's Paul H. Nitze
School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) are the only non-law
schools in the US that compete in the Phillip C. Jessup International
Law Moot Court Competition. Paul H. Nitze is a member of the council
on Foreign Relations. Nitze has been a fixture in Washington since
1946 and has served in the State Department and as Secretary of the
Navy. In 1989 Nitze founded the Paul H. Nitze School for Advanced
International Studies (SAIS) at Johns Hopkins University. In 1993
Nitze published a book titled TENSION BETWEEN OPPOSITES: REFLECTIONS
ON THE PRACTICES AND THEORY OF POLITICS. When a CFR member tries to
make a difference it is a difference designed to create tension
between two or more target groups. Nitze's targets have been the US,
Russia, and Asia. When nuclear weapons made their ominous debut at the
end of World War II, Nitze was there. As Vice-Chairman of the US
Strategic Bombing Survey, Nitze witnessed first-hand the effects of
the A-bomb at the sites of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. (http://
www.bilderberg.org/roundtable/NitzesNotSees.html )

 (3) According to a March 2001 report, Selected Staff and Board
Members of the Scowcroft Group included the following people: The
Scowcroft Team : CFR member Brent Scowcroft, CFR member Kevin Nealer,
CFR member Colin Powell, CFR member Condoleezza Rice, CFR member
Richard Haass (currently CFR’s president), CFR member Ken Juster, CFR
member Howard Baker, CFR member Carla Hills (currently CFR co-Chair),
CFR member Robert Strauss, CFR member Lawrence Eagleburger.(
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Scowcroft_Group )

(4) Corporate Members of both the Council on Foreign Relations and the
U.S.-China Business Council include Bank of America Merrill Lynch,
Chevron Corporation, Exxon Mobil Corporation, American Express, BP
p.l.c., Citi, Hewlet Packard, JPMorgan Chase & Co., McGraw-Hill
Companies, Moody’ Investors Service, Morgan Stanley, Standard
Chartered Bank, ACE Ltd., AT&T, General Electric Company, Greenberg
Traurig, LLP, IBM Corporation, Merck & Co. Inc., PepsiCo, Inc., Pfizer
Inc., PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, Prudential Financial, United
Technologies, Verizon Communications and Walmart. (http://
www.uschina.org/member_companies.html    &   
http://www.cfr.org/about/corporate/roster.html
)

-- 
Please consider seriously the reason why these elite institutions are not 
discussed in the mainstream press despite the immense financial and political 
power they wield? 
There are sick and evil occultists running the Western World. They are power 
mad lunatics like something from a kids cartoon with their fingers on the 
nuclear button! Armageddon is closer than you thought. Only God can save our 
souls from their clutches, at least that's my considered opinion - Tony

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