shecky
Master Poster
- Joined
- May 24, 2002
- Messages
- 2,192
I've read references from folks I'd generally consider whackos of this "NAFTA Superhighway", but never gave it much thought until I came across this link today.
What puzzles me the most is the notion that the scenario described above is supposed to be an evil scheme. The part about "four football fields wide" sounds a little exaggerated, but really. "High-tech electronic customs monitors, freight from China, offloaded into nonunionized Mexican ports...nary a speed bump, bound for Kansas City, where the cheap goods manufactured in booming Far East factories will embark on the final leg of their journey into the nation's Wal-Marts"? That sounds like a pretty good thing, does it not?
Furthermore, would a NAFTA Superhighway really be anything new? North America is already covered with highways. It's already quite possible to travel by truck from AK to Canada to CONUS, to Mexico DF, and beyond. Making road and regulatory improvements to facilitate even better mobility seems like a very good thing to me.
Something here for nearly everyone to get paranoid about. The usual suspects are up in arms. Even Ron Paul jumped on the bandwagon. Google pulls up tons of references. (Naturally, The Onion scooped everyone.) Except there isn't really such a proposal as "The NAFTA Superhighway".It will be four football fields wide, an expansive gully of concrete, noise and exhaust, swelled with cars, trucks, trains and pipelines carrying water, wires and God knows what else. Through towns large and small it will run, plowing under family farms, subdevelopments, acres of wilderness. Equipped with high-tech electronic customs monitors, freight from China, offloaded into nonunionized Mexican ports, will travel north, crossing the border with nary a speed bump, bound for Kansas City, where the cheap goods manufactured in booming Far East factories will embark on the final leg of their journey into the nation's Wal-Marts.
What puzzles me the most is the notion that the scenario described above is supposed to be an evil scheme. The part about "four football fields wide" sounds a little exaggerated, but really. "High-tech electronic customs monitors, freight from China, offloaded into nonunionized Mexican ports...nary a speed bump, bound for Kansas City, where the cheap goods manufactured in booming Far East factories will embark on the final leg of their journey into the nation's Wal-Marts"? That sounds like a pretty good thing, does it not?
Furthermore, would a NAFTA Superhighway really be anything new? North America is already covered with highways. It's already quite possible to travel by truck from AK to Canada to CONUS, to Mexico DF, and beyond. Making road and regulatory improvements to facilitate even better mobility seems like a very good thing to me.
Thank you. Anyone living in a port city on the Gulf of Mexico is having an economic pin stuck into his palm.