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  • In recent years, the Obama administration has put its full weight behindfast tracking

  • the Trans-Pacific Partnership, eliminating Congress’s ability to edit or stall the

  • agreement. In response, Wikileaks recently released classified documents from the secret

  • arrangement, and condemned the partnership in a press release. So what’s the big deal?

  • The US has fast tracked a number of trade agreements between countries in the last decade,

  • what’s so scary about the Trans-Pacific Partnership?

  • Well, first of all, this agreement covers a huge section of the world. It governs international

  • investments and trade regulations between the United States, Australia, Brunei, Canada,

  • Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore, and Vietnam. Together, these

  • countries represent more than 40% of the world’s GDP, and make for the single largest economic

  • treaty ever.

  • The most recent Wikileaks release revealed that the partnership establishes extrajudicial

  • courts in which corporations can potentially sue countries over laws and policies that

  • affect a company’s future profits. This is a huge deal. Imagine a tobacco company

  • suing a country because their anti-smoking regulations could potentially hurt the company’s

  • profits. Sound unlikely? Well, in 2011, tobacco giant Philip Morris used some clever legal

  • maneuvering to sue Australia for that exact reason on the basis of an outdated trade agreement

  • with Hong Kong.

  • The Obama administration has promised that the deal will increase jobs, boost US exports,

  • and lower tariffs on US products in Asia, which will let the US compete more aggressively

  • against China. However, economists like Robert Reich have called this a globalrace to

  • the bottom”. That’s an economic term for when governments reduce regulations and taxes

  • in order to attract investing companies. This practice has the added effect of lessening

  • labor laws, lowering wages, and raising the rate of outsourcing. Additionally, Democratic

  • Senator Ben Cardin [KAR-din] has voiced concerns that three of the countries, Brunei, Malaysia,

  • and Vietnam, have histories of human rights abuses.

  • Since 2012 there have been a number of protests and petitions to stop the TPP, or at the very

  • least to release the information within the agreement. In a surprising twist, several

  • House Democrats have vehemently opposed the idea of fast tracking the deal, while Republicans

  • have shown strong support for the President.

  • So what’s so bad about the Trans Pacific Trade Agreement? In short, it’s a classified

  • deal that creates an international court not bound by the laws of any country, that allows

  • companies to sue countries over potential lost profits. Although supporters of the deal

  • say that it is a means of future economic growth, Wikileaks founder Julian Assange warns

  • thatSimilar tribunals have already been shown to chill the adoption of sane environmental

  • protection, public health and public transport policies." With nearly 800 million people

  • likely to be affected by this agreement, shouldn’t we know what’s in the agreement before it

  • becomes law?

  • Lobbying behind closed doors is a huge part of the american political system. To learn

  • more about how it works, check out our video here. Subscribe right here to be the first

  • to see all our latest videos! Thanks for watching!

In recent years, the Obama administration has put its full weight behindfast tracking

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世界を滅ぼす秘密の条約 (The Secret Treaty That Could Ruin The World)

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    羅紹桀 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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