Fraud - Museum of Civilization (?)Written by Robert Bruce Baird
ECUADOREAN POTTERY OF JOMON, JAPANESE DESIGN AND STYLE: - We mentioned this briefly in General Introduction. Jomon state is where Ainu are to this day. There are few pure blood Ainu and one author says these people were Shoguns. They are white people . Kennewick Man may be Ainu and that is another fraud with same purpose in mind. The issue is one of deceit because Canadian Museum of Civilization (sounds fishy to begin with) said in their handsome 1989 book ('Ancient America') that there was evidence of an indigenous local pottery industry that led to unique designs and technology. Thus any reader would allow it might be a pure co-incidence; especially when they drove point home by saying it was an anomaly and that any visitors would have been integrated into native population such as others they could prove had been. They, of course, pointed out that much of that integration was as sacrificial victims to heathen gods. The net result being that if this was best evidence of 'diffusion' and worldwide travel (which they said it was, and it isn't) clearly one should know they are right. The main position of academia is still - there was 'No Cultural Impact' even as date of travel to Americas has been pushed back at least 15,000 years before Clovis due to work of Dillehay and others as reported in National Geographic and Scientific American in early 2001. The real concern is that there was NO prior industry as reported in 'The Guardian',
| | Steel Tubing Tariffs Prove that NAFTA Still Needs WorkWritten by Kaitlin Carruth
The North American Trade Agreement (NAFTA) was implemented on January 1, 1994. An extension of previous Canada-U.S. Free Trade Agreement of 1989, NAFTA is second largest free trade area in world. The agreement intends to limit restrictions on trade in many industries and phase out tariffs in a period of 14 years. While NAFTA has created greater trade in North America, there still are concerns on how well trade agreement is accomplishing its goal of deregulation. These concerns gained some validity with recent issuance of tariffs in steel tubing market in Mexico. After a careful investigation, Mexico's Economy of Ministry came to conclusion that United States was dumping their steel tubing products into their country. The term "dumping" is used to denote any product that is sold to another country for a lower price than in its home market. By many, dumping is believed to be unfair competition. With 469% increase in U.S. steel tubing imports from 1999 and 2001(reported by Mexico's Economy of Ministry) it appears that there was some definite foul play occurring in industry. Mexico's Economy of Ministry felt that tariffs were needed on U.S. steel tubing in order to stop effects of dumping and to help economy in Mexico. On May 27, 2005 Mexico issued tariffs that will raise prices of U.S. tubing anywhere from 7 percent to 25 percent in hopes of leveling out playing field in steel industry. A statement made by Ministry declared that "imports from United States take place under conditions of price discrimination and harm national production of similar products." This event has proven that NAFTA has not cured all our problems with trade and is still struggling in deregulation. In result of trying to save jobs in steel industry, both countries have brought us farther away from free trade. Dumping and tariffs are both activities that will keep countries away from free trade.
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