Joseph Blake writes:
The trade deal is called TTIP, which stands for The
Translantic Trade and Investment Partnership, but you
don’t need to remember that.
If passed, corporations will have the power to sue
governments who implement laws that might lessen the corporation’s profits.
This
will take place in front of secret arbitration panels and this process is
called something even less memorable that I also won’t tell you the name of it
because, again, you will never remember it.
According to a leaked document
from the European Commission, those in Europe negotiating on our behalf have
devised a strategy of “managing transparency” in order to make sure the deal gets
passed.
I’m not sure how managing transparency works but it’s presumably
similar to “bending the truth” or “packing a lie” for example. This was all revealed by George Monbiot back in December. [Well, not "revealed" to some of us, but he did manage to get it into a newspaper the existence of which is acknowledged by the media at large.]
You’re probably still wondering
why this deal is
going to destroy everything.
Do you remember that campaign
called ‘Save Lewisham Hospital’ which captured the public’s
imagination and managed to save the hospital from full closure by health
secretary Jeremy Hunt?
Well, campaigns like this that exist to protect the NHS
from privatisation could become redundant as, under the new EU-US trade deal, corporations
will be able to bypass Parliament and UK courts through the use of ad-hoc
secret courts.
If future governments try to
pass laws to protect the NHS from privatisation then corporations could sue
behind closed doors to prevent this from happening.
When even the Labour Party are emerging from the shadows
of timidity to speak out on this, you really do have to worry.
There
are some other more strange things that could happen.
Did you know that 90 per
cent of chicken carcasses in America are washed with chlorine to get rid of the
bacteria? And did you know that 68 per cent of all food on the shelves in
America contains GM? Well, in Europe all of this is banned; but not for much
longer perhaps.
Can
you see a pattern starting to emerge here?
Where there is something in place
that may restrict the profits of corporations, under the new deal it would mean a country that has
banned a product or service for whatever reason would have to pay compensation
to the industry involved or let the product or service in instead.
This
could lead to the deregulation of standards on everything from food safety, to
the environment to cosmetics. KFC would have to be renamed CFC (Chlorine Fried
Chicken) and no one wants that.
In
the same month as the European elections, negotiations which will completely
change the nature of the debate around our relationship with Europe are taking
place with shadowy corporate lobbyists at the heart of the discussions
What hope is there in stopping
the deal? John Hilary, director of NGO War
on Want, has called this deal “the
end of democracy” and “the biggest transfer of power to capital in a
generation”.
In opposition they stand united with the Green Party and as announced recently, 120 other European organisations [but not UKIP, which supports the TTIP].
So
please spread the word about this new agreement. Tell a friend about the EU-US trade deal.
Beyond that, you should also probably write to your MP.
It looks like the
aim is to rush through the talks with no details entering the public domain.
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