Monday, April 11, 2016

Japan Really Wants You To Support The TPP

Japan's American embassy has worked hard to promote the wonders of the Trans Pacific Partnership, so hard in fact that the U.S. lobbying firm retained by the Japanese government has helpfully provided the language used in Op-Eds published in several newspapers in California.  The authors just scratched in their names.


Take this column by former San Diego mayor Jerry Sanders, who now serves as the president and CEO of the San Diego Regional Chamber of Commerce, in the San Diego Union-Tribunetitled: “Trans-Pacific trade pact benefits San Diego.”
Much of the language in Sanders’ op-ed also appears in a “San Diego Draft op-ed” distributed by Southwest Strategies, a consulting firm paid by the Japanese government to promote the TPP:
Jerry Sanders: “Notably, the TPP includes Japan, which is significant”
Southwest Strategies: “Notably, the TPP includes Japan, which is critical”
Jerry Sanders: “Trade is essential for sustaining America’s role as the most innovative economy in the world”
Southwest Strategies: “Trade is essential for sustaining America’s role as the most innovative economy in the world”
Jerry Sanders: “With more than 95 percent of the world’s consumers outside of our borders, and with more than one in five U.S. jobs dependent on trade, it is essential that the U.S. continue to open new markets for American goods and services, while creating and sustaining jobs for American workers.”
Southwest Strategies: “With more than 95 percent of the world’s consumers outside of our borders, and with more than one in five U.S. jobs dependent on trade, it is critical that the U.S. continue to open new markets for American goods, intellectual property rights and services, and create and sustain high-skilled, high-wage jobs for American workers.”


Isn't nice to know that know that the Japanese government can hire an American lobbying firm to write pro TPP articles which are then published under the byline of an individual who, unbeknownst to the reader is also working to have the trade agreement approved by the U.S. Congress.  



     

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