|  The key challenge that we face in terms of our 
			international trade practices is finding the means through which we 
			can foster fair trade that protects the rights and prerogatives of 
			American workers while also upholding the best practices standards 
			that are in place with respect to our international trade partners. 
			Fair trade agreements must be based upon the three key principles 
			that the dignity of labor is honored, workplace safety standards are 
			upheld, and environmental protection is guaranteed. In my view, the 
			failure of any proposed trade agreement to ensure such practices 
			would be sufficient reason to oppose such a measure.
 We must remember that nations enter into trade agreements because it 
			is mutually beneficent for them to do so—it is perceived as the 
			classic “win-win” scenario. An effective trade agreement cannot be 
			evaluated in the context of being a zero-sum game in which only one 
			side benefits and the other side capitulates. The key element to 
			negotiating effective trade agreements is to utilize the principle 
			of national self-interest while at the same time proffering 
			potential benefits that can be advantageous to the economic 
			development of our trade partners. When describing the benefits of 
			capitalism we often use the old familiar adage that “A rising tide 
			lifts all ships.” If we truly believe in the economic potential of 
			the free market, we must be willing to engage in fair trade 
			practices that can help to lift others out of poverty and despair. 
			Doing so is in the long-range strategic interest of the United 
			States.
 
 I believe that there are key potential hemispheric partnerships that 
			the U.S. can develop with sister republics in the Americas that can 
			be mutually beneficent in the long run. Key among these is the 
			opening of relations with Cuba after two generations of embargoed 
			trade. An effective trade policy can leverage the potential for 
			economic development with the attainment of key benchmarks dealing 
			with expansion of democracy, liberalization of human rights 
			practices, and freedom of association.
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			 Although these goals are ideal in the abstract, we 
			must certainly incorporate the “trust but verify” principle to 
			guarantee that real progress is being achieved as a result of trade 
			policy. Our policy must always be contingent upon real and 
			measurable results. In addition to Cuba, such possibilities for 
			hemispheric trade partnerships could also be developed with Bolivia 
			and Venezuela provided that they too were willing to implement the 
			changes outlined in the previously mentioned benchmarks.
 Fair trade policies cannot establish the groundwork for siphoning 
			off American jobs to foreign subcontractors who hire cheap labor and 
			do not meet safety and environmental standards. The United States is 
			a signatory to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948) and 
			to various international protocols that seek to suppress unfree 
			labor and modern slavery practices. We must never agree to trade 
			policies that act in violation of the key values that we hold dear 
			with respect to the dignity of labor and the worth of the 
			individual. There are key advantages that can be gained through 
			international trade agreements, but we must never permit commercial 
			interests to overshadow our commitment to long-standing practices 
			that honor the dignity of labor.
 
			Past related 
			articles [Text from file received] |