Jim Balsillie of BlackBerry fame has come out against the TPP.
From the CBC article:
Jim Balsillie warns that provisions tucked into the Trans-Pacific Partnership could cost Canada hundreds of billions of dollars — and eventually make signing it the worst public policy decision in the country's history.
After poring over the treaty's final text, the businessman who helped build Research In Motion into a $20-billion global player said the deal contains "troubling" rules on intellectual property that threaten to make Canada a "permanent underclass" in the economy of selling ideas.
...
And unlike legislation passed in Parliament, he noted treaties like this one set rules that must be followed forever. This deal, he added, also features "iron-clad" dispute mechanisms.
"I'm worried and I don't know how we can get out of this," said Balsillie, who's also helping guide the creation of a lobby group that would press for the needs of Canada's innovation sector.
"I think our trade negotiators have profoundly failed Canadians and our future innovators. I really lament it."
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday November 10 2015, @04:12PM
> destroy the U.S. Constitution
...and every other Constitution who says the people is sovereign.
Because being sovereign implies being able to change your mind, and the TPP, according to the summary, doesn't permit it.
Now, if you think constitutions were a stopgap measure till the last remains of aristocracy and other old systems were made irrelevant, you would have a point, because apparently the same system who pushed out kings now pushes out parliaments. "Revolution" as an astronomical term implies returning to the initial point, the joke is on us.