UN Agenda 21/Sustainable Development is the action plan implemented worldwide to inventory and control all land, all water, all minerals, all plants, all animals, all construction, all means of production, all energy, all education, all information, and all human beings in the world. INVENTORY AND CONTROL.----Rosa Koire
CLICK HERE TO READ OUR BLOG
Have
you wondered where these terms 'sustainability' and 'smart growth' and
'high density urban mixed use development' came from? Doesn't it seem
like about 10 years ago you'd never heard of them and now everything
seems to include these concepts? Is that just a coincidence? That
every town and county and state and nation in the world would be
changing their land use/planning codes and government policies to align
themselves with...what?
First,
before I get going, I want to say that yes, I know it's a small world
and it takes a village and we're all one planet etc. I also know that
we have a government of the people, by the people, and for the people,
and that as cumbersome as that can be sometimes (Donald Rumsfeld said
that the Chinese have it easy; they don't have to ask their people if
they agree. And Bush Junior said that it would be great to have a
dictator as long as he was the dictator), we have a three branch
government and the Bill of Rights, Constitution, and
self-determination. This is one of the reasons why people want to come
to the US, right? We don't have Tiananmen Square here, generally
speaking (yes, I remember Kent State--not the same, and yes, an
outrage.) So I'm not against making certain issues a priority, such as
mindful energy use, alternative energy sponsorship, recycling/reuse, and
sensitivity to all living creatures.
But then you have UN Agenda 21. What is it? See our videos and radio shows at the bottom of this page, on our video page (or search YouTube for Rosa Koire) or
buy BEHIND THE GREEN MASK: U.N. Agenda 21 by Rosa Koire click here
CLICK TO PRINT OUT FLYER: WHY IS EVERYONE TALKING ABOUT UN AGENDA 21?
Considering
its policies are woven into all the General Plans of the cities and
counties, it's important for people to know where these policies are
coming from. While many people support the United Nations for its
'peacemaking' efforts, hardly anyone knows that they have very specific
land use policies that they would like to see implemented in every city,
county, state and nation. The specific plan is called United Nations
Agenda 21 Sustainable Development, which has its basis in
Communitarianism. By now, most Americans have heard of sustainable development but are largely unaware of Agenda 21.
In
a nutshell, the plan calls for governments to take control of all land
use and not leave any of the decision making in the hands of private
property owners. It is assumed that people are not good stewards of
their land and the government will do a better job if they are in
control. Individual rights in general are to give way to the needs of
communities as determined by the governing body. Moreover, people
should be rounded up off the land and packed into human settlements, or
islands of human habitation, close to employment centers and
transportation. Another program, called the Wildlands Project spells
out how most of the land is to be set aside for non-humans.
U.N.
Agenda 21 cites the affluence of Americans as being a major problem
which needs to be corrected. It calls for lowering the standard of
living for Americans so that the people in poorer countries will have
more, a redistribution of wealth. Although people around the world
aspire to achieve the levels of prosperity we have in our country, and
will risk their lives to get here, Americans are cast in a very negative
light and need to be taken down to a condition closer to average in the
world. Only then, they say, will there be social justice which is a
cornerstone of the U.N. Agenda 21 plan.
Agenda
21 policies date back to the 70's but it got its real start in 1992 at
the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro when President Bush signed onto it. Click here to see a list of the countries that signed UN Agenda 21. President
Clinton took office the following year and created the President's
Council on Sustainable Development to implement it in the United States.
Made up of federal agencies, corporations, and non-profit groups, the
President's Council on Sustainable Development moved quickly to ensure
that all federal agencies would change their policies to comply with UN
Agenda 21. A non-governmental organization called the International
Council of Local Environmental Initiatives, ICLEI, is tasked with
carrying out the goals of Agenda 21 worldwide. Remember: UN Agenda
21/Sustainable Development is a global plan that is implemented locally.
Over 600 cities in the U.S. are members; our town joined in 2007. The
costs are paid by taxpayers.
It's
time that people educate themselves and read the document and related
commentary. After that, get a copy of your city or county's General
Plan and read it. You will find all sorts of policies that are nearly
identical to those in U.N. Agenda 21. Unfortunately, their policies
have advanced largely unnoticed and we are now in the end game. People
need to identify their elected officials who are promoting the U.N.'s
policies and hold them accountable for their actions. Only when we've
identified who the people are and what they are trying to do will we be
able to evaluate whether or not we approve of the policies they are
putting forward. Some people may think it's appropriate for agencies
outside the United States to set our policies and some people will not.
The question is, aren't Americans able to develop their own
policies? Should we rely on an organization that consists of member
nations that have different forms of governments, most of which do not
value individual rights as much as we do? It's time to bring U.N.
Agenda 21 out in the open where we can have these debates and then set
our own policies in accordance with our Constitution and Bill of
Rights.
***
Ok, you say, interesting, but I don't see how that really affects me. Here are a few ways:
No
matter where you live, I'll bet that there have been hundreds of condos
built in the center of your town recently. Over the last ten years
there has been a 'planning revolution' across the US. Your commercial,
industrial, and multi-residential land was rezoned to 'mixed use.'
Nearly everything that got approvals for development was designed the
same way: ground floor retail with two stories of residential above.
Mixed use. Very hard to finance for construction, and very hard to
manage since it has to have a high density of people in order to justify
the retail. A lot of it is empty and most of the ground floor retail
is empty too. High bankruptcy rate.
So what? Most of your towns
provided funding and/or infrastructure development for these private
projects. They used Redevelopment Agency funds. Your money.
Specifically, your property taxes. Notice how there's very little money
in your General Funds now, and most of that is going to pay Police and
Fire? Your street lights are off, your parks are shaggy, your roads are
pot-holed, your hospitals are closing. The money that should be used
for these things is diverted into the Redevelopment Agency. It's the
only agency in government that can float a bond without a vote of the
people. And they did that, and now you're paying off those bonds for
the next 45 years with your property taxes. Did you know that? And by
the way, even if Redevelopment is ended, as in California, they still
have to pay off existing debt--for 30 to 45 years.
So, what does this have to do with Agenda 21?
Redevelopment
is a tool used to further the Agenda 21 vision of remaking America's
cities. With redevelopment, cities have the right to take property by
eminent domain---against the will of the property owner, and give it or
sell it to a private developer. By declaring an area of town 'blighted'
(and in some cities over 90% of the city area has been declared
blighted) the property taxes in that area can be diverted away from the
General Fund. This constriction of available funds is impoverishing the
cities, forcing them to offer less and less services, and reducing your
standard of living. They'll be telling you that it's better, however,
since they've put in nice street lights and colored paving. The money
gets redirected into the Redevelopment Agency and handed out to favored
developers building low income housing and mixed use. Smart Growth.
Cities have had thousands of condos built in the redevelopment areas and
are telling you that you are terrible for wanting your own yard, for
wanting privacy, for not wanting to be dictated to by a Condo
Homeowner's Association Board, for being anti-social, for not going
along to get along, for not moving into a cramped apartment downtown
where they can use your property taxes for paying off that huge bond
debt. But it's not working, and you don't want to move in there. So
they have to make you. Read on.
Human habitation, as it is
referred to now, is restricted to lands within the Urban Growth
Boundaries of the city. Only certain building designs are permitted.
Rural property is more and more restricted in what uses can be on it.
Although counties say that they support agricultural uses, eating
locally produced food, farmer's markets, etc, in fact there are so many
regulations restricting water and land use (there are scenic corridors,
inland rural corridors, baylands corridors, area plans, specific plans,
redevelopment plans, huge fees, fines) that farmers are losing their
lands altogether. County roads are not being paved. The push is for
people to get off of the land, become more dependent, come into the
cities. To get out of the suburbs and into the cities. Out of their
private homes and into condos. Out of their private cars and onto their
bikes.
Bikes. What does that have to do with it? I like to
ride my bike and so do you. So what? Bicycle advocacy groups are very
powerful now. Advocacy. A fancy word for lobbying, influencing, and
maybe strong-arming the public and politicians. What's the conection
with bike groups? National groups such as Complete Streets, Thunderhead
Alliance, and others, have training programs teaching their members how
to pressure for redevelopment, and training candidates for office.
It's not just about bike lanes, it's about remaking cities and rural
areas to the 'sustainable model'. High density urban development
without parking for cars is the goal. This means that whole towns need
to be demolished and rebuilt in the image of sustainable development.
Bike groups are being used as the 'shock troops' for this plan.
What
plan? We're losing our homes since this recession/depression began,
and many of us could never afford those homes to begin with. We got
cheap money, used whatever we had to squeak into those homes, and now
some of us lost them. We were lured, indebted, and sunk. Whole
neighborhoods are empty in some places. Some are being bulldozed.
Cities cannot afford to extend services outside of their core areas.
Slowly, people will not be able to afford single family homes. Will not
be able to afford private cars. Will be more dependent. More
restricted. More easily watched and monitored.
This plan is a
whole life plan. It involves the educational system, the energy market,
the transportation system, the governmental system, the health care
system, food production, and more. The plan is to restrict your
choices, limit your funds, narrow your freedoms, and take away your
voice. One of the ways is by using the Delphi Technique to 'manufacture
consensus.' Another is to infiltrate community groups or actually start
neighborhood associations with hand-picked 'leaders'. Another is to
groom and train future candidates for local offices. Another is to
sponsor non-governmental groups that go into schools and train
children. Another is to offer federal and private grants and funding
for city programs that further the agenda. Another is to educate a new
generation of land use planners to require New Urbanism. Another is to
convert factories to other uses, introduce energy measures that penalize
manufacturing, and set energy consumption goals to pre-1985 levels.
Another is to allow unregulated immigration in order to lower standards
of living and drain local resources.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.