:U.N.:
:Un means not, anti.
U.N.'s plan for world government;
plot for global taxation, gun control, standing army:
© 2003 WorldNetDaily.com
The United Nations and the United
States are engaged in a major battle over American sovereignty –
the last major impediment to global governance – according to
the May edition of WND's acclaimed monthly magazine, Whistleblower.
Titled "THE NEW WORLD RE-ORDER,"
this special edition lays bare the United Nation's plan for global
governance.
The U.N.'s plan, dubbed "Our Global Neighborhood," is a
410-page final report of the Commission on Global Governance, and
was first published in 1995 by Oxford University Press. That 28-member
"independent commission," created by former German Chancellor
Willy Brandt, developed the following strategy, as reported in the
EcoSocialist Review: "To represent a shot-across-the-bow of George
Bush's New World Order, and make clear that now is the time to press
for the subordination of national sovereignty to democratic transnationalism."
Then-U.N. Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali endorsed the commission,
and the U.N. provided significant funding. The plan calls for dramatically
strengthening the United Nations, by implementing a laundry list of
recommendations, including these:
Eliminating the veto and permanent member status in the Security Council;
Authorizing global taxation on currency exchange and use of the "global
commons;"
Creating an International Criminal Court;
Creating a standing army under the command of the secretary-general;
Creating a new Economic Security Council;
Creating a new People's Assembly;
Regulating multinational corporations;
Regulating the global commons;
Controlling the manufacture, sale and distribution of all firearms.
None of the recommendations in the report is new; all have been proposed
in a variety of documents for decades. This report, however, is the
first time the comprehensive plan for global governance has been published
with the approval and funding support of the United Nations, according
to Whistleblower.
To justify the sweeping changes proposed by the commission, a new
concept of "security" was offered. The U.N.'s mission under
its present charter is to provide "security" to its member
nations through "collective" action. The new concept expands
the mission of the U.N. to be the security of the people – and
the security of the planet.
Thus, in their speeches to the U.N.'s Millennium Assembly in 2000,
both Secretary General Kofi Annan and President Bill Clinton made
reference to this new concept, saying national sovereignty can no
longer be used as an excuse to prevent the intervention by the U.N.
to provide "security" for people inside national boundaries
To provide security for the planet, the plan calls for authorizing
the U.N. Trusteeship Council to have "trusteeship" over
the "global commons," which the plan defines to be: "...
the atmosphere, outer space, the oceans beyond national jurisdiction,
and the related environment and life-support systems that contribute
to the support of human life."
Private land ownership under attack
Actually, the U.N. has been working to achieve this goal for more
than two decades, reports Whistleblower, but the work has been pursued
as a part of the environmental agenda. A first glimpse of the environmental
agenda's magnitude came in 1992, when the U.N. Conference on Environment
and Development presented for adoption a 300-page policy document
called Agenda 21. This document made clear that the only way to protect
the environment is to control the activities of the people who use
it.
Each of the nations that endorsed Agenda 21 agreed to create a national
council to implement its recommendations. Bill Clinton issued Executive
Order 12852 on June 29, 1993, which created the President's Council
on Sustainable Development. This 28-member council included the heads
of the government departments concerned with the environment and commerce,
the heads of major environmental groups, and four representatives
from business, one of whom was Ken Lay of Enron infamy.
This group worked through the end of 1999 to implement the recommendations
of Agenda 21 throughout the United States, primarily by rewriting
and refocusing the rules of implementation for existing legislation,
and by encouraging state and local governments to implement the recommendations
at the local level. With the coordinated assistance of the Sierra
Club, the Nature Conservancy and the National Wildlife Federation
– all of whose executives sat on the President's Council on
Sustainable Development – the message of "sustainable development"
and "sustainable communities" spread rapidly across the
country.
Among the many goals of the President's Council was to change the
way public policy is made in the United States. Its "Belief Statements"
include this: "We need a new collaborative decision process that
leads to better decisions, more rapid change, more sensible use of
human, natural, and financial resources in meeting our goals."
The new collaborative decision process is the same consensus process
used by the United Nations. It is a process that uses trained "facilitators"
to assure a predetermined outcome.
Every department of government has trained facilitators to transform
public-input meetings into "consensus-building" sessions.
With the support of various environmental groups, virtually every
community in the country began to see "visioning councils"
and "stakeholder councils" appear, to develop plans for
a "sustainable community" for the 21st century.
These plans are remarkably similar, whether in Santa Cruz, Calif.,
where they call the process "Local Agenda 21," or in "Yourtown
2020," they all end up with the recommendations set forth in
Agenda 21.
When examined from a national perspective, the local plans, arrived
at by consensus, are elements of the broader plan to "provide
security for the planet" by controlling the activities of the
people.
To achieve this objective, private property has to be effectively
eliminated. This U.N. policy was first adopted in 1976 at the U.N.
Conference on Human Settlements in Vancouver, British Columbia. Its
final report says:
"Land ... cannot be treated as an ordinary asset, controlled
by individuals and subject to the pressures and inefficiencies of
the market. Private land ownership is also a principal instrument
of accumulation and concentration of wealth and therefore contributes
to social injustice. … Public control of land use is therefore
indispensable. …"
Three years later, the U.S. State Department entered into a Memorandum
of Agreement with the United Nations Education, Scientific, and Cultural
Organization to launch a Man and the Biosphere Program, which designated
vast stretches of land as wilderness. The Convention on Biological
Diversity began its life in 1981 and evolved until 1992, when it was
formally adopted by the U.N. in Rio de Janeiro.
This international law requires the creation of wilderness areas,
all connected by corridors of wilderness and surrounded by buffer
zones, in which human activity is regulated by the government, while
the population is forced to move into "sustainable communities."
There are more than 400 of these wilderness areas, called U.N. Biosphere
Reserves, throughout the world; 47 are in the United States, with
another proposed for the Chicago area and yet another proposed for
the Bay of Fundy on the Maine/Canada border.
Remarkable progress has been made toward transforming the United States
into this United Nations vision of a "secure planet." Because
each plan element operates at the local level, it is difficult to
see the ultimate outcome. A picture of the dream is suggested, however,
in the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development report
authored by Andrew Euston for the U.N. Conference on Human Development
meeting in Istanbul in 1996.
The report describes in considerable detail how "sustainable"
communities of the future will be bounded by growth limits, surrounded
by open space, with housing provided by public/private partnerships
that require both economic and ethnic integration, and feature live-over
shops and services. Transportation in these communities will feature
light rail and bicycle, since automobiles will be unnecessary; people
are expected to work within walking distance of their employment.
Each complex in the community is a "neighborhood" that provides
schools and day care, governed by a "neighborhood council."
Agriculture and light "sustainable" industry will occur
in the buffer zones between the communities and the Biosphere Reserves,
under the direction of the government, in public/private partnerships
with non-government organizations that oversee day-to-day operations.
Policy decisions are to be made by the council closest to the people
governed by the policy, providing that the policy is consistent with
each of the councils in the hierarchy. The ideal system of governance
in this utopian vision would see the government selecting a non-government
organization, or NGO, for a particular neighborhood project. The majority
of the neighborhood council would consist of board members of the
NGO, with a few additional representatives selected by the NGO. The
neighborhood council would choose a representative to sit on the community
council, which would choose a representative to sit on the watershed
council, which would choose a representative to sit on the bioregional
council, which would choose a representative to sit on the national
council, which would choose a representative to the People's Assembly
at the United Nations.
Sound familiar? This system parallels the old Soviet system in Russia,
in both design and function. It has been under development in the
United States since launched in 1993 by the President's Council on
Sustainable Development. Progress so far has been mostly voluntary
– "to comply with international obligations." But
success will come for the U.N. only when it has the power to enforce
its international law. That's the next step.