Agenda 21 Explained
Will globalists want your property next? The ingenious plan of the United Nations is called Agenda 21. There is absolutely nothing wrong with sustainable development in the proper context. However, if you add a political agenda along with this type of ideology, you have an evil design that could rob the freedoms of Americans, including control of private property.
Just what is the role of sustainable development in the United States? Why shouldn’t free markets determine what is economically sustainable? And why should the United Nations be allowed to rewrite the United States Constitution, which has uniformly been the supreme law of the land since September 17, 1787?
Agenda 21: It stresses the need to change from old sector-centered ways of doing business to new approaches that involve cross-sectoral co-ordination and the integration of environmental and social concerns into all development processes.
In April of 1997, the Clinton administration implemented Agenda 21. This decision formally placed the global agenda in your backyard.
In 2011, President Obama signed Executive Order #13575, establishing the White House Rural Council.
Harvey Rubin, the one who implemented a paperless system in Miami-Dade County is quoted: “Individual rights must take a backseat to the collective.” He’s coming from an eco-friendly stance, of course…
Definition of collectivism:
1. A political or economic theory advocating collective control especially over production and distribution; also : a system marked by such control.
2. Emphasis on collective rather than individual action or identity.
Definition of communism: A theory advocating elimination of private property.
According to the speaker of the video: “Agenda 21 is in every county in the United States of America”.
Today, more than 1200 cities, towns, counties, and their associations in 70 countries comprise growing membership of ICLEI. ICLEI was founded in 1990 as the International Council for Local Environmental Initiatives.
There may be a community planner coming to your town or your child’s classroom, to talk about environmentalism. Are you ready?
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