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Welcome to Call to Decision FORCING INTERNATIONAL AGENDAS THROUGH LOCAL
MAYORS By
Tom DeWeese In June 2005, I reported on
the UN’s efforts to recruit the nation’s mayors to directly impose
Sustainable Development policy into our local communities.
The Mayors weren’t there to simply discuss policy, they
committed to an agenda with specific goals.
And, the results are now clearly being seen in more than 400
communities in 48 states. First, let me define the
policy I’m talking about and describe where it came from.
Sustainable Development is the direct opposite of the type of
locally elected representative government our Founding Fathers organized
for the United States. ’Sustainable
Development’ expert Michael
Shaw explains, it “is the process by which America is being
reorganized around a central principle of state collectivism using the
environment as bait.”
In fact, the policy involves every aspect of our daily lives from
food processing and consumption, to health care, to community
development to education to labor, and much more.
The blue print for
sustainable development came from a United Nations soft
law policy
called Agenda 21, first
revealed at the UN’s Earth Summit in 1992.
The best way to understand
what Sustainable
Development actually is, can be found by discovering what is NOT
sustainable. According to
the UN’s Biodiversity Assessment Report, items for our everyday lives
that are NOT sustainable include: Ski
runs, grazing of livestock, plowing of soil, building fences, industry,
single family homes, paved and tarred roads, logging activities, dams
and reservoirs, power line construction, and economic systems that fail
to set proper value on the environment (capitalism, free markets).
There are many more specifically listed on UN documents, but
these examples should show clearly how Sustainable Development is not
compatible with a free society. It’s interesting to note
that most of the Sustainable
Development agenda has not been implemented through congressional
legislation, rather through the use of government grants, Executive
Order and Public/Private Partnerships between government officials and
global corporations and non-governmental organizations (NGOs), as well
as through non-elected boards and committees.
As a result, under the banner “going green,”
it has become official policy for federal, state and now local
governments. It literally
represents a revolution in the way the United States operates; yet
voters have had basically no say in its implementation.
Now
to the mayors. The 2005 conference was a
way for the UN and its NGO cohorts to skip around Congress and head
straight to local implementation.
As part of their participation, the mayors were pressed to commit
to specific legislation and policy goals by signing a slate of UN
accords. Two documents were presented for the mayors’ signature.
The first document was
called the Green
Cities Declaration, produced by the
United Nations Environment Programme.
This document was essentially a statement of principles which set
the agenda for the mayor’s assigned tasks.
It says, in part, “Believing as Mayors of cities around the
globe, we have a unique opportunity to provide leadership to develop
truly sustainable urban centers based on culturally and economically
appropriate local actions…”
The Declaration is amazingly bold in that it details exactly
how the UN intends to implement a very specific agenda in every town and
city in the nation. The
final line of the Declaration explained the UNs’ goal very explicitly:
“Signatory cities shall work to implement the following
Urban Environment Accords. Each
year cities shall pick three actions to adopt as policies or laws.”
That leads to the second
document signed by the mayors, called the “Urban
Environment Accords.”
The document included exactly 21 specific actions (as in Agenda
21), for the mayors to take, controlled by a timetable for
implementation. For example, under the
topic of energy, action item #1 called for the mayors to implement a
policy to increase the use of “renewable” energy by 10% within seven
years. Energy actions items
2 and 3 dealt with reducing energy consumption.
These action items are classic examples of the UN trying to go
around the U.S. Congress and federal energy policy and force a
‘backdoor’ implementation of the UN’s Kyoto Accord, which the U.S.
has never ratified. Perhaps, the most egregious
action item offered in the Urban Environmental Accords dealt with the
topic of water. Action
number 19 called for adoption and implementation of a policy to reduce
individual water consumption by 10% by 2020.
Interestingly, the UN document begins by stating:
“Cities with potable water consumption greater than 100
liters per capita per day will adopt and implement policies to reduce
consumption by 10% by 2015.” There is no scientific
basis for the 100-liter figure other than to employ a very clever use of
numbers to lower the bar and control the debate over water consumption. One must be aware that 100 liters is equal to about 26
GALLONS per person, per day. According
to the UN, each person should have less than 26 gallons each day to
drink, bathe, flush toilets, wash clothes, water lawns, wash dishes,
cook, take care of pets, and more.
According to the U.S.
Geological Survey, Americans actually need about 100 GALLONS per day to
perform these basic life functions.
Consider also that there is no specific water shortage in most
parts of the United States. Water
is not an international issue – it is a very local one.
According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, annual
water withdrawal across the nation is about 407 billion gallons, while
consumption (including evaporation and plant use is about 94 billion
gallons). So, such
restrictions, as outlined in the Urban Environmental Accords are really
nothing more than a major campaign by the UN to control water
consumption. Yet, the
nation’s mayors are being pushed to impose policies to severely
restrict Americans’ free use of water.
The rest of the Accords
deal with a variety of subjects including waste reduction, recycling,
transportation, health, and nature – as stated, issues literally
dealing with every aspect of our lives.
Perhaps the most outrageous promise of action by the mayors is
action item #16, in which they agreed to “Every
year identify three products, chemicals, or compounds that are used
within your city that represents the greatest risk to human health and
adopt a law or eliminate their sale and use in the city.” Consider this bit of real
live insanity as an example of how
serious it can get. In the
1990s, Anchorage, Alaska had some of the most pristine water in the
nation. It literally had no pollution.
Yet, because of government-mandated clean water standards, the
federal government ordered the city to meet strict federal rules that
required the city to remove a certain percentage of pollution from its
water. The city simply
couldn’t do it because there wasn’t that amount of pollution to be
removed. But, the
government insisted that the law be upheld – no exceptions.
Therefore, in order to meet the federal requirements (and avoid
huge fines or jail terms), Anchorage city officials were forced to
pollute its pristine water by dumping fish parts into it so they could
then clean out the required quota.
So, it is not far fetched to say that, if your mayor has to ban
the ink in your fountain pen to meet his quota – ban it he will.
Again, the UNs’ meeting
with the mayors took place in 2005.
Today in 2008, what are the consequences?
Plenty! Meet
ICLEI, a non-profit, private foundation, headquartered in Canada,
dedicated to helping your mayor implement all of his promises. Originally known as the “International
Council for Local Environmental Initiatives (ICLEI), today the group
simply calls it self “ICLEI – Local Governments for
Sustainability.” In
1992, ICLEI was one of the groups instrumental in creating Agenda 21.
Now it is driven to help impose it from the local level of
government. Many Americans ask how
dangerous international policies can suddenly turn up in state and local
government, all seemingly uniform to those in neighboring communities.
The answer – groups like ICLEI.
The group has made its mission to push local communities to
regulate the environment – and it’s having tremendous success.
According to a report published by the Capital Research Center,
ICLEI is now operating in more than 400 cities in 48 states (except
Hawaii and South Dakota). The
group is shooting for 1,000 member cities in the next three years.
ICLEI is there to help the mayors keep their promises and meet
their goals. “Climate
change”, of course, is the ICLEI mantra. That’s the real excuse for all of the draconian controls and bannings
of valuable tools of civilization.
ICLEI’s programs are designed to decrease each cities “carbon
footprint.” That can be
costly to the taxpayers. But
mayors, who sign promises on UN documents to ban at least three valuable
commodities per year, love them. In
fact, ICLEI is very popular with the mayors and city council members
because it not only shows the community leaders how to promote climate
change, but it also does the work for them.
Never mind that cities have to pay dues to ICLEI in order to gain access to
their impressive list of programs.
Here’s just some of the
programs ICLEI provides cities and towns, in order to spread their own
particular political agenda in the name of “community services.” They include: ·
Software products and
associated training to help set the goals of
“greenhouse gas reductions”; ·
Access to a network of
“experts, newsletters, conferences and workshops
– to assure the indoctrination of city employees is complete; ·
Toolkits, online resources,
case studies, fact sheets, policy and practice manuals, and blueprints
used by other communities – you are not alone; ·
Training workshops for
staff and elected officials on how to develop and
implement the programs – wanna bet they never seem to mention that
thousands of scientists around the world now say man-made global warming
is a myth and none of these programs are necessary?
Probably doesn’t make it into the workshop; ·
Technical assistance in
designing and implementing the program; ·
Notification of relevant
grant opportunities – this is the important
one – money – with severe strings attached; and finally, important
for the mayors, ·
Assistance in publicizing
local climate protection successes.
As the Capital Research
Center’s report details, “Local governments gratefully outsource
their work to ICLEI, which even offers hiring advice.
The group recommends
that cities hire a ‘sustainability manager’ to coordinate an
inter-departmental green team representing city administrative, public
works, environment, facilities, budget, economic development, planning,
social services, and parks agencies to share ideas about how to improve
internal operations to make them more consistent with environmentally
sound practices.” As I’ve reported endless
times, sustainable development
is a top down control by government, invading every aspect of
our lives. The above
list of interactions, even at the local level show just how invasive it
can be. A full time
“sustainability manager,” even in small towns, can devote 100% of
his time to assure that every nook and corner of the government is on
message, including the budget managers, the welfare department, and, of
course, the developers. It’s
not about protecting the environment; it’s about reinventing
government with a specific political agenda.
ICLEI has money- lots of
it, along with a lot of high-level government contacts, and they use
them. The target is your
local community, your home, your place of business, your child in
school, your car, your light bulbs, your drinking water, your food
consumption, your tax dollars, and every other aspect of your lives.
ICLEI and others are dedicated to controlling your
locally elected public officials to quietly implement an
all-encompassing tyranny over every community in the nation.
And, your mayor is probably helping them do it – in the name of
environmental protection, of course.
It’s not necessarily their fault.
The mayors have been targeted and are now in a vice grip between
international forces like the UN and Non-governmental organizations
(NGOs) like ICLEI. The United States is not a
global village run by elders who hand down the rules from on-high.
We are a nation of governments elected by the citizens.
There is supposed to be discussion, debate and disclosure so that
all citizens know where, when and why an issue is being presented –
and then they are to vote on it. Today, however, global
forces which do not accept the unique American form of government sneak
behind the curtain, avoiding controversy and honest debate.
They target unknowing local officials, wine and dine them, and
blind them with power and influence.
The only possible result can be the tyranny of a powerless
electorate stripped of their rights, property and self-determination. Mayors
across the nation must be clued in to the fact that ICLEI and its ilk
are not their friends, rather they are the purveyors of a self-made
crisis hysteria using fear rather than truth and logic to impose their
agenda. © 2009 Tom DeWeese - All
Rights Reserved Tom DeWeese is president of
the American Policy Center and Editor of The DeWeese Report , 70 Main
Street, Suite 23, Warrenton Virginia. E-Mail: ampolicycenter@hotmail.com
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