DeWeese walks you through the insidious process whereby the UN Agenda 21 is put in place by local officials under the guise of being local action. In these difficult economic times local officalial are rewarded with bribes aka grants.
Connecting the Dots: From the United Nations to Your State Government April 15th, 2013 by Tom DeWeese
"Proponents of Sustainable Development constantly tell us that their plans are just local. And they deride those who accuse them of imposing an international agenda. Kooks. Fringe Fanatics. Conspiracy Theorists. These are just some of the labels they pin on those fighting to expose Agenda 21. Moreover, they sarcastically ask, “how can an obscure twenty year old document be a threat to local policy? Tsk Tsk.”
Well, let’s take just one example and follow it through the process. Let’s get acquainted with the Earth Charter. If Agenda 21 is the blue print – the Earth Charter is the manifesto. . . . But, say your local officials, we aren’t imposing international policy – it’s all local. Well, consider the third document in this effort to connect the dots. This is taken from the government website of the state of Washington, Department of the Ecology. In reading it (available on the state’s official website http://www.ecy.wa.gov/Sustainability/) notice two things.
First in paragraph 3, it quotes “Our Common Future.” This was the special report from the Brundtland Commission. This was the 1987 UN Commission on Environmental and Development, chaired by Gro Harlem Brundland, Vice President of the World Socialist Party. In that report the term Sustainable Development was first coined.
And the report was the precursor to Agenda 21 and the Earth Charter. The Washington state government document describes the Earth Charter as a “reference document.”
In other words, the Earth Charter is being used by the government of the state of Washington as a guideline for state environmental and development policy.
Can the dots be connected any more clearly? This is a direct link between UN international Agenda 21 policy and American state government. That state government, using the Earth Charter as a guideline, passes regulations down to the local communities to enforce environmental and development policy. That’s how it works in every federal, state and local policy today across the nation."