Agenda 21: What/Who Is Behind It?
Radio Commentary, 90.7, 91.7 New Life FM, August 5, 2011
By Sue Ella Deadwyler
Good morning, Jim. Last October Neal Boortz warned of a new $100 million plan “to support more livable and sustainable communities across the country.” Under the plan, the federal government would borrow money to distribute as Sustainable Communities Planning Grants to “create more housing choices, make transportation more efficient and reliable, reinforce existing investments and support the kinds of neighborhoods that attract businesses.”
A coalition of international organizations developed this sustainable development agenda and convinced 179 nations to endorse it at the 1992 UN environmental conference in Rio de Janeiro. In 1993 it surfaced here, when President Clinton by-passed Congress and used an Executive Order to impose it on the United States. Now, fast-forward to June 9, 2011 when President Obama’s Executive Order created the White House Rural Council, made the secretary of agriculture the Council chairman over 25 federal agencies and authorized them to implement sustainable development in rural America. In other words, sustainable development grants will finance the restructuring of every aspect of life, as we know it, in the United States.
Sustainable development is an arm of the UN Agenda 21, a 180-page non-binding agreement to implement comprehensive UN goals for SOCIAL EQUALITY in the environment, women’s and children’s rights, and community development. In fact, Agenda 21 expects every country to create its own social equality plan to comply with UN initiatives.
On June 16, 2011 H.R. 2112 passed the U.S. House of Representatives. It’s an appropriations bill that could be used to fund more federal and global control over farms and rural life. Please call Senator McConnell at 1 202 224-2541* and ask him to remove any funding for sustainable development in rural America. Senator McConnell is a member of the Senate Appropriations Committee that’s currently considering H.R. 2112. For Georgia Insight I’m Sue Ella Deadwyler, your Capitol correspondent.