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fuagf

10/06/23 5:06 AM

#453125 RE: blackhawks #453123

Exactly. Same fear generating garbage "[i]...ridiculous to the point of utter absurdity, but they have had an important real-world impact"

"Same conspiracy theory crap as with Agenda 21 up here.
AGENDA 21: THE UN, SUSTAINABILITY AND RIGHT-WING CONSPIRACY THEORY
"

Agenda 21: a conspiracy theory puts sustainability in the crosshairs

Could right-wing attacks on a non-binding UN sustainability resolution put sustainable business at risk in some states?


In Texas, the anti-Agenda 21 fight continued this year with a bill that sought to prevent any governmental entity from accepting money from or granting money to any Agenda 21 plan of action. Photograph: Michael Yoshino / Alamy/Alamy

Greg Harman
Thu 25 Jun 2015 03.04 AEST
Last modified on Sat 15 Jul 2017 06.58 AEST

Green space, clean energy, increased urban density...and global dictatorship. It’s hard to see how all of these things could connect, but — according to a popular right wing conspiracy theory — a UN resolution aimed at sustainable development could pave the way.

Theorists argue that Agenda 21, a 23-year-old non-binding UN resolution that suggests ways for governments and NGOs to promote sustainable development, is the linchpin in a plot to subjugate humanity under an eco-totalitarian regime. One of its most outspoken critics, American Policy Center .. http://americanpolicy.org/about/141-2/ .. president Tom DeWeese, has described the resolution as “a new kind of tyranny that, if not stopped, will surely lead us to a new Dark Ages of pain and misery yet unknown to mankind”.

"Insert: Repeat - The fears generated in such places are ridiculous to the point of utter absurdity, but they have had an important real-world impact."

APC is on the political fringes, but anti-Agenda 21 sentiment is moving into the political mainstream. Criticism of the resolution extended to the Republican party’s 2012 platform .. https://gop.com/platform/ , which stated: “We strongly reject the UN Agenda 21 as erosive of American sovereignty.”

Legislators in several states have even created anti-Agenda 21 bills, many of which could pose serious threats to companies pursuing sustainability in those states.

In Arizona, for example, a proposed bill dictated that the state could not “adopt or implement the creed, doctrine, or principles .. http://insideclimatenews.org/news/20120511/bill-ban-united-nations-agenda-21-sustainability-climate-change-global-warming-iclei-john-birch-society-kansas .. or any tenet” of Agenda 21, and prohibited it from “implementing programs of, expending any sum of money for, being a member of, receiving funding from, contracting services from, or giving financial or other forms of aid to” a host of organizations with sustainability agendas, including the President’s Council on Sustainable Development.

Taken at face value, Arizona’s bill – which was defeated in 2012 – would have curtailed almost any sustainability efforts in the state, restricted the activities of tens of thousands of philanthropic organizations that promote sustainability, and potentially scared away hundreds of sustainability-minded companies. If it had passed, it could also have cost the state millions of dollars in lost revenue, as well as thousands of jobs.

If it hadn’t been defeated, Phoenix mayor Greg Stanton .. http://usatoday30.usatoday.com/USCP/PNI/Editorial/2012-04-30-PNI0430opi-stantonPNIBrd_ST_U.htm .. feared the bill “would send the message that Phoenix doesn’t believe in a sustainable economic future. It could negatively impact not only Phoenix and its residents, but the entire state”.

Agenda 21 addresses issues ranging from children’s health to public transportation to women’s empowerment, all of which could also have been severely curtailed under the sweeping wording of Arizona’s bill. The state’s chamber of commerce was among the bill’s staunchest opponents.

Battles in the statehouse

While Arizona’s bill was especially concerning, it’s only one of several anti-Agenda 21 bills that have come to the floor in state legislatures across the country. Almost all have failed, either dying in committee .. http://www.themainewire.com/2013/04/maine-democrats-kill-agenda-21-ban/ , getting defeated on the statehouse floor .. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/06/new-hampshire-agenda-21_n_2633364.html .. or – in the case of Missouri’s 2013 bill – getting vetoed by the governor. .. https://governor.mo.gov/news/archive/gov-nixon-vetoes-harmful-bills-aimed-nonexistent-problems-such-agenda-21 .

The exception was Alabama, which unanimously adopted a law in 2012 .. http://blog.al.com/live/2012/05/united_nations_agenda_21_bill.html .. to prevent any future effort to “deliberately or inadvertently infringe or restrict private property rights without due process, as may be required by policy recommendations originating in, or traceable to ‘Agenda 21’”.

As Alabama’s legislation demonstrates, one of the biggest dangers of anti-Agenda 21 bills lies in their often-vague wording, which can obscure many of their potential impacts. Arizona house minority leader Chad Campbell called his state’s bill the “most poorly crafted bill .. http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/04/26/11415282-agenda-21-arizona-close-to-passing-anti-un-sustainability-bill?lite ” in the statehouse at the time. “We wouldn’t be able to use CFL light bulbs in state buildings because that would be considered energy efficiency,” he said.

In Texas, a similarly sweeping anti-Agenda 21 bill submitted this year sought to prevent any governmental entity from accepting money from or granting money to any “nongovernmental or intergovernmental organization accredited by the United Nations to implement a policy that originated in the Agenda 21 plan .. http://www.capitol.state.tx.us/Search/DocViewer.aspx?ID=84RSB004451B&QueryText=%22agenda+21%22&DocType=B ”.

To get an understanding of the breadth of this language, it’s worth noting that, under its broadest interpretation, Texas’ bill could have curtailed the activities of the National Rifle Association. While the NRA is hardly a hotbed of sustainable activism, it supports several programs that dovetail with Agenda 21. Last year, for example, the group gave money to 4-H, the Boy Scouts of America, and the Texas Wildlife Association, all of which promote conservation and sponsor outdoor education - activities that could easily be linked to the sweeping priorities of Agenda 21.

The Texas bill could also have barred nonprofits that work with the UN .. https://www.texastribune.org/2015/02/26/conservative-lawmakers-continue-assault-un/ .. from receiving any state or municipal funding. In an email to the Houston city attorney’s office, James Cargas, the city’s senior assistant attorney for energy, wrote that it would impact “approximately 31,000 nongovernmental organizations [that] provide funding for the benefit of the general public or volunteer services”, including senior citizen advocacy group AARP, the United Way and the privately-owned Ford Foundation. In other words, had it passed the bill, Texas might have cut itself off from hundreds of millions of dollars in charitable funding.

Texas motorcycles, politics and guns: welcome to the biker world
Read more > https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2015/may/22/texas-bikers-motorcycles-politics-bandidos-waco-shootout

A lightning rod

On the surface, it’s hard to see why Agenda 21 is so controversial. While it urges international cooperation, it is hardly the totalitarian, internationalist screed that critics claim. Far from promoting international governance, for example, it calls for greater local government involvement in sustainable agricultural and urban development.

But that hasn’t stopped anti-internationalist critics from portraying the resolution in the grimmest possible terms. Pundit Glen Beck .. http://www.politifact.com/personalities/glenn-beck/statements/ , for example, hoisted the paranoid banner with Agenda 21: Into the Shadows .. http://www.glennbeck.com/agenda21/ , a 2015 novel that outlines how the feared “anti-human” scheme could unfold.

In the real world, however, Agenda 21’s critics are left groping for actual targets. In an interview with the Guardian, Alabama state senator Gerald Dial conceded that his bill doesn’t have any real world application – yet.

“We think the long term impact is more relevant than the short term,” Dial said. “When people become more familiar with what Agenda 21 is, more business and people who are looking to locate somewhere will say, ‘Hey, Alabama would be a great place because we won’t be faced with any opportunities for the federal government to come in and mandate to take over property.’”

Meanwhile, Texas state representative Molly White said that her bill requires further development because of the “complexities of this Agenda”.

“My staff and I will look at other bills passed around the country during the interim to prepare the legislation and refile it for next session,” she wrote in an email.

From bamboo bikes to renewables: the leaders that understand sustainability
Read more > https://www.theguardian.com/sustainable-business/2014/dec/10/bamboo-bikes-to-renewables-leaders-understand-sustainability

A useful lens on both sides of the political spectrum

Given the breadth and vehemence of the anti-Agenda 21 sentiment, it is perhaps unsurprising that many sustainability organizations are reluctant to discuss it. For example, the International Council for Local Environmental Initiatives .. http://www.iclei.org/ , perhaps the group most actively engaged in assisting local governments to achieve sustainability goals aligned with Agenda 21 goals, denied requests to discuss the resolution’s attackers.

ICLEI spokesperson Celina Plaza wrote in an email that the organization prefers to “focus on positive support for local sustainability”. She added that, for the most part, “local sustainability initiatives enhance the health and economy of communities, and those who oppose these initiatives are often not acting in the best interest of citizens”.

But anti-Agenda 21 sentiment may also be galvanizing some pro-sustainability activists. Kevin Wilhelm, CEO of Seattle-based Sustainable Business Consulting .. http://sustainablebizconsulting.com/ , said that he helped form the Washington Business for Climate Action .. http://www.washingtonbusinessforclimateaction.org/about.html , an association of business leaders committed to climate advocacy, after he realized that the conspiracy-minded anti-sustainability activists in his state were “much better organized” than those who supported the goals of Agenda 21.

“We’ve now recruited 183 businesses,” Wilhelm said. “We’re pushing back to say, ‘Look, there is a huge business opportunity and a huge business risk here [related to climate change] and we need to take action.’”

Leaders identify key sustainability challenges - infographic
Read more > https://www.theguardian.com/sustainable-business/sustainability-leaders-key-sustainable-challenges-infographic

Mitchell Silver, former president of the American Planning Association .. https://www.planning.org/ , a nonprofit professional organization dedicated to urban planning, said that those making wild claims about the dangers of sustainable development are on the losing side of the argument.

What I want to hear from opponents of sustainable development is where are you going to put 50m new housing units over the next few decades?” he told Reuters in 2012 .. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/10/15/agenda-21-tea-party_n_1965893.html .. . “So far, I haven’t gotten an answer to that question.”

Citing his state’s failed anti-Agenda 21 bill, Arizona state senator Steve Farley says that there is a growing awareness among business-minded Arizona Republicans .. https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/republicans .. that their Tea Party-aligned colleagues are hurting the state’s business interests.

“Sometimes these conspiracies get a life of their own and those people you depend on to support your tax-cutting majority sabotage you [by] destabilizing the overall economic climate,” Farley said. “But you can’t just say that these folks are in the margins. These folks are in the center of power.”

https://www.theguardian.com/sustainable-business/2015/jun/24/agenda-21-conspiracy-theory-sustainability

**


The Nobel Peace Prize 1945

Cordell Hull
Facts


Photo from the Nobel Foundation archive.

Cordell Hull

The Nobel Peace Prize 1945

Born: 2 October 1871, Olympus, TN, USA

Died: 23 July 1955, Bethesda, MD, USA

Residence at the time of the award: USA

Role: ex-Secretary of State, Prominent participant in the originating of the United Nations

Prize motivation: “for his indefatigable work for international understanding and his pivotal role in establishing the United Nations”

Prize share: 1/1

Father of the United Nations

In 1945, the year of Norway's liberation from Nazi-German occupation, the Nobel Committee wished to show its support for the establishment of the new world organization, the United Nations. This was done by awarding the Peace Prize to Cordell Hull, the man known as the father of the United Nations. The decision has a parallel in 1920, when President Woodrow Wilson received the same distinction as the chief architect behind the League of Nations.

Continued - https://www.nobelprize.org/prizes/peace/1945/hull/facts/

**

Agenda 21 is a non-binding action plan of the United Nations with regard to sustainable development.[1] It is a product of the Earth Summit (UN Conference on Environment and Development) held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, in 1992. It is an action agenda for the UN, other multilateral organizations, and individual governments around the world that can be executed at local, national, and global levels. One major objective of the Agenda 21 initiative is that every local government should draw its own local Agenda 21. Its aim initially was to achieve global sustainable development by 2000, with the "21" in Agenda 21 referring to the original target of the 21st century.[2]

[...]

Australia

Australia is a signatory to Agenda 21 and 88 of its municipalities subscribe to ICLEI, an organization that promotes Agenda 21 globally. Australia's membership is second only to that of the United States.[13]

Africa

In Africa, national support for Agenda 21 is strong and most countries are signatories. But support is often closely tied to environmental challenges specific to each country; for example, in 2002 Sam Nujoma, who was then President of Namibia, spoke about the importance of adhering to Agenda 21 at the 2002 Earth Summit, noting that as a semi-arid country, Namibia sets a lot of store in the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD).[14] Furthermore, there is little mention of Agenda 21 at the local level in indigenous media. Only major municipalities in sub-Saharan African countries are members of ICLEI. Agenda 21 participation in North African countries mirrors that of Middle Eastern countries, with most countries being signatories but little to no adoption on the local-government level. Countries in sub-Saharan Africa and North Africa generally have poorly documented Agenda 21 status reports.[citation needed] By contrast, South Africa's participation in Agenda 21 mirrors that of modern Europe, with 21 city members of ICLEI and support of Agenda 21 by national-level government.[citation needed]

North America

United States

The national focal point in the United States is the Division Chief for Sustainable Development and Multilateral Affairs, Office of Environmental Policy, Bureau of Oceans and International Environmental and Scientific Affairs, U.S. Department of State.[15] A June 2012 poll of 1,300 United States voters by the American Planning Association found that 9% supported Agenda 21, 6% opposed it, and 85% thought they didn't have enough information to form an opinion.[16]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agenda_21