UNITED NATIONS: “THE 2030 AGENDA FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT” (SDG’S), AGENDA 2030 & THE GREAT RESET
A GLOBAL agenda. GLOBAL policy, for the 21st century
Many of you may have heard of Agenda 21, but are not sure what it is, or why it matters. That is what I hope to change with this series. I will attempt to show you hard evidence through government sources, and statements straight from the puppet politicians implementing this agenda, to the detriment of their citizens. Many of them do this unwittingly, but quite a few of them are quite happily obliging, knowing very well what they are doing, and selling their countries out with devastating effects.
Is it real?
This may seem like a strange question, considering the introduction you just read, but a staggering amount of people haven’t done the basic exercise of checking if this agenda actually exists. The guy on the radio (if it even makes it to the airwaves) laughed it off, called it a “conspiracy theory”, so maybe it’s all just a crazy paranoid myth, right? Wrong. I can assure you it exists, and you can see the entire original document, on the United Nations website, here.
Why does it matter?
Before I even begin to explain why the intent and contents of this plan is bad, it is important to explain why it is important at all. Whether you agree with the words written in that document or not, the main problem with it is this: most people in the world today, living in what appears on the surface to be free democracies, live with the assumption and expectation that we, the people, elect other people to positions in government, to act as our representatives and manage our respective countries to benefit all its people to achieve maximum prosperity and freedom. It is implicit in our understanding of this dynamic, that these leaders should not be enacting policies or programs that are to our detriment, and definitely not the policies and programs of foreign entities. At very least, we should be asked for consent, and fully informed if they wish to implement policies/programs of a foreign entity not accountable to our institutions, and this is exactly the problem with Agenda 21:
It is the Agenda of a foreign, unelected, and unaccountable mega-bureaucracy of career parasites, who are using our money, to fund these measures which are demonstrably against our best interest, often by incurring more debt.
That is the main problem, regardless of whether you think it’s contents are a good idea or not.
We should have been properly informed, and then asked for consent, and that has never happened with any of the 178 countries who are signatories of this agreement.
What is Agenda 21? – A few different descriptions
There is a reason many people still haven’t heard about Agenda 21, nearly 25 years after the agreement was signed – it is because it was marketed to the public under a less sinister sounding name, something we’ve ALL heard of: “sustainable development”. That’s right: Agenda 21 IS “sustainable development”, and it’s very important to understand that this does NOT mean what we all would naturally assume by the dictionary definitions of those words, or what you really really want it to mean.
No. It means none of that. It means the 351 pages of it, the way the UN, decided. Without any input or consent from any of the citizens of the signatory countries. I can’t stress this enough – it doesn’t mean what you think or feel it should mean. It’s already been defined 25 years ago, by the UN. An organization none of us ever consented to join.
Now that we have that out of the way, let’s get to the question, what is it?
That very much depends on who you ask. If you ask the United Nations:
“Agenda 21 is a comprehensive plan of action to be taken globally, nationally and locally by organizations of the United Nations System, Governments, and Major Groups in every area in which human impacts on the environment.”
Herein lies the reason many other people you may ask what Agenda 21 is, may say that it’s a plan for total global control: Because ALL human activity, impacts the environment.
You may also ask yourself, how did nearly every government on the planet, manage to slip something of this magnitude past their electorate? Well, because of the much repeated claim, that this is a “non-binding voluntary agreement”. My response to this, would be non-binding and voluntary for who? Certainly not for you! This claim is absolutely false.
If you ask Daniel Sitarz however, the activist-lawyer who literally wrote the book on Agenda 21, called “Agenda 21: The Earth Summit Strategy to Save Our Planet”, it is the following:
“Agenda 21 proposes an array of actions which are intended to be implemented by EVERY person on Earth…it calls for specific changes in the activities of ALL people… Effective execution of Agenda 21 will REQUIRE a profound reorientation of ALL humans, unlike anything the world has ever experienced… “
Sounds mighty “voluntary” and “non-binding”, doesn’t it?
If you ask Rosa Koire, author of “Behind the Green Mask – UN Agenda 21”, and former district branch chief for the California Department of Transportation, and real estate appraiser specializing in imminent domain valuation, it is this:
”…. the global action plan to INVENTORY and CONTROL all land, all water, all energy, all minerals, all construction, all plants, all animals, all means of production. all information, and all human beings in the world. INVENTORY AND CONTROL.”
And if you ask me, it is the UN’s “one size fits all” global development/economic blueprint for the 21st century, to control the entire planet’s population under a global technocratic, unelected, unaccountable world government, with one of it’s main goals to cull the totally controlled human population. The elites are exempt, you are not, and they will extract money from you, to implement your own enslavement.
From The UN’s Sustainable Development website:
2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development
The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, adopted by all United Nations Member States in 2015, provides a collective Utopian blueprint for peace and prosperity for people and the planet, now and into the future. At its heart are the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), which are an urgent call for action by all countries – developed and developing – in a global partnership. They are called to recognize that ending poverty and other deprivations must go hand-in-hand with strategies that improve health and education, reduce inequality, and spur economic growth – all while tackling “climate change” and working to preserve our oceans and forests.
The SDGs build on decades of work by countries and the UN, including the UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs
In June 1992, at the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, more than 178 countries adopted Agenda 21, a comprehensive plan of action to build a global partnership for sustainable development to improve human lives and protect the environment.
Member States unanimously adopted the Millennium Declaration at the Millennium Summit in September 2000 at UN Headquarters in New York. The Summit led to the elaboration of eight Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) to reduce extreme poverty by 2015.
The Johannesburg Declaration on Sustainable Development and the Plan of Implementation, adopted at the World Summit on Sustainable Development in South Africa in 2002, reaffirmed the global community’s commitments to poverty eradication and the environment, and built on Agenda 21 and the Millennium Declaration by including more emphasis on multilateral partnerships.
At the United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development (Rio+20) in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, in June 2012, Member States adopted the outcome document “The Future We Want” in which they decided, inter alia, to launch a process to develop a set of SDGs to build upon the MDGs and to establish the UN High-level Political Forum on Sustainable Development. The Rio +20 outcome also contained other measures for implementing sustainable development, including mandates for future programmes of work in development financing, small island developing states and more.
In 2013, the General Assembly set up a 30-member Open Working Group to develop a proposal on the SDGs.
In January 2015, the General Assembly began the negotiation process on the post-2015 development agenda. The process culminated in the subsequent adoption of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, with 17 SDGs at its core, at the UN Sustainable Development Summit in September 2015.
2015 was a landmark year for multilateralism and international policy shaping, with the adoption of several major agreements:
Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction (March 2015)
Addis Ababa Action Agenda on Financing for Development (July 2015)
Transforming our world: the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development with its 17 SDGs was adopted at the UN Sustainable Development Summit in New York in September 2015.
Paris Agreement on Climate Change (December 2015)
Now, the annual High-level Political Forum on Sustainable Development serves as the central UN platform for the follow-up and review of the SDGs.
Today, the Division for Sustainable Development Goals (DSDG) in the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UNDESA) provides substantive support and capacity-building for the SDGs and their related thematic issues, including water, energy, climate, oceans, urbanization, transport, science and technology, the Global Sustainable Development Report (GSDR), partnerships and Small Island Developing States. DSDG plays a key role in the evaluation of UN systemwide implementation of the 2030 Agenda and on advocacy and outreach activities relating to the SDGs. In order to make the 2030 Agenda a reality, broad ownership of the SDGs must translate into a strong commitment by all stakeholders to implement the global goals. DSDG aims to help facilitate this engagement.
Introduction
Before I get into the origins of UN Agenda 21/“Sustainable Development”, I just want to highlight two important aspects, and briefly introduce you to two lesser known role players.
Number one, Agenda 21 is a GLOBAL agenda. Global policy, for the 21st century. The reason I stress this, is that there is nowhere to run. We will have to defeat this from the ground up, from our local communities, our own countries. Nobody is going to do it for us, we have to do it.
Secondly, “Sustainable Development” does not mean what people would naturally assume it to mean based on the definitions of those words, or what people really want it to mean. We didn’t define it through any sort of democratic process. It was prepackaged, and already defined by the UN, and as I wrote in chapter 1,
“…it is the Agenda of a foreign, unelected, and unaccountable mega-bureaucracy of career parasites, who are using our money, to fund these measures which are demonstrably against our best interest, often by incurring more debt.”
Some lesser known role players
I want to introduce you to two role players here which you may never have heard of, and you may wonder why I even bring them up. Well, because you probably won’t find this in wikipedia writeup of Agenda 21, and I want you to keep these and their connection to Agenda 21 “Sustainable Development” in mind, as we progress in this series. Because they are connected, and I think it’s important that people know they are connected, and how.
1) The Club of Rome
The Club of Rome is a “think tank” (I always prefer the term “twat bucket”) that describes itself as
“… an organization of individuals who share a common concern for the future of humanity and strive to make a difference”
and it consists of high level politicians, UN bureaucrats, diplomats, scientists, economists, and business leaders from all over the world.
Their honorary membership list includes former presidents and prime ministers, you know, the club you’ll never be in, people like Rigoberta Menchú Tum, Guatemala, (UNESCO Goodwill Ambassador – a word on “World Goodwill” a little later), and some slightly more, shall we say… elite club members. Like Juan Carlos I, King of Spain, Princess Beatrix of the Netherlands, Dona Sophia, Queen of Spain. All in all a lovely bunch of people whose default view of the world is that they’re better than you, and who totally understand the plight of the family-raising middle class.
In 1991, The Club of Rome published a report titled, The First Global Revolution. The book is divided into two sections, The Problematique and The Resolutique. Towards the conclusion of the Problematique, it states:
“In searching for a common enemy against whom we can unite, we came up with the idea that pollution, the threat of global warming, water shortages, famine and the like, would fit the bill”
“But in designating these dangers as the enemy, we fall into the trap… (of) mistaking symptoms for causes. All these dangers are caused by human intervention in natural processes, and it is only through changed attitudes and behaviour that they can be overcome. The real enemy then is humanity itself.”
Yes, the enemy is humanity itself, and the challenges can only be overcome through changed attitudes and behavior. Not through development. Not through technological advancement. This is significant because as you’ll see later in the series, the cornerstones of Agenda 21/sustainable development strategy is behavior modification and “demand management” through punitive measures, much in the way you would do behavioral conditioning on rats, but which they call “incentives and disincentives”. More like bribes and penalties, if we call them by their real grown up names.
Later in the book, in the “Resolutique” section it states,
”To meet the needs expressed above, we therefore reiterate the reccomendation in The Club of Rome declaration of 1989 that a world conference on the common environtmental imperitavies be held, aimed at the creation of a UN environmental security council…”
”if not constituted earlier, this could be a major outcome of the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development to be held in Brazil in 1992”
So this “think tank”, that declared “humanity itself” the enemy, clearly called for, and foresaw, a future in which the UN exerted a great amount of control and influence globally, under the pretext of environmental protection. Remeber that.
Numerous players in the Club of Rome have since the release of The First Global Revolution, gone on to be major influencers in the development, of UN Agenda 21 “Sustainable Development”. The global planning agreement, that your government is committed to, and has never achieved consent for. In the words of these UN colonizers, “Global Environmental Governance”. Something the people of the Western Cape province in South Africa is getting to know first hand right now.
So if you ever feel wherever you are in the world, as if your local/national government is not actually working for you, but rather behave in ways that classifies you as the “enemy”, consider that your government is committed to an Agenda that was spawned by people who view humanity as its enemy.
This shouldn’t be an altogether surprising feeling.
2) The Lucis Trust Association
This is a strange one, and I include it because their involvement with the UN predates the actual Agenda 21 agreement by 3 years, and as they enjoyed “consultant” status, may have had an influence of the final agreement. This thought becomes quite bizarre once you find out what this organization actually is.
The “About” section on the Lucis Trust website states:
“Lucis Trust promotes recognition and practice of the spiritual principles and values upon which a stable and interdependent world society may be based. The esoteric philosophy of its founder, Alice Bailey, informs its activities which are offered freely throughout the world in eight languages.”
One of the articles on the Lucis Trust website is titled “The esoteric meaning of Lucifer”. I quote a short passage:
“There are comments on the World Wide Web claiming that the Lucis Trust was once called the Lucifer Trust. Such was never the case. However, for a brief period of two or three years in the early 1920’s, when Alice and Foster Bailey were beginning to publish the books published under her name, they named their fledgling publishing company “Lucifer Publishing Company”. By 1925 the name was changed to Lucis Publishing Company and has remained so ever since.”
“The Baileys’ reasons for choosing the original name are not known to us, but we can only surmise that they, like the great teacher H.P. Blavatsky, for whom they had enormous respect, sought to elicit a deeper understanding of the sacrifice made by Lucifer. Alice and Foster Bailey were serious students and teachers of Theosophy, a spiritual tradition which views Lucifer as one of the solar Angels, those advanced Beings Who Theosophy says descended (thus “the fall”) from Venus to our planet eons ago to bring the principle of mind to what was then animal-man.”
Something I deliberately didn’t mention earlier: Expanding the “About” section on the website, scrolling down all the way, reveals the following:
“LUCIS TRUST is on the Roster of the United Nations Economic and Social Council”
Yes you read that right, and I’ll elaborate on it shortly.
Another thing you will notice under the expanded “About” section, is something most of you have probably heard of, namely “World Good Will”. Yes, that is where the UN Goodwill ambassador comes from; it is a Lucis Trust initiative.
The website also states,
“World Goodwill is recognised by the Office of Public Information at the United Nations as a Non-Governmental Organisation. It is represented at regular briefing sessions at the United Nations in New York and Geneva.”
Back to the aforementioned United Nations Social and Economic Council involvement; if you go to the website of the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs, ESANGO, and search for Lucis Trust, you will find the Lucis Trust Association listed there, and see that they have had consultive status there (Roster) since 1989. That is 3 years before Agenda 21 Sustainable Development was signed at the Rio Earth Summit.
If you then click on their name, and then the “Profile” tab, and select “Activities” you will see under their “Areas of expertise & Fields of activity”, Sustainable Development
– Yep, the Lucifer-groupie Lucis Trust, has been a consultant for the UN on Sustainable Development since 1989. “Why are they on there? What do they have to do with sustainable development?”, you may ask..? Well… I don’t know. If you can figure it out (especially after reading their website), please let me know. I have no idea. But it may be worth remembering the next time the ignorant, libtarded radio presenter goes on and on about how great sustainable development is.
Origins
In 1983 the UN asked the Brundtland commission to “propose long term strategies for achieving sustainable development by the year 2000 and beyond”
Gro Harlem Brundtland was former prime minister of Norway, director general of world health organization, and vice president of Socialist International. In 1987 the Brundtland commission released a report titled “Our Common Future”, defining Sustainable Development as:
“Development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs”
In 1992 the UN convened the Earth Summit to formulate policy for the world environmental movement, and produced Agenda 21 – global development policy for the 21st century.
General secretary of the summit, Maurice strong (also a member of the Brundtland commission), in his opening speech stated,
“Current lifestyles and consumption patterns of the affluent middle class, involving high meat intake, use of fossil fuels, appliances, home and work air conditioning and suburban housing, are not sustainable”
The Agenda 21 view on private property can be traced back to the 1976 “Report on Habitat” that came out of the conference on Human Settlements. The section on private land ownership states:
“Land, because of its unique nature and the crucial role it plays in human settlements, cannot be treated as an ordinary asset, controlled by individuals and subject to the pressures and inefficiencies of the market. Private ownership is also a principal instrument of the accumulation and concentration of wealth and therefore contributes to social injustice; if unchecked, it may become a major obstacle in the planning and implementation of development schemes”
The 1996 UN publication, Global Biodiversity Assessment stated:
“Property rights are not absolute and unchanging, but rather a complex, dynamic, and shifting relationship between two or more parties, over space and time”
At the 1992 Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro Brazil, Agenda 21 was revealed and this 350 page, 40 Chapter document, this global development policy framework agreement, was signed by 178 countries.
The amount of politicians who seeked consent from their citizens to be signed up to this “global governance” program, was zero.
It is strange to me that hardly any people I talk to have ever heard of UN Agenda 21, BUT every person I talk to, have heard of “sustainable development”.
Agenda 21 is the GLOBAL action plan for implementing “sustainable development”. The two are inseparable.
It is the UN Agenda for the 21st century; The comprehensive action plan to INVENTORY and CONTROL all land, all water, all energy, all minerals, construction, plants, animals, means of production, information, and all human beings in the world.
It is hardly EVER called “Agenda 21” by politicians or media. It is most often referred to by other names such as “sustainable development”, “build back better”, “Our Common Future”, or “high density urban mixed-use development” a.k.a. “Smart Growth”, the name for the preferred “development model” under Agenda 21. The World Economic Forum’s version is known as “The Great Reset”. No matter the label, it’s tyranny, complete totalitarianism and subservience disguised as progress, equality, inclusivity and sustainability.
For more research on this and related topics, please visit my website https://beardedheretic.com/great-reset-sdgs/