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Dr Muriel Newman
Contact Muriel:
Email: muriel@nzcpr.com
Phone 09 4343 836
or 021 800 111
PO Box 984, Whangarei
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There
is a strange irony about New Zealanders. While some are
extremely vocal in opposing foreign ownership of land or
assets, many turn a blind eye when a foreign group like the
United Nations effectively takes over aspects of our
governance and institutional arrangements.
A case in point is Agenda 21, a United Nations political
agenda that is designed to control resources and people. It
has been embedded in New Zealand’s institutional framework
for over 20 years, manifesting itself through such buzz words
as ‘sustainable development’, ‘biodiversity’, ‘smart
growth’, ‘waste minimisation’, and ‘population
control’. Former Minister of the Environment Dr Nick Smith
acknowledged its influence in March in a speech entitled Rio+20:
The Future We Want: “In the
twenty years since the Rio Earth Summit, ground-breaking
concepts contained in the Rio principles and Agenda 21 have
been mainstreamed
into our daily lives”.
Dr Smith explained, “This year’s Rio+20 conference on
sustainable development will focus on two themes: the green
economy and the institutional framework for sustainable
development”. While this sounds worthy, what it signals is
an expansion of global governance controls on New Zealanders
that will further undermine our culture and private property
rights that have traditionally underpinned our economic growth
and our identity in the world.
Agenda 21 had its origins
at the first Earth Summit in Sweden in 1972 through the
establishment of the United Nations Environmental Programme.
In 1992, at the Earth Summit at Rio de Janeiro, world leaders
from 179 nations attending the UN Conference on Environment
and Development (UNCED) agreed to adopt five conventions
including Agenda 21.
Ten years later in 2002 at the World Summit on Sustainable
Development in Johannesburg, South Africa, the full
implementation of Agenda 21 was strongly reaffirmed by world
leaders.
Essentially Agenda 21 is
based on the notion that humans are destroying the planet and
as a result, every aspect of our lives needs to be controlled.
The mechanism being used to bring about this change is
“sustainable development”, which is defined to mean
development that meets the needs of the present generation
without compromising the needs of future generations.
According to the UN, “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 humans impact on the
environment.” The Preamble begins, “Humanity stands at a
defining moment in history. We are confronted with a
perpetuation of disparities between and within nations, a
worsening of poverty, hunger, ill health and illiteracy, and
the continuing deterioration of the ecosystems on which we
depend for our well-being. However, integration of environment
and development concerns and greater attention to them will
lead to the fulfilment of basic needs, improved living
standards for all, better protected and managed ecosystems and
a safer, more prosperous future. No nation can achieve this on
its own; but together we can - in a global partnership for
sustainable development.”[1]
Critics claim Agenda 21 is a system of global control
– the UN’s plan for a centrally managed global society,
where governments around the world implement laws that control
the way we live, where we live, and how we live … all under
the noble banner of saving an endangered planet. If fully
implemented, Agenda 21 would have governments involved in
almost every aspect of human life on earth.
The 300 pages and 40 Chapters in Agenda 21 consist of 115
different and very specific programs designed to force the
transition to sustainable development. The Agenda is broken up
into four main areas: Social and Economic Dimensions, which cover such things as combating
poverty and protecting human health; Conservation and Management of Resources for Development, which
focuses on protecting the atmosphere and other natural
resources, promoting sustainable agriculture, and conserving
biodiversity; Strengthening
the Role of Major Groups, which promotes action plans for
women, youth and indigenous groups, as well as the key role to
be played by Local Government; and Means
of Implementation, which looks at the financing of the
plan, educating children and the general public about the
plan, and the ways of implementing the plan through changing
institutional arrangements.
New Zealand’s institutional arrangements were changed to
support Agenda 21 back in the early nineties, although work
began on the key piece of legislation to implement
‘sustainable development’ - the Resource Management Act -
before that. A high powered UNCED Implementation Officials
Group was established to coordinate the operation. This group
of officials from the Ministry for the Environment,
Agriculture, Commerce, Conservation, Foreign Affairs and
Trade, Forestry, Research Science and Technology, Transport,
Maori Development, Health, and the Department of Prime
Minister and Cabinet, was responsible for driving through the
laws and regulations necessary for Agenda 21.
The UN’s overarching strategy for implementing Agenda 21 has
been to work locally. Local government was specifically
identified as the target vehicle using - as a controlling
mechanism - the endless and ever-expanding raft of district
and regional plans. Achieving their objective has been made
easy through the implementations of a farcical process that
passes off as “consultation” but is, in effect, little
more than tokenism to justify a predetermined outcome. While
most councils do not disclose their involvement with Agenda
21, others like the Hamilton City Council, feature it on their
website: “Agenda 21, a guide to
global sustainability, is a national commitment. Its
principles are modified into Local Agenda 21 according to the
specific needs and priorities of a country or community. These
are the overlying principles that should guide development
through New Zealand. In all its activities, Council will be
guided by the principles of Agenda 21 in its progression
towards becoming a Sustainable City. All units will be
responsible for the implementation of Agenda 21 under the
guidelines of the Strategic Plan.”[2]
By working with politicians
and high level officials, the United Nations has ensured that
Agenda 21 has been adopted around the world. As a result of
the relentless promotion of its political agenda by local
government (and in particular the staff), it is now having a
profound impact on people’s lives - eroding their private
property rights, dictating where they can and can’t live,
imposing ‘biodiversity’ restrictions on landowners,
preventing rural subdivision, requiring resource consents for
established activities like farming, requiring the
registration of all dams and wells, promoting urban
intensification through smart growth, compelling the use of
public transport instead of private cars, imposing excessively
high water quality standards at enormous cost to ratepayers,
and forcing such unnecessarily stringent air quality standards
that in many parts of the country the public can no longer use
cost-effective open fires or wood burners to heat their homes
- nor burn their rubbish in a garden incinerator.
This situation has now become so ridiculous, that families in
Christchurch whose homes are being demolished because of the
earthquake are not allowed to install replacement wood burners
in their new homes - because of the excessively strict air
quality standards. While these restrictions on traditional
home heating methods were imposed under the guise of reducing
the death rate from respiratory disease, new evidence now
shows that they were unnecessary since emissions from fires
and wood burners have been found to have almost no adverse
impact on human health – see the open letter here>>>
to Environment Canterbury from Health Board member Wendy
Gilchrist, who is asking that Christchurch residents be
permitted to reinstate complying wood burners in their new
replacement homes.
Twenty years on, the public are now recognising the failings
of the global socialist agenda that has been imposed on us and
they are waking up to the
negative consequences on their quality of life.
In the US, the public are fighting back against Agenda 21 to
protect their freedom and rights - as this week’s NZCPR
Guest Commentator, US freelance journalist Alex Newman
explains:
“Alabama became the first state to adopt a tough law
protecting private property and due process by prohibiting any
government involvement with or participation in a
controversial United Nations scheme known as Agenda 21.
Activists from across the political spectrum celebrated the
measure’s approval as a significant victory against the UN
“sustainability” plot, expressing hope that similar
sovereignty-preserving measures would be adopted in other
states as the nationwide battle heats up.
“The law, aimed at protecting private property rights,
specifically prevents all state agencies and local governments
in Alabama from participating in the global scheme in any way:
The State of Alabama and
all political subdivisions may not adopt or implement policy
recommendations that 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.” To read Alex’s full article,
please click here>>>
Alabama’s adoption of a binding law to veto Agenda 21 and
expunge its influence from their statute books brings to 8 the
number of states this year that have passed laws or
resolutions against the UN’s political plan. Opponents to
Agenda 21 are Alabama, Arizona, Georgia, Kansas, Louisiana,
Minnesota, New Hampshire, and Tennessee.
It’s fair to say the public globally are also tiring of the
doomsday messages of Agenda 21 advocates. The Agenda claims
that the global environment is deteriorating, when there is
much evidence to show it is improving. It claims that the Earth’s resources
are finite and running out, when history shows that through
innovation and technology, mankind finds ways to replenish the
environment and discover new methods to meet demands. The
Agenda asserts that wealth acquisition is a key cause of
global degradation, when common sense tells us that wealthy
societies are far better able to protect their environment
than poor ones. As a result the UN wants to redefine wealth
and prosperity, making people who succeed feel guilty so they
will change their lifestyle and be less dependent on the
Earth’s resources.
The Agenda promotes ‘green jobs’ as the saviour for an
economy, when research shows that for every green job created,
at least 2.2 ordinary jobs in the general economy will be
destroyed – and if the ‘green jobs’ are created by subsidies, that same money could
have created nearly five times as many ordinary jobs. Agenda
21 promotes the need to ‘educate’ children in order to
change consumption patterns, and a quick look at the school
curriculum will show that their propaganda is deeply embedded,
with concepts such as sustainability, waste minimisation, and
smart growth, along with a bias against farming, cars, and
wealth, found at almost every level of schooling.
Through Agenda 21, the UN clearly aims to control the
population. As a political organisation the UN has been very
effective at imposing their values on our society – often
without the public even recognising the fact. Surely we should
be forming our own concepts of right and wrong, good and bad
based on our own unique values and culture, rather than
importing those values from a socialist organisation based on
the other side of the world. What do you think?
This week’s poll asks: Should
New Zealand follow the lead of Alabama and ban Agenda 21 from
our laws and practices?
Click here for poll >>>
FOOTNOTES:
1. United Nations, Agenda
21
2. Hamilton City Council, Agenda
21 Council Policy
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