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Florida Spring Protection to fuel growth
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2010 is the start of a renewed power for the Citizens
of Central Florida Known as "The Browning Brigade", as Stearns is challenged for the first time in a generation.
THE ELECTION OF 2012 WILL BE THE END FOR STEARNS STRANGLE HOLD ON OUR DISTRICT 6. For 22 years Cliff Stearns has
used the 6TH Congressional Seat as his personal TREASURE SOURCE. 20 thousand voters joined the growing BROWNING BRIGRADE
army to reclaim our seat in Congress. Now we have opened the door to our congressional representative actually doing
for the people rather than for himself. First to bring tourism to a halt was Cliff Stearns and Obama and their claim that The Gulf
was if a state of disaster, of catastrophic proportions. Northern tourist took the congressman
and president at their word, canceling travel plans to the Sunshine State. Pandering for a few votes and the chance
to gain from the industrial, Stearns singlehandedly destroyed the tourist industry for many months if not years. Once
interrupted the plans for travel to Florida must now be redeveloped at great cost. Support Don Browning in his effort to reform US Congress. National Debt, and the growth of government restrictions and regulation from
the top down is slowing and harming the productivity of the private business sector. Long term congressmen are the problem.
Understanding the anti-Development efforts in the 6th Congressional District is a good place to start. Help promote term limits. For 12 terms Congressman
Cliff Stearns has been effective at promoting Agenda 21. Do what you can to develop a political force to bring in new
blood in the next election. Congressmen become strong taking money from special interest in Washington DC. A new
congressman in the 6th District will help the people and hurt the Stearns Machine. Most Stearns funding goes to Sustainable
De-Development, through earmarks and the Heart of Florida program to De-Develop the 6th District. Sustainable Development
is at the core of the Stearns Heart of Florida De-development program. Agenda 21 Sustainable Development Because this is so important it's going to have it's own page.SOUND THE ALARM AGAINST SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
by Tom DeWeese After more than15
years of trying to warn Americans about the dangers of Sustainable Development, finally, many in the freedom movement are
beginning to understand that it is the root of most of the issues we are fighting today. But it is a vast, complicated issue
that is difficult to comprehend – even for those of us who have been studying it for so long. It is critical that all
freedom-loving Americans grasp the true destructive force of evil that is Sustainable Development. P&E: Sustainable
Development is a buzz-word that one hears used frequently in discussions of government policy the world over. But like most
Americans, I had no idea what it meant. The term appeared in full force in 1992; in a United Nations initiative
called the U.N. Sustainable Development Agenda 21, or as it has become known around the world, simply Agenda 21. It was unveiled
at the 1992 United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED), ballyhooed as the Earth Summit. In fact, the
Earth Summit was one of the provisions called for in the Brundtland report as a means of implementing Sustainable Development
around the world. But the UNEP doesn’t operate on its own. Influencing it and helping to write policy are thousands of non-governmental organizations (NGOs). NGOs are not just any private group hoping to influence policy. True NGOs are officially sanctioned by the United Nations. Such status was created by UN Resolution 1296 in 1948, giving NGOs official “Consultative” status to the UN. That means they can not only sit in on international meetings, but can actively participate in creating policy, right along side government representatives. Today these NGOs have power nearly equal to member nations when it comes to writing UN policy. In fact, most UN policy is first debated and then written by the NGOs and presented to national government officials at international meetings for approval and ratification. The policies sometimes come in the form of international treaties or simply as policy guidelines. It is through this system that Sustainable Development has become international policy. The three most powerful NGOs influencing UNEP policy are three international NGOs. They are the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF), the World Resources Institute (WRI) and the International Union for Conservation and Nature (IUCN). These three groups have provided the philosophy, objectives and methodology for the international environmental agenda through a series of official reports and studies such as: World Conservation Strategy, published in 1980 by all three groups; Global Biodiversity Strategy, published in 1992; andGlobal Biodiversity Assessment, published in 1996. These groups not only influence UNEP’s agenda, they also influence a staggering array of international and national NGOs around the world. Jay Hair, former head of the National Wildlife Federation, one of the U.S.’s largest environmental organizations, was once the president of the IUCN. Hair later turned up as co-chairman of the Presidents Council on Sustainable Development. The IUCN, WWR, and WRI write the documents needed to implement the Sustainable Development agenda. These are provided to the WWF which maintains a network of national chapters around the world. These, in turn, influence, if not dominate NGO activities at the national level. It is at the national level where NGOs agitate and lobby national governments to implement those policies that are advanced by the UNEP. In this manner, the UN and its NGOs bring the world ever closer to global governance. Q: What kinds of groups promote this in the U.S.A.? TAD: In 1995, President Bill Clinton, in compliance with Agenda 21, created the President’s Council on Sustainable Development. With great fanfare the Council issued a comprehensive report containing all the guidelines on how our government was to be reinvented under sustainable development. Those guidelines were created to direct policy for every single federal agency, state government and local community government. Many Americans ask how dangerous international policies can suddenly turn up in state and local government, all seemingly uniform to those in communities across the nation and around the globe. The answer – meet ICLEI, a non-profit, private foundation, dedicated to helping your mayor implement all of his promises. Originally known as the International Council for Local Environmental Initiatives (ICLEI), today the group simply calls itself "ICLEI – Local Governments for Sustainability." In 1992, ICLEI was one of the groups instrumental in creating Agenda 21. The group’s mission is to push local communities to regulate the environment – and it’s having tremendous success. Currently there are 544 American cities in which ICLEI is being paid with tax dollars from city councils to implement and enforce Sustainable Development. ICLEI is there to assure that the mayors keep their promises and meet their goals. Climate change, of course, is the ICLEI mantra. Rather than protecting the environment; their programs are about reinventing governmentwith a specific political agenda. ICLEI and others are dedicated to controlling your locally elected public officials to quietly implement an all encompassing tyranny over every community in the nation. Like a disease, ICLEI (or others of its kind) is entrenched in most American cities, dictating policy to your locally elected officials, controlling policy and making sure they do not listen to your protests. In addition to ICLEI, groups like the Sierra
Club, Nature Conservancy and Audubon Society, NGOs which also helped write Sustainable Development policy have chapters in
nearly every city. They know that Congress has written legislation providing grants for cities that implement Sustainablist
policy. They agitate to get the cities to accept the grants. If a city rejects the plan, they then agitate to the public,
telling them that their elected representatives have cost the city millions in “their” tax dollars. Finally, the
NGOs usually get their way. This quote lays down the ground rules for the entire Sustainable Development
agenda. It says humans are nothing special – just one strand in the nature of things or, put another way, humans are
simply biological resources. Sustainablist policy is to oversee any issue in which man reacts with nature –which, of
course, is literally everything. And because the environment always comes first, there must be great restrictions over private
property ownership and control. This is necessary, Sustainablists say, because humans only defile nature. In fact, the report
from the 1976 UN Habitat I conference said: “Land …cannot be treated as an ordinary asset, controlled
by individuals and subject to the pressures and inefficiencies of the market. Private land ownership is also a principle instrument
of accumulation and concentration of wealth, therefore, contributes to social injustice.” According to its authors, the objective of sustainable development is to integrate economic, social, and environmental policies in order to achieve reduced consumption, social equity, and the preservation and restoration of biodiversity. The Sustainablists insist that society be transformed into feudal-like governance by making Nature the central organizing principle for our economy and society. As such, every societal decision would first be questioned as to how it might effect the environment. To achieve this, Sustainablist policy focuses on three components; land use, education, and population control and reduction. The sustainable development
logo used in most literature on the subject contains three connecting circles labeled Social Equity; Economic Prosperity;
and Ecological Integrity (known commonly as the 3 Es). In the Sustainablist’s world, everyone has a right to a job with a good wage, a right to health care and a right to housing. To assure those rights, wealth must be redistributed. In the language of the Sustianablists, “Capital ownership is systematically deconcentrated and made directly available to every person.” That, they say, is Social Justice. That means there will be no single owner of property or business. All will be controlled by society for the common good. This is the same policy behind the push to eliminate our nation’s borders to allow the “migration” of those from other nations into the United States to share our individually-created wealth and our taxpayers-paid government social programs. Say the Sustainablists, “Justice and efficiency go hand in hand.” Borders,” they say, “are unjust.” Under the Sustainablist system, private property is an evil that is used simply to create wealth for a few. So, too, is business ownership. Instead, “every worker/person will be a direct capital owner.” Property and businesses are to be kept in the name of the owner, keeping them responsible for taxes and other expenses, however control is in the hands of the “community,” (read, government). Under Sustainable Development individual human
wants, needs, and desires are to be conformed to the views and dictates of social planners. Harvey Ruvin, Vice Chair of the
International Council on Local Environmental Initiatives (ICLEI) said: “individual
rights will have to take a back seat to the collective” in the process of implementing Sustainable Development. As a result, Sustainable Development policy is redefining free trade to mean centralized global trade “freely” crossing (or eliminating) national borders. It definitely does not mean people and companies trading freely with each other. Its real effect is to redistribute American manufacturing, wealth, and jobs out of our borders and to lock away American natural resources. After the regulations have been put in place, literally destroying whole industries, new “green” industries created with federal grants bring newfound wealth to the “partners.” This is what Sustainablists refer to as economic prosperity. The Sustainable Development “partnerships” include some corporations both domestic and multinational. They in turn are partnered with the politicians who use their legislative and administrative powers to raid the treasury to fund and enforce the scheme.
Of course, as the new elite stomp out the need for competition through government power, the real loser is the consumer, who no longer counts in market decisions. Government grants are now being used by industry to create mandated green products like wind and solar power. Products are put on the market at little risk to the industry, leaving consumers a more limited selection from which to choose. True free markets are eliminated in favor of controlled economies which dictate the availability and quality of products. For part two click below. Ecological Integrity Under Sustainable Development there can be no limited government,
as advocated by our Founding Fathers, because, we are told, the real or perceived environmental crisis is too great. Maurice
Strong, Chairman of the 1992 UN Earth Summit said: “A shift is necessary toward lifestyles less geared to environmentally-damaging
consumption patterns. The shift will require a vast strengthening of the multilateral system, including the United Nations.” On the environment –
leading to controls on private property and business. To quote a special Sustainable Development document prepared by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD): “A new ecologically balanced economics will drive the pursuit of Community Sustainability within modern society’s all-encompassing urban-rural industrial civilization…. This global marketplace is destined to recast the meanings of industry, work, play, health, agriculture, communications, learning and much more.” Sustainable Development calls for changing the very infrastructure of the nation, away from private ownership and control of property to nothing short of central planning of the entire economy – often referred to as top-down control. Sustainable Development policy is built on something called the “precautionary principle.”
That means that any activities that might threaten human health or the environment should be stopped -- even if no clear cause
and effect relationship has been established – and even if the potential threat is largely theoretical. Q: Is there a rational basis for "sustainable development",
I mean are natural resources that in danger of being destroyed or consumed out of existence? Q:
To what extent is the promotion of "Sustainable Development" fear-mongering? Meanwhile in rural communities,
farmers and land owners are unable to make money from their lands because of taxes, global “free trade” pacts
like NAFTA, and strict regulations that are killing their ability to survive. So they are signing things like conservation
agreements and selling their development rights, thinking these things will save their land. What they don’t understand
is that groups like the Nature Conservancy are getting rich and powerful trading and selling those Easements to their fellow
environmental groups. The farmers, thinking they have preserved the land to hand down to their children find to their horror
that they have nothing to hand down. They no longer own the land. And if they try to sell it, they find no buyers, because
no one wants to buy something they can’t control. If
you hear your locally–elected leaders using these terms, Sustainable Development is what they mean. Meanwhile, the UN has worked directly with local communities to recruit mayors and
county commissioners to create Sustainable policy on their own. The National Conference of Mayors is a major promoter of Sustainable
Development. Of course, with ICLEI in over 500 cities, literally every single local and state government is now involved in
putting these polices in place. They answer to no one and they are run by zealots with their own political agenda imposing international laws and regulations. Local homeowners have no say in the process and in most cases are shut out. Sometimes they are literally thrown out of council meetings because they want to discuss how a regulation is going to affect their property or livelihood. Essentially, this process of a series of non-elected councils and boards enforcing policy is the perfect description of a soviet.
Today, those who are taking to the streets in TEA Party protests are focusing on federal issues like taxes and health care. They must learn that they can never restore the Republic if their local community is a little soviet. This is the root of our fight against Sustainable Development. Tom DeWeese is president of the American Policy Center and Editor of The DeWeese Report
, 70 Main Street, Suite 23, Warrenton Virginia. |
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