Rural
landowners who desire to use their own property are shocked when they learn
new regulations increasingly restrict them from doing almost anything.
These regulations ostensibly protect endangered species, viewsheds,
open space, or a host of other reasons for limiting the owners rights to
use their land. Although the environment and society allegedly benefit
from the regulations, it is the landowner who pays the price through lowered
property values. Rarely does the property owner receive just compensation
for the societal benefit―as required by the U.S. Constitution and almost
every state constitution. Rather the property owner is required to pay the
entire cost, even though all of society supposedly benefits.
Essential Background Reading
Why Property Rights Matter
The Problem With The Endangered Species Act
International Domination of US Environmental Law and Private Property
The Wildlands Project
Why Property Rights Matter
The Problem With The Endangered Species Act
International Domination of US Environmental Law and Private Property
The Wildlands Project
These
regulations are usually developed by planners or other professionals
who have no real-life experience in rural living. Because they have no real
understanding of what is required to develop exploit natural resources, they
establish idealistic arbitrary and capricious rules that make farming,
ranching and timber growing increasingly difficult and less profitable.
When some resource users find they can no longer farm, ranch or produce timber
profitably they are forced to sell their property at a greatly reduced value
because the same regulations devalue the land. Those who own property near
an urban area face an added burden when their ad valorem taxes skyrocket due
to the growing potential for development. Yet, when they try to sell their
land for development they find their property value has plummeted because
regulations requiring open space and other societal benefits severely
limit the ability to develop the land and therefore its value.
Property
owners in America have always accepted the need for regulations. Common
law since the time of the Magna Charta has always allowed the government to
restrict property use that would otherwise cause problems of safety,
health, harm or nuisance to the community or the property owner’s neighbors.
However, the imposition of regulations to provide vague benefits to
society or the environment is relatively new in America. This new process
is called sustainable development.
With sustainable development, no longer do property owners in the United
States have unalienable property rights, as penned in the Declaration of
Independence and protected in the U.S. Constitution’s Bill of Rights.
Instead, government imposes on property owners what are termed “usufructory rights.” Since unalienable property rights
provide the foundation to liberty and wealth in America, sustainable development portends
dire consequences to all Americans.
By
definition, usufructory rights are the rights to use and enjoy the profits
and advantages of something belonging to another, as long as the property
is not damaged or altered in any way. Conceptually, it is similar to renting
or leasing something within limits set by its true owner. The usufruct system
of property use is derived from the Latin word ususfructus. Originally it
defined Roman property interests between a master and his slave held under a
usus fructus (Latin: “use and enjoyment”) bond. The Romans expanded
this concept to create an estate of uses in land rather than an estate of possession. Having
seized lands belonging to conquered kingdoms, the Romans considered them
public lands, and rented (ususfructus) them to Roman soldiers. Thus the
emperor retained the estate (possession) in the lands, but gave the occupier
an estate of uses.
The
growing mountain of environmental and other regulations that supposedly
benefits the public good in the United States today has stripped Americans
of the unalienable right to possess land. Instead, Americans increasingly
have only the usufruct right to use the land and pay taxes (rent). As with the
Romans, the government retains the right to determine how the land
is used.
The Link Between Sustainable
Development and The Wildlands Project
The
usufruct principles of sustainable development first became public at
the 1976 United Nations Conference on Human Settlements (Habitat I) held
in Vancouver. For instance, the Preamble of Agenda Item 10 of the Conference
Report states
that:
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 principal instrument of 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 provision of decent dwellings and healthy conditions
for the people can only be
achieved if land is used in the interests of society as a whole. Public control of land use is therefore
indispensable.…” (Italics added)
Throughout
this UN document the socialist model for private property
rights are set forth as the basis for future United Nations policy:
Public
ownership or effective control of land in the public interest is the single most important means
of…achieving a more equitable distribution of the benefits of development….
Governments must maintain full jurisdiction and exercise complete sovereignty
over such land…. Change in the use of land…should be subject to public control
and regulation…of the common good. (Italics added)
State
control over private property has been central to every international
treaty since the 1970s. The United Nations’ World Commission on Sustainable Development formalized this into international
policy when it published its report Our
Common Future in 1987. This landmark report helped trigger a
wide range of actions, including the UN “Earth Summits”
in 1992 and 2002, the International Climate Change Convention, The Convention on Biological Diversity and worldwide “Agenda 21″
programs. Agenda 21 is a 40
chapter master plan
to reorganize national laws to the socialist principles of central control.
The United States signed Agenda 21 during the 1992 Earth Summit at Rio de
Janeiro in 1992. Chapter 15.3 requires “urgent and decisive action” be taken
“to conserve and maintain genes, species and ecosystems, with a view to the
sustainable management and use of biological resources.” To do this chapter
15.4 requires that “Governments…should:
(a)
Press for the early entry into force of the Convention on Biological
Diversity, with the
widest possible participation; and
(b) Develop national strategies for the conservation of biological diversity and the sustainable use of biological resources.
(b) Develop national strategies for the conservation of biological diversity and the sustainable use of biological resources.
Chapter
15.5 of Agenda 21 continues by stating that “conservation of ecosystems
and natural habitats…should include the reinforcement of terrestrial… protected
area systems…and promot[ion of] environmentally sound and sustainable
development in areas adjacent to protected areas with a view to furthering
protection of these areas.” The United Nations and its international allies
designed the Convention on Biological Diversity to be the workhorse in
fulfilling these requirements. The treaty was merely a 18 page outline of what needed to be done. Senator
Jesse Helms (R-NC) correctly called it “a preamble falsely described as a
treaty.” The implementing language was to be added after enough nations ratified
it to put it into force. Even so, Article 8
of the treaty uses almost identical language used in Agenda 21:
(a)
Promote a system of protected
areas or areas where special measures need to be taken to conserve
biological diversity;
(e) Promote environmentally sound and sustainable development in areas adjacent to protected areas with a view to furthering protection of these areas.”
(e) Promote environmentally sound and sustainable development in areas adjacent to protected areas with a view to furthering protection of these areas.”
By
August of 1993 the Clinton administration accepted Agenda 21’s challenge
when it directed
“natural resource and environmental agencies…develop a joint strategy to
help the United States fulfill its existing international obligations
(e.g. Convention on Biological Diversity, Agenda 21)…the executive
branch should direct federal agencies to evaluate national policies…in
light of international policies and obligations, and to amend national
policies to achieve international objectives.” This effort became the primary
reason for the need for vice president Gore and president Clinton to reinvent government.
To
accomplish this, president Clinton also created the President’s Council
on Sustainable Development. The council was comprised of green-oriented
industrial leaders, natural resource cabinet heads and leaders of major
environmental groups. The council produced a host of socialist guidelines
to implement Agenda 21 in a series of documents under the banner of Sustainable America from 1996 to 1999. These became the
official policies of the federal government and were heavily promoted by
environmental non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and foundations.
All are centered on the usufruct concept of property.
The
United Nations intended that the implementing language for the Biodiversity
Treaty be taken from the Global Biodiversity Assessment (GBA),
a 1040 page tome that ostensibly scientifically defined the reason and
the methodology for protecting biodiversity. The GBA
establishes the need for the usufruct concept,
Source: http://agenda21news.com/2014/09/background-wildlands-project/#more-2747
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