A Missouri state lawmaker is trying to protect the Show Me State from becoming subject to the collectivists at the United Nations and their pet private property eliminating project: Agenda 21.
On December 12,
Missouri Representative Mike Moon (shown) introduced House Bill 216,
legislation that would amend the state code to prohibit political subdivisions
of the state from enacting any aspects of Agenda 21 or similar schemes. The
bill reads:
Neither the
state of Missouri nor any political subdivision shall 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, adopted by the
United Nations in 1992 at its Conference on Environment and Development or any
other international law or ancillary plan of action that contravenes the
Constitution of the United States or the Missouri Constitution.
“Political
subdivision” is defined in the text of the measure as “any state, county,
incorporated city, unincorporated city, public local entity, public-private
partnership, and any other public entity of the state, a county, or city.”
The bill is
brief, but direct. The United Nations is called out for having “accredited and
enlisted numerous nongovernmental and intergovernmental organizations to assist
in the implementation of its policies relative to Agenda 21 around the world.”
Accordingly,
that state and its subordinate subdivisions are forbidden from “entering into
any agreement with, expending any sum of money for receiving funds from,
contracting services from, or giving financial aid to those nongovernmental and
intergovernmental organizations as defined in Agenda 21.”
This isn’t the
first time this legislation has been introduced. Last year, the state Senate
and House passed a similar measure, but it was vetoed by state Governor Jay
Nixon. Despite being passed overwhelmingly by the state legislature, the House
failed to override Nixon’s veto.
In a letter accompanying last year’s veto, Governor Nixon revealed a common misunderstanding of the
scope and purpose of Agenda 21. He wrote:
This
resolution, known as Agenda 21, provides a general blueprint for sustainable
development. It imposes no mandates on state or local governments and not a
single pejorative action in Missouri has been tied to it.
It is
fundamentally misguided and unnecessary to require local government officials
to become international law experts in order to perform their duties. This
legislation would spawn endless litigation frivolously attacking governmental
action based on a belief that a two decades old United Nations resolution is
somehow shaping decisions regarding such issues as health codes and road
projects. It is absurd for a city council making a zoning decision to find it
necessary to retain a high priced attorney specializing in international law
for the purpose of needlessly chasing imaginary shadows around corners.
Governor Nixon
apparently knows something about being fundamentally misguided.
What is Agenda
21? Consider this information collected by The New American’s Alex
Newman:
The widely criticized
UN scheme, adopted by governments and dictatorships worldwide at the Earth
Summit in Rio de Janeiro more than two decades ago, has been marketed as a way
to make humanity more “sustainable.” According to UN documents, however, Agenda
21 essentially seeks to restructure human civilization under the guise of
environmentalism. Even human thought is in the crosshairs, official reports
show.
While the UN
plot has not been ratified by the U.S. Senate as required by the Constitution,
it has been quietly creeping into states and local communities with prodding
and bribes from the federal executive branch. “Here in Arizona, Agenda 21 is
slowly creeping into the state,” popular Arizona state Sen. Judy Burges, a
Republican who sponsored similar legislation in her state, told The New
American recently. “It has its tentacles in everything from the schools to
local government all the way up to the state.”
Also key to
foisting the agenda on communities are “non-governmental organizations” (NGOs).
Among the primary groups is the Germany-based ICLEI, formerly known as the
International Council of Local Environmental Initiatives. During an interview
with The New American in Rio last June at the UN Conference on
Sustainable Development, ICLEI President David Cadman said he did not
understand opposition to Agenda 21 and did not believe state governments could
ban it.
“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 [sic] on the environment,” the UN admits on
its website. Even the relatively tame summary has sparked suspicions from
analysts, who point out that virtually every aspect of human existence has some
“impact” on the “environment.” The UN even claims, for example, that carbon
dioxide — a gas exhaled by everyone on Earth and required for all plant life —
is a “pollutant” in need of a global CO2 regulation regime.
Regarding the
need for hiring a “high priced attorney specializing in international law,” as
a former attorney, I will give the towns, cities, and counties of Missouri some
free advice regarding international law and its relation to the Constitution.
When it comes
to treaties — or any act passed by Congress for that matter — the analysis must
begin by looking within the four corners of the Constitution.
It only makes
sense that the federal government cannot enter into a treaty that would
contravene the Constitution. If I tell my teenage son that he can drive my car
to the movies, does that give him permission to drive it into a lake?
To put a finer
point on it, Article VI of the Constitution says:
This
Constitution, and the laws of the United States which shall be made in
pursuance thereof; and all treaties made, or which shall be made, under the
authority of the United States, shall be the supreme law of the land; and the
judges in every state shall be bound thereby, anything in the Constitution or
laws of any State to the contrary notwithstanding.
That means that
in order to have any lawful effect, the object of any treaty signed by the
president and ratified by the Senate must lie within their constitutional
authority (“the authority of the United States”).
If the Congress
and president were to disregard these restrictions on their power (as they so
often do), the mandates of the resulting treaty would not be the law of the
land as Alexander Hamilton explained in Federalist 33:
If a number of
political societies enter into a larger political society, the laws which the
latter may enact, pursuant to the powers intrusted [sic] to it by its
constitution, must necessarily be supreme over those societies and the
individuals of whom they are composed…. But it will not follow from this
doctrine that acts of the larger society which are not pursuant to its
constitutional powers, but which are invasions of the residuary authorities of
the smaller societies, will become the supreme law of the land. These will be
merely acts of usurpation, and will deserve to be treated as such. [Emphasis in
original.]
Thomas
Jefferson echoed that point specifically as it pertains to the topic of
treaties. Jefferson wrote, “In giving to the President and Senate a power to
make treaties, the Constitution meant only to authorize them to carry into
effect, by way of treaty, any powers they might constitutionally exercise.”
At another
time, he reiterated this principle of constitutional construction, saying,
“Surely the President and Senate cannot do by treaty what the whole government
is interdicted from doing in any way.
In a letter to
his colleague, collaborator, and friend, James Madison, Jefferson agreed that
“the objects on which the President and Senate may exclusively act by treaty
are much reduced” by application of the principle that a treaty cannot
contradict the Constitution and yet still enjoy the approval of that document.
Again, my son couldn’t justify crashing my car into a lake by pointing to
my permission to drive it to the movies.
Although in
reality, as proved above, treaties that violate the Constitution are prima
facie null, void, of no legal effect, the Supreme Court has come down on both
sides of the supremacy issue.
In a pair of
contradictory decisions, the Supreme Court has held that “No doubt the great
body of private relations usually fall within the control of the State, but a
treaty may override its power” (Missouri v. Holland) and “constitutional
rights cannot be eliminated by a treaty” (Reid v. Covert).
For this reason
— and many others — Representative Moon is right to try again to protect the
property rights of Missourians from being abridged by the United Nations and
sacrificed on the altar of “sustainable development.”
House Bill 216
is not currently on the Missouri House of Representatives’ calendar. If
enacted, it would go into effect on August 28, 2015.
Source:http://blog.tenthamendmentcenter.com/2014/12/missouri-bill-would-effectively-nullify-agenda-21/
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