Agency Tyranny Page | 16
The US House of Representative never
approved Agenda 2118 nor did the US Senate ratify the UN Biodiversity Treaty.
That, however, did not protect American property owners from the movement away
from private property rights. The UN’s agenda continued, albeit a bit
more slowly, through executive actions.
UN’s Marxist
Ideals Codified in US Regulatory Law
One year after the Rio Earth Summit, President
Bill Clinton, exasperated at the refusal of Congress to approve the UN’s
programs, decided to go it alone. In 1993, he formed the President’s Council on
Sustainable Development (PCSD). Its purpose was to advance the ideas of Agenda 21
and the Biodiversity Treaty and gain buy-in from stakeholders who would later
implement the UN’s version of Sustainable Development in the United States. To
assure continuity with the UN’s program, the President formed a committee that
seated the very people who wrote Agenda 21, at the same table with Federal
Agency employees. EPA, HUD and the Department of Commerce members served
side-by-side with directors of international groups like the World Resources
Institute, Environmental Defense Fund and the Natural Resources Defense Council.21
Together, the committee created a 10-point list of National Goals that matched
the anti-private property objectives of Agenda 21.
Agency Tyranny Page | 17
The PCSD reported its progress to the
United Nations.23
It was not long before the committee’s
ideas made their way into regulatory law. By 1998, the UN’s Sustainable Development
goals from the 1992 Earth Summit were codified in the Federal Register and had
become the law of the land.24 The EPA’s Sustainable Development Challenge Grant
Program included the goals of advancing Agenda 21 and the ideas of the President’s
Council on Sustainable Development.
The formerly
rejected “Wildlands Project,” designed to migrate Americans into controlled
regions; and the Vancouver Action Plan’s goal to increase government’s control
over private property, were jointly transformed into America’s “Regional
Sustainable Development” movement. (Read this paragraph again!)
Throughout the next decade sustainability,
regionalism and Smart Growth planning flourished in every state. In 2002 HUD
partially funded the American Planning Association to
create boilerplate Smart Growth
legislation that reflected the government’s plans.
The “Growing Smart Legislative Guidebook”
recommended governments use ‘takings’ legislation to confiscate the property of
individuals who failed to change their property to conform to government schemes.
Planners consider the “amortization of non-conforming uses” clause an option
that localities may or may not use. But, all of the options in the guidebook
restrict rather than expand private property rights. Agency Tyranny Page | 18
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