SAME LYING TACTICS BEING USED ACROSS THE NATION by Tom
DeWeese, Founder, The American Policy Center (Dec. 5, 2014)
Recently Americans were shocked by the surfacing of video
clearly revealing the blatant arrogance of White House Medical Consultant
Jonathan Gruber as he described how Obamacare proponents were able to lie to
the American people to get the law passed. “Lack of transparency,” he smugly
stated, “is a huge political advantage.” Gruber went on to pound his chest over
the “very clever basic exploitation of the lack of economic understanding of
the American voter. “Stupid,” was his favorite word.
The fact is, what Americans actually witnessed in those
videos is the way the insiders actually talk to each other behind closed doors
and how they really regard the American people. This is their attitude as they
force a complete agenda down our throats to radically change the American
system. And when they get caught with their pants on fire, Barack Obama and
Nancy Pelosi look at reporters with deadpan faces, saying, “I don’t know who
that guy is.” And these deliberate
deceptions are not just connected to the passing of Obamacare.
A blatant case in point is our nationwide fight to stop
Agenda 21. We opponents aren’t fortunate enough to have such revealing,
dramatic video to instantly shock Americans awake. But we do have a whole lot
of evidence to prove the same tactics are being employed, all the while, the
proponents deny it even exists. Agenda 21? Never heard of it! Just a conspiracy
theory! Wanna bet?
The facts clearly show that no one was denying Agenda 21 and
its goals until after we made it a national issue. Just follow the bouncing
ball:
1. On the American Policy Center’s website, www.americanpolicy.org ](
http://www.americanpolicy.org/ )), readers can see a CSPAN video from September, 1992,
recording the official business in the US House of Representatives. This
particular session was held just after the UN’s Earth Summit ended. It clearly
shows Rep. Nancy Pelosi introduced House Concurrent Resolution #353, which
called for the “United States to take a strong leadership role on implementing
decisions made at the UN Earth Summit, including Agenda 21, through domestic
and foreign policy.” She went on to call Agenda 21 a “blueprint,” and a
“comprehensive strategy.” She also said her Resolution had 71 co-sponsors and
was supported by Non-governmental organizations (NGOs) that had been
represented at the Earth Summit.
Apparently in September of 1992, Agenda 21 was considered a
“blueprint” for the future, at least in our nation’s main governmental body.
2. In 1994, the American Planning Association (APA) issued
an article in one of its Newsletters entitled “How Sustainable is Our
Planning?” The APA is considered one of the nation’s most respected planning
groups. Almost every city uses its policy guide book to make planning decisions
and as it’s been around for several decades, the APA doesn’t openly have any
ties to the United Nations.
Yet, this APA article, published just two years after the
UN’s Earth Summit openly discusses the origins of Sustainable Development
coming from the UN’s Bruntland Report entitled “Our Common Future.” The report
was produced by the UN’s Commission on Global Governance (but the APA article
doesn’t call it that).
The most telling paragraph of the article is the fifth one.
It says “Vice President Gore’s book, Earth in the Balance, addressed many of
the general issues of sustainability. Within the past year, the President’s
Council on Sustainable Development has been organized to develop
recommendations for incorporating sustainability into federal government. Also,
various groups have been formed to implement Agenda 21, a comprehensive blueprint
for sustainable development that was adopted at the recent UNCED Conference in
Rio de Janeiro (the ‘Earth Summit’)”
In that one paragraph, the APA ties together its planning
strategy to Al Gore, the President’s Council on Sustainable Development (which
was organized to take the Agenda 21 soft law policy and make it official US
policy), it revealed the organization of specific groups intended to bring
Agenda 21 into federal, state and local policy. Above all, it defined Agenda 21
as a comprehensive blueprint for sustainable development.
Apparently in 1994, the American Planning Association
considered Agenda 21 a “blueprint” to guide its planning policy in American
cities.
3. In April, 1997, the United States issued a report to the
United Nation’s Commission on Sustainable Development. The title of the report
was “Implementation of Agenda 21: Review of Progress Made Since the United
Nations Conference on Environment and Development” (Earth Summit). It details
all of the actions the US had taken in the five years since the Earth Summit to
implement the policy. In the report the US recommends that the UN Commission on
Sustainable Development (CSD) “should continue to serve as the focal point for
monitoring the implementation of Agenda 21 at local, regional and international
levels.”
Apparently in 1997, the U.S. had no problem, not only
implementing Agenda 21, but recognizing that the UN should be the main force to
oversee it, even at the local level. By the way, for those not paying close
attention, “local level” means YOUR community!
4. The Federal Register is the official document of the
federal government, reporting on the day to day activities of Congress and
detailing federal programs. In the
August 24, 1998 Federal Register, on page 45156, there was a report
entitled, “The Environmental Protection Agency: Sustainable Development
Challenge Grant Program.” In that report was this interesting bit of
information: “The Sustainable Development Challenge Grant Program is also a
step in implementing Agenda 21, the Global Plan of Action on Sustainable
Development, signed by the United States at the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro
in 1992.” It also describes various programs offered through the grants to help
local communities implement the goals of Agenda 21.
Apparently, in 1998, everything was well under way to make
Agenda 21 policy unquestioned US policy. That’s how non-treaty, soft law
“suggestions” become US law.
So, right up to at least the year 2000, no one in Congress,
the EPA, or even the main national planning group – the APA, gave any pause or
doubt in their proud support for this “comprehensive blue print called Agenda
21. They were all equally proud to work right along side the International
Council for Local Environmental Initiatives (ICLEI). During those years, ICLEI
was able to get more than 600 American cities to become dues paying members for
the exact purpose of implementing Agenda 21.
But then the fun started. A group of Americans who saw the
Agenda 21 “blueprint” to be a threat to things like local elected control,
private property rights and even national sovereignty, began to organize under
the banner of Freedom 21.
We put together eleven national conferences to teach
activists about Agenda 21 and to create new tactics to fight it. As those
activists took what they learned into their local communities, and as articles
began to pop up on the internet and local media a strange thing began to
happen. Suddenly, the once bold Agenda 21 movement that proudly proclaimed
their “comprehensive blueprint” of change, began to deny its very existence.
By 2005, the once pro-Agenda 21 crowd apparently had a
complete lobotomy to wipe out any memory of Agenda 21. The most often used
words now heard in association with Agenda 21 were, “Never heard of it.” And
that was from the people who actually wrote it.
ICLEI removed references of it from its website. The
American Planning Association quickly established a “Myths and Facts” section
to its website, adamantly denying it had any connections to Agenda 21. “None of
APA’s programs, products or services… are linked to Agenda 21,” it said. And if
Agenda 21 was mentioned, it was prefaced by such words as “innocuous 20 year
old document;” “Obscure United Nations accord;” “arcane UN document.”
Of course, the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) rushed
into the fray by attacking all of those who dared speak out about Agenda 21.
Somehow such open discussion of a political policy labeled us, at best, fringe
nuts, as worst domestic terrorists. In April, 2014 report, the SPLC said,
“Agenda 21 is not a treaty. It has no force of law, no enforcement mechanisms,
no penalties, and no significant funding. It is not even a top down
recommendation…. It’s a feel good guide….” That description is a long way from
all of those giddy references about Agenda 21 being a “comprehensive
blueprint.”
However, as we continued our fight, the once proud
Sustainablists worked harder to bury their connections. The American Planning
Association, in particular, went into panic mode. First the APA organized boot
camps to “retrain” its planners on how to deal with our opposition. Then they
produced a “Glossary for the Public” to give planners guidelines on how to
“talk” about planning. The opening line of the Glossary is the most telling:
“Given the heightened scrutiny by some members of the public, what is said –
and not said – is especially important in building support for planning.”
Can it be any clearer? Transparency was no longer to be part
of the debate on Agenda 21 and Sustainable Development. Hide it, deny it, lie
about it. It was all summed up by one of the planners who actually had advised
President Clinton’s Council on Sustainable Development. J. Gary Lawrence warned
planners that “Participating in a U.N. advocated planning process would very
likely bring out many… right wing conspiracy groups…who would actively work to
defeat any elected official… undertaking local Agenda 21. So, we call our
process something else, such as comprehensive planning, growth management or
smart growth.”
In complete exasperation, the SPLC demanded that the
business community, the Chamber of Commerce, local governments and the news
media “stop reporting on Agenda 21 as if it were a bona fide controversy…”
Further, it demanded that communities “need to be encouraged to return to or
start to develop such plans in tandem with responsible groups like the American
Planning Association.” In other words, stop questioning these plans and just
shut up and do it. Ask yourself, what “plan” is the SPLC talking about, and why
is it so very important that communities participate? Isn’t it all just “local” planning? Why would
a national “anti-hate” group care so much about “local” programs?
There is no doubt that the attempts to hide implementation
of Agenda 21 have been done using many of the same tactics Jonathan Gruber
gloated over, and for the same reasons. If the American people knew the truth,
they would rise up to stop it.
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