Does U.N.’s
Agenda 21 Education Mandate Push Common Core in USA? What Does Common Core Have To Do With the U.N.’s Agenda 21 ?
There’s an
interesting article about Obama’s call for the U.S. to pay for education
of the world. It’s “A Global Fund for Education: Achieving Education
for All” that you can read in fullhere:http://www.brookings.edu/research/papers/2009/08/education-gartner
Its summary states:
“In order to realize the world’s
commitment to ensuring education for all by 2015, important
innovations and reforms will be needed in the governance and financing of global education. In
2008, Presidential Candidate Barack
Obama committed to making sure that every child has the chance to learn
by creating a Global Fund for
Education. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has recently called
for a new architecture of global
cooperation… A new Global Fund for Education… must be capable of
mobilizing the approximately $7 billion annually still needed to achieve
education for all, while holding all
stakeholders accountable for achieving results with these resources.
None of these objectives will be achieved without a major rethinking of the
global education architecture and an evolution of current mechanisms for
financing education… Achieving these two Millennium Development Goals, and the broader Education for
All Goals… will require more capable international institutions.”
I have to ask
three questions as I read this:
- Since when do nations collectively finance global education?
- Since when has the whole world agreed on what should be taught to the whole world?
- Since when is the United States of America reduced to “accountable stakeholder” status over its own educational and financial decisionmaking?
So Obama
created a global education fund, using U.S. taxpayer money. I don’t
remember voting on this.
And Hilary
Clinton is misusing the word “inclusiveness” to now mean “no more
independent sovereignty for anyone.” Meanwhile, there’s a United
Nations/UNESCO program called “Education For All” that involves the same ideas
and the very same key people as “Common Core”. And there’s also an
“Education, Public Awareness and Training” chapter in the U.N.’s Agenda 21
goals.
Both the U.N.’s
educational goals (via UNESCO and “Education for All” ) and “Common Core”
do sound very appealing on the surface. Each seeks to educate by teaching
the exact same standards to all children (and adults) on a national or a global
scale. But both supercede local
control over what is taught to students, and both dismiss the validity and importance of the
U.S. Constitution implicitly.
Both UNESCO’s
educational goals and Common Core are, coincidentally, heavily funded by
activist and philanthropist Bill
Gates, one of the wealthiest billionaires on earth. http://www.eagleforum.org/links/UNESCO-MS.pdf ( Link to Gates’
Microsoft/Unesco partnership)
Gates gave the
Common Core developer/copyright holders, NGA/CCSSO, about $25 million dollars
to promote his special interest, Common Core. (See CCSSO: 2009–$9,961,842, 2009– $3,185,750,
2010–$743,331, 2011–$9,388,911 ;
NGA Center: 2008–$2,259,780
at http://www.keepeducationlocal.com .
Gates partnered
with UNESCO/U.N. to fund “Education For All” as well. See http://bettereducationforall.org/
The “Education
For All” developer is UNESCO, a branch of the United Nations. Education
For All’s key document is called “The Dakar Framework for Action: Education For
All: Meeting Our Collective Commitments.” Read the full text here: http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0012/001211/121147e.pdf
At this link,
you can learn about how Education For All works:
In a nutshell:
“Prior to the reform of the global EFA coordination architecture in 2011-2012, the Education for All
High-Level Group brought together high-level representatives from national
governments, development agencies, UN agencies, civil society and the private
sector. Its role was to generate
political momentum and mobilize financial, technical and political support
towards the achievement of the EFA goals and the education-related Millennium
Development Goals (MDGs). From 2001-2011 the High-Level Group met
annually.”
The six goals of “Education For All” are claimed to be internationally
agreed-upon. But since much of what happens with the United Nations threatens
the sovereignty of the United States and all sovereign nations, I do not
recognize that these goals, or anything else for that matter, are
“internationally agreed-upon.” Do you?
For everyone on
earth to totally agree, we’d have to submit to a one-world government with a
one-world constitution that would override any individual country’s
constitution. There are some great thoughts on this subject
here: http://www.keepeducationlocal.com/
But in the
U.N.’s own words: “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 on the environment. Agenda 21, the Rio Declaration on Environment and
Development, and the Statement of principles for the
Sustainable Management of Forests were adopted by more than 178 Governments at the United
Nations Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED) held in Rio de
Janerio, Brazil, 3 to 14 June 1992. The Commission on Sustainable Development (CSD) was created in December 1992 to
ensure effective follow-up…” See: http://www.un.org/esa/dsd/agenda21/
So Agenda 21 is
a comprehensive plan of action to be
taken by everyone. We all apparently have been signed up to agree,
whether we agree or not. I’m already getting the communist creeps.
But most of us
haven’t even heard of Agenda 21 nor do we know anything about “sustainable
development”.
On the linked Education and Awareness page of
that same U.N. website, we learn:
“Education, Public Awareness and
Training is the focus of Chapter 36 of Agenda 21. This is a cross-sectoral theme both relevant to the implementation of the
whole of Agenda 21 and indispensable for achieving sustainable development.”
http://www.un.org/esa/dsd/susdevtopics/sdt_educawar.shtml
Did you get
that? Education is indispensable for the U.N. to get its agenda pushed
onto every citizen worldwide. They just admitted it out loud.
They want a strong hand in determining what is taught worldwide.
So then we
click on Chapter 36. The “indispensable” implementation tool they are
describing are your children’s American public schools. Yes, really:
36.2 says they
plan to “reorient” worldwide education toward sustainable development.
(No discussion, no vote, no input needed on this reorientation plan,
apparently.)
36.3
says: “While basic education provides the underpinning for any
environmental and development education, the latter needs to be incorporated as
an essential part of learning. Both formal and non-formal education are
indispensable to changing people’s
attitudes so that they have the capacity to assess and address their
sustainable development concerns. It is also critical for achieving
environmental and ethical awareness, values
and attitudes, skills and behaviour consistent with sustainable development and
for effective public participation in decision-making. To be effective,
environment and development education should deal with the dynamics of both the
physical/biological and socio-economic environment and human (which may include
spiritual) development, should be integrated
in all disciplines, and should employ formal and non-formal methods
The take-away?
- Environmental education will be incorporated in formal education globally.
- Any value or attitude held by anyone globally that stands independent to that of the United Nations’ definition of “sustainable education” must change. Current attitudes are unacceptable.
- Environmental education will be belief-and-spirituality based.
- Environmental education will be integrated into all disciplines, not just science.
The stated
objectives (36.4) include endorsing “Education for All,” achieving “environmental
and development awareness in all sectors of society on a world-wide scale as
soon as possible”; and to achieve the accessibility of environmental and
development education, linked to social education, from primary school age
through adulthood to all groups of people; and to promote integration of
environment concepts, including demography, in all educational programmes, and “giving special emphasis to the further training of decision
makers at all levels.”
Does that not
sound like quite an agenda? But it gets worse.
Under
“Activities,” we find:
“Governments
should strive to update or prepare strategies aimed at integrating environment
and development as a cross-cutting issue into education at all levels within
the next three years. This should be done in cooperation with all sectors of
society…. A thorough review of curricula should be undertaken to ensure a
multidisciplinary approach, with environment and development issues and their
socio-cultural and demographic aspects and linkages.”
So, if a country
like the USA, for example, has a Constitution and G.E.P.A. laws that states
that its federal government has absolutely no legal right to supervise or
direct state school systems, then what? How can it be done?
I’ll tell
you how! Just get a U.S. President to circumvent Congress and the
states’ right to educate. Just use nongovernmental groups like the
NGA/CCSSO to write and copyright new national educational standards. Just
pay groups to do what you are not legally authorized to do. Just create “Race
to the Top” grants. Just promote a socialist education system
but call it a state-led Common Core. Then get zillionaire
philanthropist Bill Gates to promote and pay for most of it. And that is what
has happened.
Enough info for
today? Oh, no. Not even close.
They go on to
say how countries should pay for all
the reorientation and values/attitudes changing for all
people. And there’s even a media-to-museum rebranding blitz outline:
In 36.10: “Countries…
should promote a cooperative relationship with the media, popular theatre groups, and entertainment and advertising industries by initiating discussions
to mobilize their experience in shaping public behaviour and consumption
patterns and making wide use of their methods. Such cooperation would also
increase the active public participation in the debate on the environment.
UNICEF should make child-oriented material available to media as an educational
tool, ensuring close cooperation between the out-of-school public information
sector and the school curriculum,
for the primary level. UNESCO, UNEP and universities should enrich pre-service curricula for journalists on
environment and development topics;
(f) Countries,
in cooperation with the scientific community, should establish ways of
employing modern communication technologies for effective public outreach.
National and local educational authorities and relevant United Nations agencies
should expand, as appropriate, the use of audio-visual methods, especially in
rural areas in mobile units, by producing
television and radio programmes for developing countries, involving
local participation, employing
interactive multimedia methods and integrating advanced methods with folk
media;
(g) Countries
should promote… environmentally sound leisure and tourism activities… making
suitable use of museums, heritage
sites, zoos, botanical gardens, national parks…”
So, it should
be pretty clear that there is a huge re-education program happening to all
countries, the aim of which is to change people’s attitudes toward believing in
“sustainable development” and environmental education. If it’s picking up
litter, some other innocuous program, fine; spend trillions without taking a
vote to make sure we all think alike. Stupid but harmless. On the
other hand, what if, what IF, it’s something we DON’T all agree upon?
There are hundreds of countries. Even if it were just up to China* vs.
the U.S. to define “sustainable behavior” how would we ever agree? Paper
or plastic? Paper wastes trees; plastic creates landfills. These
“green-defining” issues are endless.
But the
problem, in a nutshell, is simply: Whose version of “sustainable” do you want to re-educate everyone to
believe –assuming that you can accept massive-scale propagandizing
for the promotion of one single belief system, under which people
didn’t get a representative vote)
*Sustainable
thinking includes limiting by abortion the number of babies allowed
to be born, in order to have control over population growth. The Chinese “One
Child Policy” was introduced by the Chinese Government in 1979 with the
intention of keeping the population within sustainable limits even in the face of natural disasters and poor
harvests, and improving the quality of life for the Chinese population as a
whole. Under the policy, parents who have more than one child may have their
wages reduced and be denied some social services.” (BBC)
Source:https://whatiscommoncore.wordpress.com/2012/09/14/does-u-n-s-education-mandate-push-common-core-in-usa/
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