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AGENDA 21

  Australia 

Agenda 21 and Water Issues  

Special Update March 4, 2008

 

 The Takedown of Australia! <click here, then "download" to read 72 page full report

 

Prepared by Sue and Lindsay Maynes and the EnviroWild Team of Australia


Australia's implementation of Agenda 21 exceeds that of all other common law countries. The citizens of Queensland, Australia have had their property rights completely stripped so to advance the globalist political agenda.  Read how the State of Queensland is now removed from the protections of the Australian Constitution. A privately owned state corporation now owns and controls all land-use activity in Queensland. This horrific experience is destroying the life and culture of those living there and provides a prototype example of what public/private partnership really means. 

 

Note for Australian FA contacts: Sue Maynes will be speaking on March 8 and 9, 2008 at the Inverell Forum on the Queensland Constitution 2001.

 

Agenda for the 21st Century Invades Australia <read

by Diane Ross    

Leaders eager to enforce Agenda 21 policies encourage Public/Private Partnerships with willing corporations, developers and others. As a result, Australian businesses are becoming nationalized and private property ownership is being abolished.

 Australia Water History  <read
by Laurence Jones   
 

Here's the timeline of serious issues with Australia 's public drinking water. The timeline is given in two parts with time of actions, relevant discussion and citations.

 

 

Neighborhood Tool

 


*Updated Guide* Understanding Sustainable Development/Agenda 21 <click, then "download" to view

More charts and new sections on the North American Union, Trans-Texas Corridor and Eminent Domain.

 

You may have heard people talking about Sustainable Development – in public meetings, on television and on the radio. Consultants talk about it, university professors lecture on it, and at various levels of government, it may even be mandated. But what is Sustainable Development? That is precisely the question this pamphlet is intended to address.You will read of the origins of Sustainable Development, its theoretical underpinnings, its major programs, and the means by which it is implemented.

 

When you have finished reading this document, you will have the knowledge necessary to begin identifying the vast array of Sustainable Development programs that arise. Please recognize this document for what it is: a unique opportunity to learn more about Sustainable Development, and to make a difference in your community by supporting present and future actions that restore and protect the rights and well-being of your family, your fellow citizens, and you. 

 Email store@freedomadvocates.org to place an order or use the contact info below to reach us.

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AGENDA of 

 Sustainable Development

 7. Nullification of the right to the reasonable use of one’s property affects by extension the right to private action and the freedom of expression. Shaw, Michael, What is Private Property? Liberty Garden (2003).

8. Heywood, V.H. (ed.). Global Biodiversity Assessment. United Nations Environment Programme. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1995): 767, 782. This document likewise condemns “inappropriate social structures” (p 763), golf courses (p 970), and the attitudes toward nature found in “Judeo-Christian-

Islamic religions” (pp 766, 838). In contrast to the unalienable rights found in America’s founding documents, the United Nations Charter and the Declaration of Human Rights are based on a very different idea: rights are granted and rescinded by men.

The Sustainable Development political agenda originates in the founding documents of the United Nations. This isn’t surprising, since the myriad of countries represented in the drafting of Agenda 21 have widely divergent forms of government, and must have a point of agreement (a “least common denominator”) to rally around – and the U.N. Charter provides that point.

However, for progress to be made in implementing Sustainable Development in the United States, "Unalienable rights such as the right to property must be eroded, attacked, and struck down altogether." 7, 8

Implementing Sustainable Development

The authors of Agenda 21 have said it will affect every area of life, grouped according to three objectives: Equity, Economy, and Environment (known commonly as “the 3 E’s”). By defining these terms vaguely, a litany of abuse has resulted. Furthermore, by rubber-stamping pre-conceived plans, using manipulative “visioning” sessions to garner the appearance of public buy-in, and acquiring grants from sources with questionable motives, the entire process of implementing Sustainable Development policies is suspect.

Equity: Using the Law to Restructure Human Nature

The authors of the Sustainable Development action plan recognized that their environmental and economic objectives, and the corresponding transformation of the American system of justice, are radically divergent from the views and objectives of the average person. Therefore, in order to achieve their objectives, they call for a shift in attitudes, that can be seen in the educational programs developed by its proponents. This is the premise of Sustainable Development: That individual human wants, needs, and desires are to be conformed to the views and dictates of planners. Harvey Ruvin, Vice Chair of the International Council on Local Environmental Initiatives (ICLEI), and Clerk of the Circuit and County

Court in Miami-Dade County, Florida, has said that “individual rights will have to take a back seat to the collective”  in the process of implementing Sustainable Development. 9 Understanding Sustainable Development – Agenda 21

9. Peros, Joan, unpublished report, UNCED Rio+10 Summit – Johannesburg,

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