Agenda 21… Funded by HUD, EPA, USDA, DOT and Insiders

 

agenda21-trojin-horse

Growing Smart Legislative Guidebook Model Statues for Planning and the Management of Change was
funded by a grant from the US Department of Housing and Urban
Development (the lead federal agency); Federal Highway Administration
(US Department of Transportation); US Environmental Protection Agency;
the Federal Transit Administration (DOT); the Rural Economic and
Community Development Administration (US Department of Agriculture).
 

All of these agencies were members of the President’s Council on
Sustainable Development which ran from 1993-1999.

Private
funders included the Siemens Corporation; Henry M. Jackson Foundation;
Annie E. Casey Foundation; and the American Planning Association.  These
private organizations promote smart growth.  

Siemens,
for instance, benefits from the development of the ‘smart grid’ and is a
key private for-profit corporation for solar, biomass, and other
subsidized power generation.

This huge multi-national corporation is
involved in health care,  building systems, financing, communications
and more. Siemens is a German company that was nearly bankrupt until
Hitler supplied free slave labor and money for technological
development.   http://www.usa.siemens.com/answers/en/ 

The Henry M. Jackson Foundation is a major grant funder.  Their involvement on an international scale is detailed here:

The
Foundation seeks to leverage its influence and effectiveness by
convening and participating actively in groups of like-minded funders to
discuss topics of mutual interest. Examples of funder partners or
networks follow:

International Human Rights Funders Group
The Jackson Foundation is a founding member and former steering
committee member of the International Human Rights Funders Group
(IHRFG), an association of grantmakers dedicated to supporting efforts
to protect human rights on both  national and international scales.

Members meet at least twice yearly to discuss issues of common concern
in human rights philanthropy and reach out to potential funders to
attract greater dollars to the human rights field. IHRFG also seeks to
inform public policy on a national level. (text in italics is directly from the Jackson Foundation website)

The Funders’ Network for Smart Growth
The Jackson Foundation is a founding member of the Funders’ Network
for Smart Growth and Livable Communities, a coalition that seeks to
strengthen and expand philanthropic leadership and grantmaking that
improves communities through better development decisions and growth
policies.

It brings together foundations, nonprofit organizations and
other partners to address a range of environmental, social, and economic
problems. (Text in italics is from The Funders’ Network for Smart Growth website)

The Funders Network membership list is vast.  Annie E. Casey Foundation
is just one of many members. Read the membership list here:  http://www.fundersnetwork.org/connect  

We
suggest that you look carefully at the members of the Funders’ Network
for Smart Growth and Livable Communities to see where the UN Agenda
21/Sustainable Development money trail leads.  

Money and power flow back
and forth along these channels.  Enterprise Community Development and
LISC, for example, are on the list.  They are for-profit affordable
housing developers who benefit hugely from subsidies in smart growth and
redevelopment (urban renewal) zones.  

Wal-Mart is a partner.  The Orton
Family Foundation is a partner.  You’ll find over 100 foundations and
corporations on the list.  Take a look.  and look at this too, as an example of who funds the Smart Growth conferences.

On the
issue of devaluation of property through regulatory means, we find it
reprehensible that counties and cities recognize that development rights
have value when they’re being purchased in conservation easements, but
they have no value when they’re being taken away through regulations.
 

You won’t find many General or Comprehensive Plans that don’t embed
sustainable communities strategies in their elements.  Most states
require it by law through their legislation.   These policies fund and
support UN Agenda 21/Sustainable Development.

More
and more non-profit organizations are being created, fragmenting from
others, spinning off and creating more non-profits.  Funding comes from
state and federal grants, from your taxes and fees, private grants,
donations (tax write-offs), and from lawsuits.  

You’ll find the League
of Women Voters advocating for Smart Growth.  The Lung Association
lobbies for Smart Growth.  The National Association of Realtors
advocates for Smart Growth. The Chamber of Commerce does too.  So does
the AFL-CIO.  

Are your dues or professional fees paying for UN Agenda
21/Sustainable Development?  Are you volunteering for a group
supporting UN Agenda 21/Sustainable Development?

SPEAK OUT.  REFUSE TO PAY OR PAY UNDER PROTEST, AND TELL THE  
              MEMBERSHIP WHY YOU ARE TAKING ACTION.

 

June 3, 2012 – posted at ChrisInMaryville

 

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