Analysis of United Nations Agenda 21 – Part 6
The urge to save humanity is almost always only a false-face for the urge to rule it. Power is what all messiahs really seek: not the chance to serve.
—Minority Report: H.L. Mencken’s Notebooks (1956)
Biotechnology and other topics
The statements in Agenda 21 on biotechnology–which is not a very “green” concept at all–are of major interest, so this is one of the themes covered in this series (in later posts).
Word counts:
biotechnology: 65 instances
biotechnologies: 17 instances
biotechnological: 2 instances
Population
The title of Chapter 5 is DEMOGRAPHIC DYNAMICS AND SUSTAINABILITY.
Regarding population, see, for example:
5.17. Full integration of population concerns into national planning, policy and decision-making processes should continue. Population policies and programmes should be considered, with full recognition of women’s rights.
Is it “national planning” by a democratically elected government (in theory) or global technocratic planning by a private, corporate, unelected group? It’s really the latter, but either way, it requires interfering in private, family life. Moreover, the reality is that health and happiness and having a future depends on the continuation of families and children.
A policy that pushes us into dying out is just fundamentally suspect and I think it has taken generations of conditioning for us to accept a genocidal program sold to us with the message that there “too many of us” and that we should have smaller families.
Governments have systematically funded sterilization procedures and abortion. And some countries like Canada have more recently adopted euthanasia–“M.A.I.D.”–after decades of focus on health care system shortcomings! What about all the cancer? What about all the infertility? In retrospect, can’t we see what the priority is?
As per Merriam-Webster https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/demography, “demography” is defined as:
the statistical study of human populations especially with reference to size and density …, distribution, and vital statistics
According to https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demography:
Demography … is the statistical study of populations, especially human beings.
Demographic analysis examines and measures the dimensions and dynamics of populations; it can cover whole societies or groups defined by criteria such as education, nationality, religion, and ethnicity….
…
Demography is the statistical and mathematical study of the size, composition, and spatial distribution of human populations and how these features change over time. Data are obtained from a census of the population and from registries: records of events like birth, deaths, migrations, marriages, divorces, diseases, and employment. …
I believe that depopulation or interference with reproductive abilities is a big part of the intent of Agenda 21 and sustainable development, and that includes the climate change message and resulting carbon tax policies. It seems that there is a lot of resistance to the promotion of abortion and other policies relating to population despite the years of propaganda, even more so back in 1992.
The propaganda attacks on resistance to it have been elevated gradually since then (https://canadianliberty.com/thoughts-on-trudeaus-abortion-announcement/). However, mass sterilization programs in various nations have been documented (https://canadianliberty.com/?s=sterilization)–often by the media–in the 1970s and the 1990s, and these have been going on in the 2000s also. These are definitely more covert in nature, usually violating informed consent in one way or another, and mass awareness of such programs would still cause outrage. It hasn’t been a piece of cake to force this agenda on the whole world, but they do have a willing elite in many countries. It has required constant culturally destructive propaganda of every kind to have affected our mindsets and the way we live–decades of it (see New Order of the Barbarians: https://archive.org/details/pdfy-TmWlwCRIyvcIfa5W, Dr. Richard Day tapes: https://archive.org/details/1of-3-dr-richard-day-new-order-of-barbarians (removed), Dr. Lawrence Dunegan: The New Order of the Barbarians, Duckduckgo search, Berelson-Jaffe memo: https://archive.org/details/fredericks_jaffe_memorandum_to_bernard_berelson/1969.03.11%20-%20Frederick%20S.%20Jaffe%20-%20Memorandum%20%20to%20%20Bernard%20%20Berelson%20%28Jaffe-Memo%29/, https://jaffememo.com/).
Also see Kissinger’s report on population (https://canadianliberty.com/relevant-henry-kissingers-1974-national-security-study-memorandum-on-population-part-1/).
However since the illegally coerced introduction of the COVID-19 injections, things have ramped up in a huge way (https://rumble.com/v2ii4q4-naomi-wolfs-viral-hillsdale-college-speech-what-is-in-the-pfizer-documents.html).
Word counts:
Demographic: 64 instances
Demography: 1 instance
One of the objectives which includes this concept is in 36.4 of Chapter 36 of Agenda 21 “PROMOTING EDUCATION, PUBLIC AWARENESS AND TRAINING”
To promote integration of environment and development concepts, including demography, in all educational programmes, in particular the analysis of the causes of major environment and development issues in a local context, drawing on the best available scientific evidence and other appropriate sources of knowledge, and giving special emphasis to the further training of decision makers at all levels.
demographic trends: 29 instances
population: 109 instances
population growth: 5 instances
pressure, pressures (including “demographic pressure”): 11 instances
See 14.33 for an example of this rhetoric (“enormous pressure”) and scary claims of crises:
Inappropriate and uncontrolled land uses are a major cause of degradation and depletion of land resources. Present land use often disregards the actual potentials, carrying capacities and limitations of land resources, as well as their diversity in space. It is estimated that the world’s population, now at 5.4 billion, will be 6.25 billion by the turn of the century. The need to increase food production to meet the expanding needs of the population will put enormous pressure on all natural resources, including land.
So they say. They blame people–the population–rather than their own corporate farming methods and policies for whatever degradation there is. 30 years later we’re still here, the terror has been ramped up and the COVID injections have been unleashed. People on their own are perfectly capable of dealing with land use and other resources.
Word counts:
growth: 46 instances (various contexts)
For example, see 14.83 (Chapter 14 is “Promoting Sustainable Agriculture and Rural Development”).
In many developing countries, population growth rates exceed 3 per cent a year, and national agricultural production has fallen behind food demand [their claim]. In these countries the goal should be to increase agricultural production by at least 4 per cent a year, without destroying the soil fertility. This will require increasing agricultural production in high-potential areas through efficiency in the use of inputs. Trained labour, energy supply, adapted tools and technologies, plant nutrients and soil enrichment will all be essential.
The above relates to one of the solutions for the alleged problem of population growth. Interfering by using “adapted tools and technologies” probably includes the planned biotech crops, now referred to as GMO crops.
Word counts:
urbanization: 5 instances
Example, from 18.56:
Early in the next century, more than half of the world’s population will be living in urban areas. By the year 2025, that proportion will have risen to 60 per cent, comprising some 5 billion people. Rapid urban population growth and industrialization are putting severe strains on the water resources and environmental protection capabilities of many cities . . . Better management of urban water resources, including the elimination of unsustainable consumption patterns, can make a substantial contribution to the alleviation of poverty and improvement of the health and quality of life of the urban and rural poor. . . .
In the above statement, another unnecessary problem, urbanization, includes a complaint about “rapid urban population growth,” and then the false solutions are introduced, having to do with tyrannical control over “consumption patterns” (likely refers to rationing through the use of a carbon tax), “better management of urban water resources” (rationing) and certainly not trying to reverse the urbanization “trend,” which is more likely to be intentional (see below).
How on earth would rationing alleviate poverty and improve health and quality of life?? By the way, the terms “rationing” and “rationed” are not used in the Agenda 21 document. It uses other terms instead so that you don’t catch on to what it’s all about.
From 6.20:
Youth. As has been the historical experience of all countries, youth are particularly vulnerable to the problems associated with economic development, which often weakens traditional forms of social support essential for the healthy development, of young people. Urbanization and changes in social mores have increased substance abuse, unwanted pregnancy and sexually transmitted diseases, including AIDS. Currently more than half of all people alive are under the age of 25, and four of every five live in developing countries. Therefore it is important to ensure that historical experience is not replicated.
This document doesn’t explicitly set urbanization goals, probably because of the drawbacks such as the one just mentioned, because it is not so obvious that urbanization is a good goal to have. If you notice also the parallel reference to “changes in social mores,” the UN document doesn’t seem to explicitly admit its institution’s part in promoting those changes either. However, it is pretty clear that modernization includes those types of social engineering changes promoted in Huxley’s works and in Agenda 2030.
Create the problem and supply the solutions.
7.19 refers to existing urbanization “policies”:
Therefore all countries should, as appropriate, conduct reviews of urbanization processes and policies in order to assess the environmental impacts of growth and apply urban planning and management approaches specifically suited to the needs, resource capabilities and characteristics of their growing intermediate-sized cities. As appropriate, they should also concentrate on activities aimed at facilitating the transition from rural to urban lifestyles and settlement patterns and at promoting the development of small-scale economic activities, particularly the production of food, to support local income generation and the production of intermediate goods and services for rural hinterlands.
Notice that the above paragraph calls for “facilitating the transition from rural to urban lifestyles.”
7.35 explains that there are “opportunities” in urbanization:
The sustainability of urban development is defined by many parameters relating to the availability of water supplies, air quality and the provision of environmental infrastructure for sanitation and waste management. As a result of the density of users, urbanization, if properly managed, offers unique opportunities for the supply of sustainable environmental infrastructure through adequate pricing policies, educational programmes and equitable access mechanisms that are economically and environmentally sound. In most developing countries, however, the inadequacy and lack of environmental infrastructure is responsible for widespread ill-health and a large number of preventable deaths each year. In those countries conditions are set to worsen due to growing needs that exceed the capacity of Governments to respond adequately.
32.2 complains about population growth:
The rural household, indigenous people and their communities, and the family farmer, a substantial number of whom are women, have been the stewards of much of the Earth’s resources. Farmers must conserve their physical environment as they depend on it for their sustenance. Over the past 20 years there has been impressive increase in aggregate agricultural production. Yet, in some regions, this increase has been outstripped by population growth or international debt or falling commodity prices. Further, the natural resources that sustain farming activity need proper care, and there is a growing
concern about the sustainability of agricultural production systems.
It’s just a concern that elites are promoting for their agenda. People already have known for thousands of years how to manage their food production without outside interference. I do not believe they needed the post-war “Green Revolution” (see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green_Revolution) which was promoted by the Rockefeller and Ford Foundations. I don’t believe they needed help growing food. Who founded the UN? Same people. Same Fabian agenda. So partly they are referring to complaints about the results of their own agricultural systems. Create new problems through interference, offer the solutions. It’s imperialism. Inserting yourself into other peoples’ lives and managing their problems (and the ones you create) is a power play.
Chapter 6 is PROTECTING AND PROMOTING HUMAN HEALTH
6.20, quoted above, refers to “the problems associated with economic development” so “economic development” is being targeted to some degree as a bad thing, but that’s what “sustainable development” is really about–reducing our standard of living.
References to Controls on Reproduction
Word Counts:
reproductive: 17 instances
reproductive health: 10 instances
reproductive health care: 6 instances
maternal: 9 instances
maternal health: 3 instancess
maternal mortality: 1 instance
maternal and child mortality: 4 instances
The following terms are not used in this document:
family planning
contraceptive
birth control
abortion
sterilization / sterilize / sterilizing
Other specific reproductive procedures are not found either.