© 1999
Discerning the Times Digest and NewsBytes
In a long list of alarming Executive Orders, President
Clinton issued yet another, EO #13112, on February 3, 1999. Supposedly
designed to control noxious invasive alien species, EO 13112 is not based
on U.S. law, but on Article 8h of the Convention on Biological
Diversity--a treaty that was never ratified by the U.S.
Like the biodiversity treaty, EO 13112 is very
ambiguous. "Alien species", for example, is defined , "with
respect to a particular ecosystem, any species, including its seeds, eggs,
spores, or other biological material capable of propagating that species,
that is not native to that ecosystem."
Under that definition, notes Tom McDonnell of the
American Sheep Industry, "most agricultural crop and animal
species would clearly fall within the definition of alien. Domesticated
pets, many houseplants, and Kentucky bluegrass used in most lawns and golf
courses would also be defined as alien species under this executive order."
Likewise, the EO defines an "invasive
species" as, "an alien species whose introduction does or is
likely to cause economic or environmental harm or harm to human health."
Since the activities of any alien species causes unnatural disturbance, by
default it causes "harm to the environment." The indeterminate
language of this EO leaves it wide open to interpretations which could
potentially have far-reaching consequences.
McDonnell was on the committee that drafted the EO. He
and other members of the group repeatedly attempted to include language
that would limit the scope of the EO to invasive species that are actually
noxious. The federal representatives on the committee ignored these
suggestions and kept the language very vague so it could be interpreted
any way they choose. But why?
EO 13112 is but one of a plethora of presidential
directives rooted in the global agenda and not U.S. law. Few Americans
realize that for decades the international agenda has been implemented in
their backyards through a single institution known as the International
Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN). First accredited by the
United Nations in 1946 as a scientific advisor of the General Assembly,
the IUCN presently has 895 state, government agency, and Non-Governmental
Organizations (NGO) members in 133 countries. The mission of the IUCN is
to
"influence, encourage and assist societies
throughout the world to conserve the integrity and diversity of nature
and to ensure that any use of natural resources is equitable and
ecologically sustainable."
Despite the IUCN’s billing as a scientific body, the
Spring 1996 issue of the IUCN’s Ethics Working Group’s publication,
Earth Ethics, suggests otherwise. The IUCN, admits Earth Ethics, "promotes
alternative models for sustainable communities and lifestyles, based in
ecospiritual practices and principles." These ecospiritual
practices are designed, according to this article to induce "a
radical change in [humanity’s] attitudes, values, and behavior through
changes in "international law."
The IUCN is the perfect organization for implementing
international policy at the local level. Not only are many of our Federal
Agencies members of the IUCN such as; U.S. Fish &Wildlife Service, the
National Park Service, the U.S. Forest Service, and the Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA), but the IUCN permits them to huddle in private
behind closed doors to develop their ecospiritual strategies with the
Sierra Club, Nature Conservancy, National Wildlife Federation, National
Audubon Society, UNESCO, UNEP, and UNDP, who are also members.
By secretly developing strategies to implement their
ecospiritual agenda, the various tentacles of the IUCN control
environmental policy at every level, international as well as local. The
IUCN, for instance, originally wrote the Convention on Biological
Diversity in 1982. During the 1980s IUCN-member federal agencies, along
with IUCN environmental organizations and IUCN UN agencies strongly
promoted an ecospiritual "nature-knows-best" pseudoscience
called conservation biology to provide the credibility it needed to
justify the biodiversity treaty in the 1990s.
By being IUCN members, federal agencies help write
international policy they then implement and enforce locally. In an
internal working document dated August 6, 1994 the EPA blatantly outlined
a multi-year plan to implement the biodiversity treaty even though the
U.S. Senate had never ratified it, "Natural resource and
environmental agencies... should... develop a joint strategy to help the
United States fulfill its existing international obligations (e.g.
Convention on Biological Diversity, Agenda 21)."
The EPA document even goes so far as to openly defy the
U.S. Constitution by stating that federal agencies should "amend
national policies to achieve international objectives." The
Constitution specifically delegates the power to make national policy to
Congress, not federal bureaucrats.
These bureaucrats seem to believe themselves to be
wiser than Congress and the American people so they do an end run around
Congress. EO 13112 represents just one of the myriad of international
programs the EPA and other IUCN member federal agencies have been quietly
implementing for decades.
Though many believe themselves to be wise, remember what God says in 1
Corinthians 1:27, "But God hath chosen the foolish things of the
world to confound the wise; and God hath chosen the weak things of the
world to confound the things which are mighty." (KJV) Be
encouraged. God is still in control. V