© 2000 Discerning the
Times Digest and NewsBytes
On Friday, September 8, over 150 heads
of state from around the world took a giant step to eventually create a
world government. They unanimously adopted the "United Nations
Millennium Declaration" at the conclusion of their United Nations
(UN) Millennium Summit. "Only through broad and sustained efforts to
create a shared future, based upon our common humanity in all its
diversity, can globalization be made fully inclusive and equitable,"
world leaders stated as they unanimously adopted the Declaration.
Declaration "mandates" UN
to create global governance
Economist and UN watchdog Joan Veon made
a very interesting observation in the September 9 WorldNetDaily.
"This is the first time since 1945 that the heads of state have
convened to set a ‘Program of Action’ to reform the UN," claimed
Veon. Because the 152 heads of state signed the Millennium Declaration,
Veon believes that it "automatically incorporates it into
international law."
Although some might say that Veon is
probably stretching it a bit, it is significant that it was the heads of
state themselves that represented the nations rather than having the
nation-states' normal ambassador represent them in the Summit
deliberations. It was the heads of state who signed the Millennium
Declaration. This, in fact, does give the UN all the authority it needs to
move ahead and implement all of the changes that are included in the
Declaration that do not require a change in the UN Charter.
A special commission will be established
to implement the goals stated in the Millennium Declaration. Many of
these will be instituted by changes in the existing UN structures or
actions, but most will require a change in the UN Charter. That the UN
Charter must be changed almost seemed to be a given at the Millennium
Summit meeting. One of the key roles of the special commission will be to
recommend the needed changes to the UN Charter to meet the goals of the
Millennium Declaration.
In an address delivered at the
concluding meeting of the Conference, United Nations Secretary-General
Kofi Annan told the Summit that it had sketched out clear directions for
adapting the Organization to its role in the new century. "It lies in
your power, and therefore is your responsibility, to reach the goals that
you have defined", he declared. "Only you can determine whether
the United Nations rises to the challenge. For my part, I hereby
re-dedicate myself, as from today, to carrying out your mandate."
Annan lists six key points that the
heads of state agree to. Every one starts with a statement that "We
shall spare no effort..." implying that these are top priorities for
every nation of the world.
1. Peace, Security and
Disarmament.
By signing the Declaration, the heads of
state agree to uphold the international rule of law. This is found in 25
interlocking international treaties for which tremendous pressure will be
brought to bear for heads of state to sign. These treaties, when combined
will effectively control the actions of every human being on planet earth
from the UN. Leading the list is the Rome Statute of the International
Criminal Court. It is this star chamber court that can arrest any person
for any alleged "crime against humanity" and the person is
considered guilty until he or she can prove himself innocent. For more
information see the June 1999 issue of Discerning the Times Digest.
The heads of state also commit
themselves to "enhance the effectiveness of the United Nations in the
maintenance of peace and security, by giving it the resources and the
tools required,... and by strengthening the capacity of the Organization
to conduct peace keeping operations." Although not stated, to follow
through with this declaration will require a huge increase in the UN
budget. While some of it can be implemented immediately, to be fully
effective it will require new authority granted by a change in the UN
Charter.
The focus of this effort will be in
universal disarmament and the control of small arms and light weapons--i.e.
global gun control.
2. Development and Poverty
Eradication
The heads of state commit themselves to
drastically reducing poverty in the world so that "by the year 2015,
the proportion of the world's people (currently 22 percent) whose income
is less than one dollar a day" is halved. Likewise, the signatories
commit themselves to halving the "the proportion of people (currently
20 per cent) who are unable to access, or to afford, safe drinking
water," and ensuring all children receive a minimum of a primary
education by the same date. This is a huge undertaking that can only be
accomplished with an enormous UN budget and direct control over the
nations or a mechanism to force nations to do this.
Most poverty is created by corrupt
governments or corrupt international control of trading. Very little is
caused by lack of resources. Even then, Japan has shown that small nations
can find a niche if the government encourages free markets. The fact that
UN control will enhance, rather than reduce corruption will aggravate the
current poverty, rather than reduce or eliminate it. Incredibly, rather
than calling attention to the corrupt governments of the world, the UN
Summit Declaration actually calls for the "debt problems of low and
medium countries" that was created by corruption in the first place.
3. Protecting our Common Environment
One of the priorities of the Declaration
is to free us "from the threat of living on a planet irredeemably
spoilt by human activities, and whose resources can no longer provide for
their needs." One of the first actions that will be done in the next
few weeks is "to adopt in all our environmental actions a new ethic
of conservation and stewardship" that is in the form of the Earth
Charter, a pantheistic code of ethics by which every man, woman and child
(including pastors of Christian Churches) must support. Once this new
earth religion is accepted by the UN, a new treaty called the Covenant on
the Environment and Development will be introduced for ratification by the
nations, enshrining in law the pantheistically-based ideas of sustainable
development.
The heads of state will also agree to
sign and implement the various treaties that extend UN authority into our
homes and pocket books. These include the 1) Kyoto Protocol, which will
drastically reduce America's standard of living and give control of the
U.S. economy to the global elite; 2) the Convention on Biological
Diversity which the editor of Discerning the Times miraculously stopped
from ratification in 1994 an hour before the US Senate was scheduled to
vote on it because it calls for the eventual elimination of two-thirds of
the human population, the enshrinement of a pantheistic, earth-based
culture, and the loss of one-half of America into wilderness reserves and
interconnecting corridors that would be off-limits to human use.
Perhaps most dangerous of all, is the
commitment of the signatories of the Declaration to stop the unsustainable
exploitation of water resources by "developing water management
strategies at the regional, national and local levels including pricing
structures promoting both equitable access and adequate supplies."
Whoever controls the water, will control the people. Corruption is
inevitable when bureaucrats and politicians can favor one group over the
other with desperately needed water or other essentials for life. History
is full of such examples. The new world government will be no
different--especially since there are absolutely no checks and balances to
prevent it.
All of this will be administered by
redirecting the mission of the UN Trusteeship Council from its current
mission of decolonizing the world to protecting the global commons. See
the June, 1999 issue of Discerning the Times Digest for more information.
4. Good Governance, Democracy and Human
Rights
Again, the Declaration reaffirms a
commitment on the part of the signatories to uphold the international rule
of law, in this case to uphold the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
This declaration, however, is not God given, or inalienable, but is
whatever the United Nations says it is.
The Declaration also calls on the
nation-states "to rectify the prevailing imbalance in global
decision-making," which is based on the belief that the U.S. and
other developed nations have taken advantage over other nations that are
impoverished. While there is truth in this, as long as non-developed
nations are ruled by corrupt governments, nothing that the UN can do will
help them.
5. Protecting the Vulnerable
While the UN seeks to protect women and
children with various treaties and agreements, the protection is only as
good as the UN makes it. It is tragic to think that the millions of Tutsis
martyred in Rwanda were killed in the early 1990s by guns provided by
former UN Secretary General Butros Butros Ghali, when Ghali was minister
of affairs for Egypt. However, It was the current Secretary General, Kofi
Annan, who sanctioned the genocide of the Tutsis by the Hutus. Annan was
the head of UN peacekeeping operations at the time and, according to an
AFP report on January 11, 2000, "is accused of ignoring warnings that
the massacres were already taking place and ignoring pleas for
troops." According to the article, numerous documents showed that
Annan had extensive warning that genocide was occurring, yet he ignored
it.
These atrocities were so horrible that
on January 12, 2000 the Sydney Morning Herald reported that "The
women say the UN soldiers who were assigned to protect them either ran
away or handed their families over to murderous Hutu militia.... Mrs.
Kavaruganda says the Ghanaian UN soldiers who were supposed to protect her
and her family were drinking and socialising with the Hutus while she and
her children were being tortured." The evidence was so damning that
the UN had to invoke diplomatic immunity in the case to avoid UN officials
like Annan from being indicted and prosecuted for crimes against
humanity.
Such is the human rights record of the
UN.
6. Strengthening the United
Nations
The last of the Summit Declarations
called for the centralization of power into the General Assembly and a
"speedy reform and enlargement of the Security Council, making it
more representative, effective and legitimate in the eyes of all the
world's people." The reform that is referred to in the declaration is
the elimination of the permanent member status and veto power of the five
members who now have it--including the US. Suddenly the US would be just
one of 170 members of the UN and could not veto any UN military action,
even if the action was directed at the US by members who hate America.
Although the Declaration would also expand the membership in the Security
Council to over 20, most of the time the US would not even be on the
Security Council because it would not have permanent member status.
The Declaration would also
"strengthen the Economic and Social Council," to manage the
global economy. To fully accomplish this would require that the World
Trade Organization, the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund (IMF)
and other global institutions be brought under the control of the Economic
and Social Council. A recent UN document called the Restructuring the
Global Financial System, calls for the IMF to become the global Central
Bank (see the December, 1999 issue of Discerning the Times Digest) that
controls all the money of the world and the division of the world into
regions that would administer regional economic issues. Hence, the
European Union, NAFTA and others would also come under the authority of
the IMF and the Economic and Social Council of the UN.
But that is not all. The Summit
Declaration brings all international agencies together so as to
"ensure greater policy coherence and enhance cooperation amongst the
United Nations, its Agencies, the Breton-Woods Institutions, as well as
other multilateral bodies, with a view to securing a fully coordinated
approach to the problems of peace and development." To make sure that
it has the funding to do all of this, the Declaration states the
signatories "ensure that the Organization is provided with adequate
resources, on a timely and predictable basis, so that it may carry out its
mandates." Proceedings are already underway to implement the Tobin
tax, named after Nobel price winner, economist James Tobin. The Tobin tax
would represent a one-half of one percent tax on all international
monetary exchanges, yielding the UN in excess of 1.5 trillion dollars
annually, nearly 100 times today's annual budget.
Finally, the Millennium Summit
Declaration states that the signatories would "give full
opportunities to civil society, parliamentarians, the private sector and
other non-state actors to contribute to the achievement of the
Organization's goals and programs." This most likely would result in
the creation of the second parliamentary body called the People's
Assembly. But, rather than representing the people of the world, it
appears that the representatives will be elected from a pool of leftist
socialist, new age, environmental, transnational corporate "civil
society" NGOs. The people's assembly would totally bypass the
people's of the world, yet is called the new "democratization"
of the UN by the UN and other globalists. While the people would be under
the iron-rule of these NGOs, they would have absolutely no say in the
actions taken by the new world government.
Declaration mandate contrived years
ago
Not surprisingly, the Declaration
represents all the requests and demands made in the UN Funded Commission
on Global Governance's report, the NGO Charter for Global Democracy, the
UN NGO Forum, and Secretary General Kofi Annan's 1977 Phase II report on
UN Reform.
The the globalists would have us believe
that the enormous push to create global governance is spontaneous across a
vast segment of the peoples of the world. We are being asked to believe
that these thousands of groups and organizations just
"coincidently" happen to have exactly the same ideas of how
global governance should work. The opposite is true, however. The agenda
is controlled by a very few people who are using big money to create a
huge illusion that will delude the people of the world.
The process of implementing all of the
recommendations of the Commission on Global Governance will not occur
overnight. Many of the recommendations will be implemented
administratively, while some will require modifying the U.N. Charter which
requires Senate ratification. Nothing will seem to have changed initially.
However by signing the Summit Declaration, the heads of state have given
the United Nations and the U.N. General Assembly authority to begin
implementing the recommendations required to achieve the objectives
expressed in the Millennium Declaration--including a new UN Charter. V
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