Agenda 21 Rejected By Republican Party Platform Saying It's A 'Threat To America's Sovereignty'

The official GOP platform approved at the Republican National Convention
in Tampa included tough language rejecting the United Nations
“sustainability” scheme known as Agenda 21 for the threat it represents
to national sovereignty, drawing praise from conservative and Tea Party
leaders across the country.
~ Alex Newman
The Republican Party document also rejected
any form of UN global taxes and slammed a wide range of the
international body’s controversial programs.
In a section of the 54-page platform entitled “Sovereign American
Leadership in International Organizations,” the GOP noted that
multilateral bodies such as the UN and NATO sometimes fail to serve the
cause of peace and prosperity.
As such, the U.S. government must always
reserve the right to go its own way. “There can be no substitute for
principled American leadership,” the platform says.
The UN in particular remains in “dire need of reform,” Republicans said
in the document, attacking the global organization’s “overpaid
bureaucrats,” its “scandal-ridden management,” and the fact that some of
the world’s most barbaric tyrants hold seats on the so-called “Human
Rights Council.”
Unless and until the situation improves, the UN can
never expect the full support of the American people.
Some matters, however, are non-negotiable. "We strongly reject the U.N.
Agenda 21 as erosive of American sovereignty, and we oppose any form of
U.N. Global Tax,” the platform explains. The language echoes a
resolution adopted by the GOP earlier this year slamming the planetary
scheme to enforce so-called “sustainable development” on the world.
Since then, state and local Republican parties as well as state
legislatures and county governments have adopted similar resolutions
slamming the UN “sustainable development” agenda.
Alabama recently
enacted a bipartisan law officially banning Agenda 21 and any affiliated
schemes within the state to protect the private property and due
process rights of citizens.
While the official GOP opposition to Agenda 21 out of Tampa received
virtually no media coverage in the establishment press, a blog post by
the New York Times and a piece by Peter Jamison in the Tampa Bay Times
filled with factual errors did mention the news.
Jamison’s report
repeatedly referred to fears about Agenda 21 as a “conspiracy theory”
despite the fact that the documents are posted on the UN’s website;
therefore Agenda 21 is neither a conspiracy (secret by definition) nor a
theory.
The Tampa Bay Times piece also falsely attempted to portray the UN
agenda as trivial, erroneously claiming that “the fear of dedicated
activists” was “the belief that an international cabal is plotting to
take over the United States by building bicycle paths.”
However,
assuming it was ignorance, the writer did not bother to perform even the
slightest amount of research before parroting discredited talking
points peddled by the far-left Southern Poverty Law Center.
Even a 30-second review of the UN’s webpage on Agenda 21 would have
revealed that the scheme is about much more than bike lanes.
In the
first sentence of its summary of Agenda 21 posted online, the UN states
that Agenda 21 is actually “a comprehensive plan of action to be taken
globally, nationally and locally by organizations of the United Nations
System, Governments, and Major Groups in every area in which human
impacts [sic] on the environment.”
To understand the scope of such an agenda, consider that the UN
considers carbon dioxide — a gas exhaled by human beings and required by
plants — to be a “pollutant” in need of regulation.
As the GOP
resolution noted, the global body has also repeatedly referred to
national sovereignty and private land ownership as social injustices. That is why activists are up in arms — it has nothing to do with
bike lanes.
"The tea party groups are very much involved in this. They're hosting a
lot of speeches," explained The John Birch Society’s Director of
Missions Larry Greenley in a statement cited by the Tampa Bay Times.
"They see it as a threat to their way of life, and they choose to work
on it." Again, it has nothing at all to do with bike lanes, of course.
The official GOP platform adopted in Tampa also blasted a wide range of
other UN schemes — some related, others not.
“The United Nations
Population Fund has a shameful record of collaboration with China’s
program of compulsory abortion,” the platform noted, re-affirming the
principle that the federal government should not be unconstitutionally
providing U.S. taxpayer money to organizations that support or commit
abortions.
Republicans also slammed a wide range of UN treaties that the Obama
administration and other elements within the U.S. government have been
pushing for ratification by the Senate.
Among them: “the U.N. Convention
on Women’s Rights, the Convention on the Rights of the Child, the
Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, and the U.N. Arms
Trade Treaty as well as the various declarations from the U.N.
Conference on Environment and Development.”
The so-called “Law of the Sea Treaty” (LOST) came under fire, too, with
the platform congratulating Senate Republicans for blocking
ratification.
“Because of our concern for American sovereignty, domestic
management of our fisheries, and our country’s long-term energy needs,
we have deep reservations about the regulatory, legal, and tax regimes
inherent in the Law of the Sea Treaty,” it stated.
The GOP platform also came out against any efforts that could result in
giving the UN control over the Internet, which assorted communist and
Islamist dictatorships have been pursuing for years.
“International
regulatory control over the open and free Internet would have disastrous
consequences for the United States and the world,” Republicans added in
the document, echoing concerns expressed by numerous lawmakers on both
sides of the aisle.
Finally, to protect members of the U.S. Armed Forces from “ideological
prosecutions” abroad, the GOP platform said the Party does not accept
the purported jurisdiction of the so-called “International Criminal
Court.” The document also called for statutory protection for American
personnel and officials working overseas.
The GOP platform contains many planks praised by activists — auditing
the Federal Reserve, considering a return to the gold standard,
rejecting UN taxes, and much more.
Some hoped the Party would go further
— especially in its condemnation of the global entity and its desire to
tax the American people. However, it remains unclear whether Republican
officials will even take the mild platform seriously. They certainly
have not in the past.
House Speaker John Boehner recently revealed that few Republicans have
even read the entire document, prompting serious concerns among
conservative activists who worked so hard to influence the language.
For the sake of the future of America, however, grassroots Party members hope Republicans will stick to the platform going forward — at least as far as the document conforms to the U.S. Constitution.
Alex Newman - September 1, 2012 - LibertyNewsOnline
- SadInAmerica's blog
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