SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: PROLIFE who wrote (29530)8/16/2000 12:20:13 PM
From: Frank Griffin  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769667
 
A very scary thought!

August 16, 2000

Does Al Gore support the Earth
Charter?

Grandiose plans are under way for the 55th
annual gathering of the U.N. General
Assembly in New York City Sept. 5-9. Titled
the Millennium Assembly and Summit, it is
scheduled to take at least two actions
designed to turn the corner from a world of
sovereign nation-states to a world of
disparate peoples subordinated to the
supreme authority of the United Nations.

The two actions expected to be taken by
consensus are adoption of the Earth
Charter, a document whose text has evolved
through several drafts since the Earth
Summit in 1992, and adoption of a
declaration authorizing a new U.N.
commission to implement the various
recommendations necessary to bring about
global governance.

The Earth Charter's advocates speak of it as
though it were the "Magna Carta" of a new
regime, but it's not a regime of freedom from
arbitrary kings like King John at Runnymede
in 1215. It's a charter for submission to
global dictators possessing unprecedented
powers.

Al Gore has been an enthusiastic supporter
of the Earth Charter during its years of
development. The U.N. Millennium meetings could draw more
media than the presidential debates, and Republicans should make
Gore state whether he is for or against these radical U.N. goals.

A portion of the Millennium Assembly is designated as the
Millennium Summit, which President Clinton and 160 heads of state
are expected to attend, the largest gathering of heads of state in
history. Also meeting at the same time at the New York Hilton will be
Mikhail Gorbachev and his State of the World Forum, hoping to help
induce heads of state to concur in the Millennium Assembly's
historic actions.

The Earth Charter demands that we adopt "sustainable
development plans and regulations" (i.e., to subordinate human
needs to global fads enforced by environment dictators), and that
the United Nations "manage the use of renewable resources such
as water, soil, forest products, and marine life ... (to) protect the
health of ecosystems" (i.e., not the health of mere humans).

The Charter affirms that "all beings are interdependent" (i.e.,
personal freedom is irrelevant), and "every form of life has value
regardless of its worth to human beings" (i.e., animals, plants and
insects, but not unborn babies). The charter demands that we
"ensure universal (i.e., global) access to health care that fosters
reproductive health (i.e., abortion and contraception) and
responsible reproduction (i.e., U.N.-dictated population control)."

The Charter demands that we "act with restraint and efficiency when
using energy" (i.e., lower U.S. energy use and standard of living).
The charter requires that we "eradicate poverty," "promote the
equitable distribution of wealth within nations and among nations,
and "relieve them of onerous international debt" (i.e., redistribute
U.S. wealth around the world).

The charter exhorts us to affirm "gender equality" and "eliminate
discrimination in ... sexual orientation" (i.e., adopt the feminist and
gay agendas). The charter demands that we "integrate into formal
education (i.e., assign a U.N. nanny to monitor our schools) ... skills
needed for a sustainable way of life (i.e., indoctrination in how we
must subordinate sovereignty to the U.N. dogma of sustainability)."

The charter demands that we "demilitarize national security
systems" (i.e., eliminate our armed services and their weapons).
The charter concludes by proclaiming that the "Way Forward"
requires "a change of mind and heart" as we move toward "global
interdependence and universal responsibility."

Also to be considered by the Millennium Assembly and Summit is a
lengthy declaration, developed by 1,000 U.N.-accredited
nongovernmental organizations, called "Strengthening the United
Nations for the 21st Century."

This declaration calls for "a fair distribution of the Earth's
resources"
(from the United States to the rest of the world, of course), and for
the "eradication of poverty" by "redistribution (of) wealth and land."
It
demands that we "cancel the debts of developing countries."

The declaration demands the disarmament of all conventional and
nuclear weapons, the prohibition of "unilateral deployment of
nationwide missile defense by any country," and a "standing Peace
Force" (i.e., a U.N. standing army). It calls for a "U.N. arms register"

of all small arms and light weapons and "peace education" covering
"all levels from preschool through university."

The declaration demands U.N. "political control of the global
economy so that it may serve our vision," and that we "integrate" the
World Trade Organization under U.N. control. It calls for "eliminating"
the veto and permanent membership in the Security Council.

The declaration calls for implementing U.N. treaties that the United
States has never ratified, including the Convention on the Rights of
the Child and the Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights
(which denies the right to private property). The declaration calls for
the unratified International Criminal Court to exercise "compulsory
jurisdiction" over all states, enforced by the U.N. Security Council.

This declaration calls for the United Nations to impose direct taxes,
such as "fees on foreign exchange transactions (i.e. the Tobin Tax)."
It requires "gender-based methodologies" as outlined at the U.N.
Conference in Beijing.

All this and more of the same could be our future under an Al Gore
presidency.

©2000 Copley News Service