Agenda 21 Is Not Dead
by Karen Schumacher | The Washington Standard
Agenda 21, also called Sustainable Development (SD), was the United Nations (UN) action plan for the 21st century and signed by GHW Bush in 1992. WJ Clinton integrated SD into the federal government from the years 1993 to 1999. Although the Agenda 21 document is now 33 years old, it lives on but is just given other names.
Agenda 2030 is Agenda 21 with 17 broad ranged sustainable development goals (SDG) which have targets that identify more specific actions. Every Agenda 2030 goal and target can be found scattered throughout Agenda 21. Targets are further detailed into indicators which “measure progress on that target”. The UN has been collecting data on indicators since the inception of Agenda 21, including data from the United States.
Now with the Great Reset, which is also called the World Economic Forum’s (WEF) Fourth Industrial Revolution (4th IR), and WEF’s partnership with the UN, the full achievement of Agenda 21 is coming close to its final fulfillment.
While much focus has been on the specifics and details of Agenda 21, the overall picture was easily missed. There are some clear themes that Agenda 21 is operating under.
Agenda 21 Themes
Public Private Partnerships (P3 or PPP): As dictated by Agenda 21 (30.7), throughout the federal government P3’s are actively being implemented. What initially appears to have begun as agreements for infrastructure development during the colonial period, have now become a full blown enmeshment of the two entities, escalating after Agenda 21. The UN sees this as necessary for the SDGs, and WEF strategically uses them to advance its corporate wealth and power. Read Full Article >