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Understanding Sustainable Development — Agenda 21 Understanding Sustainable Development — Agenda 21 <br />• <br />As Sustainable Development policies permeate every county in <br />America, it has become apparent that the conflict is not a dynamic of <br />Republican vs. Democrat, liberal vs. conservative, or left vs. right. In <br />fact, the implementation of Sustainable Development is occurring on a <br />bi-partisan basis. <br />THE CONTEMPORARY DIALECTIC <br />BRINGING A GLOBAL GREEN CARTEL TO AMERICA <br />COLLECTIVIST <br />ONE WORLD <br />LEFT <br />tPO <br />F/LG� 09 <br />SUSTAINABLE <br />DEVELOPMENT <br />COLLECTIVIST <br />ONE WORLD <br />RIGHT <br />6• <br />• <br />GOVERNMEN <br />CONTROLLE <br />SOCIETY <br />4 e <br />Yi NY <br />v 2005 FREEDOMADVOCATES <br />Sustainable Development <br />Land Use Programs <br />Sustainable Development is a plan for global control including the <br />restriction of land use and resource extraction. The land use element <br />of Sustainable Development calls for the implementation of two action <br />plans designed to abolish private property: the Wildlands Network and <br />Smart Growth. Upon final implementation of these plans all human <br />action is subject to control. <br />Since all things ultimately come from natural resources on rural <br />lands, the transfer of the landscape from private control to government <br />control will make it easy for government and its partners — NGOs, <br />foundations, businesses, and corporations — to control what we have, <br />what we do, and where we go. The transformation of free <br />societies into collectivized societies through Sustainable Development <br />ensures the dominance of a ruling elite which, by definition, excludes <br />all but a very select few. <br />The Wildlands Network <br />The Wildlands Network (aka Wildlands Project) is the plan to <br />eliminate human presence on "at least" 50 percent of the American <br />landscape,25 and to heavily control human activity on most of the rest <br />of American land. Examples of the piece -by -piece implementation of <br />the Wildlands Network include road closures, the policy of breaching <br />dams and the adoption of United Nations World Heritage Sites — which <br />25. Reed Noss, who made this assertion in 1992, reiterated his commitment <br />in a recent interview: "Fifty percent is an estimate I made years ago of <br />the proportion of an average region that would need to be managed for <br />conservation in order to meet well -accepted conservation goals ... [It] turns out <br />I was pretty much on the mark ..." (Range Magazine, Fall 2003, p42). Noss <br />has been the Science Editor for Wild Earth, the quarterly publication of the <br />Wildlands Project. <br />—20— <br />— 21 — <br />