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Want
to better understand the UN and the roll that so-called
"environmentalists" play in the plans of the NWO?
Read this....
From Magic City Morning Star
Agenda 21
Flashback: Globalized Grizzlies
By Michael S. Coffman,
PhD.
Jun 19, 2004, 18:38
On June 17th ('97 ed.), the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service (FWS) conducted a public hearing in
Bozeman, Montana regarding the proposed Grizzly
Bear Recovery Plan. That plan would create 32
million acres of "protected recovery zones" in at least
six regions, which would be connected by migratory
corridors, one of which is 240 miles long. It
also called for the recovery of all grizzly bear
populations in Montana, Wyoming, Idaho, Washington, and
possibly Colorado, and the eventual connection of
"island" bear populations with other grizzly populations
across the affected areas.
Obviously, such an
ambitious plan is fraught with implications for
private property rights, economic development,
the security of livestock, and even the physical safety
of residents in the affected areas. Curiously, however,
the FWS did not bother to inform any of the affected
parties. Representatives of natural resource
industries and local landowners were not notified of the
hearing at all and were denied information about the
meeting until they found out about it from independent
sources.
However, six weeks
before the scheduled meeting, the FWS solicited
testimony from self-described environmental groups about
the proposed recovery plan. Among those invited to
create public policy were the Greater Yellowstone
Coalition, the Sierra Club, the Wilderness Society, and
Wild Forever.
The FWS tapped
Louisa Willcox, a founder of the eco-terrorist group
Earth First!
and project coordinator for Wild Forever,
to preside over the meeting's speaker agenda. In a
coordinated fashion, environmental groups asked that
roadless areas be kept
roadless,
that roaded public lands be reduced below one mile of
road per square mile, that grizzly bear recovery zones
be doubled in size to over 50,000 square miles, that
grizzly bear habitat be connected with corridors,
and that grizzly bear food sources and habitat be
protected from human disturbance.
While eco-terrorists
and their allies were treated with respectful attention
by the FWS, the original agenda of the meeting was
intended to prevent property owners and resource
industry spokesmen from testifying. It was only through
the persistence of Joe Beardsley, a
private citizen, that the FWS was shamed into giving him
and a few other local citizens about 30 minutes for
spontaneous testimony, a token concession at best, given
the well-orchestrated five-hour tag-team effort by the
radical environmentalists.
The June 17th meeting
typifies the method of "governance" being devised to
implement radical environmental policies across the
United States, and the demands presented by the
federally approved eco-radicals are in harmony with a
long-term design to eradicate private property and
industrial civilization from at least half of the
continental U.S. That design entails the systematic
subversion of the U.S. Constitution and the surrender of
our sovereignty to the United Nations in the name of
protecting "biodiversity."
From Rumor to
Reality
During a March 7th
White House press conference, journalist Sara McClendon
asked the President to rebuke the "rumor mongerers" who
were irresponsibly subverting public serenity by
spreading stories that the Administration is
surrendering U.S. sovereignty to the United Nations.
"Large segments of our citizens believe that the United
Nations is taking over whole blocks of counties in
Kentucky and Tennessee," McClendon pointed out. Amid
snickers from the assembled reporters, which he had
abetted with his theatrical display of incredulity,
Mr. Clinton responded, "We're all laughing about
it, but there is not an insubstantial number of people
who believe that there is a plan out there for world
domination and I'm trying to give American sovereignty
over to the UN." Having
invited the press to ridicule such apprehensions, Mr.
Clinton promptly proceeded to vindicate them: "For
people that are worried about it, I would say there is a
serious issue here that every American has to come to
grips with ... and that is, how can we be an
independent, sovereign nation leading the world in a
world that is increasingly interdependent, that requires
us to cooperate with other people and then to deal with
very difficult circumstances in trying to determine how
best to cooperate?"
Mr. Clinton's response
might well have been adapted from Our Global
Neighborhood, the 1995 report from the UN-funded
Commission on Global Governance, which asserts that a
"thickening web of interdependence requires that
countries work together .... In an increasingly
interdependent world ... the notions of territoriality,
independence, and non-intervention have lost some of
their meaning. In certain areas, sovereignty must be
exercised collectively, particularly in respect to the
global commons", that is, the global environment. The UN
and the Clinton Administration share the assumption that
the management of the "commons" requires the incremental
surrender of U.S. sovereignty and the restructuring of
the American way of life.
It was that assumption
that led to the Administration's decision to ask the UN
to designate Yellowstone National Park and Everglades
National Park as "World Heritage Sites in Danger", thus
imposing new restrictions on human use of those sites.
The same vision of collective management of the "global
commons" informs the deliberations of the President's
Council on Sustainable Development (PCSD), which is
weaving UN guidelines into U.S. policies on land use,
resource development, and population. And,
notwithstanding Mr. Clinton's evasions, there is indeed
a master plan behind the Administration's environmental
agenda, if not a plan for "world domination," then at
least a plan to eradicate modern industrial
civilization.
Back to 1492
The master plan is
called the "Wildlands Project," a
grandiose design to transform at least half the land
area of the continental United States into an immense
"eco-park" cleansed of modern industry and private
property. The Wildlands concept is largely the work of
Dave Foreman, the principal founder of the eco-terrorist
group Earth First! Foreman describes the Wildlands
Project as an effort to "tie the North American
continent into a single Biodiversity Preserve"; the
Project's official publication, Wild Earth, refers to a
"long-term master plan" to connect ecosystems throughout
the continent "until the matrix, not just the nexus, is
wild." Foreman summarizes Wildlands as "a bold attempt
to grope our way back to 1492", that is, to repeal a
half-millennium of biblical civilization, with its
unique blessings of material prosperity, technological
progress, private property, and individual rights.
According to Foreman,
Wildlands activists would "identify existing protected
areas" such as federal and state wilderness areas,
parks, refuges, and other designated sites; such tracts
would serve as "core areas" completely off-limits to
human activity. Then the agitators would demand the
creation of "buffer zones" to protect the core areas.
Wildlands architect Reed Noss explains that in both the
core and buffer areas, "the collective needs of
non-human species must take precedence over the needs
and desires of humans."
The next step is to
create "wildlife corridors" connecting the protected
areas. Once this is accomplished, according to Foreman,
Wildlands activists would "look for gaps between wild
lands or public lands" for future acquisition "by public
agencies or by private groups like the Nature
Conservancy." In this way, private lands would
be steadily absorbed into the Wildlands scheme "until
the matrix, not just the nexus, is wild."
John Davis, editor of
Wild Earth, acknowledges that the Wildlands Project
seeks nothing less than "the end of industrial
civilization .... Everything civilized must go...." In
this bizarre scheme, human civilization must be
radically reconfigured, roads must be torn from
the landscape, and human populations must be
relocated. All of this is to be done, according to
Wildlands board member Michael Soule, in harmony with a
prophetic vision: "The oracles are the fishes of the
river, the fishers of the forest, and articulate toads.
Our naturalists and conservation biologists can help us
translate their utterances. Our spokespersons,
fund-raisers, and grass-roots organizers will show us
how to implement their sage advice." All of this could
be dismissed as flatly ridiculous, were it not for three
ominous facts:
- First, the
Wildlands Project can boast scores of affiliates who
are (in Foreman's words) developing "Wilderness
Recovery Networks on the regional and ecosystem
level using the [Wildlands] model ... so that such
plans can dovetail into similar plans for adjacent
regions until the continent-wide plan is assembled."
In other words, Wildlands isn't just a malignant
daydream, but an unfolding campaign that is speeding
across America like a cancer.
- Second, the UN
Convention on Biodiversity, which was signed by Bill
Clinton in 1993 but has yet to be ratified by the
Senate, effectively mandates implementation of the
Wildlands Project.
- Third, despite
the refusal of the Senate to ratify the Biodiversity
Treaty, the Clinton Administration is eagerly
implementing its provisions through executive action
and bureaucratic fiat.
Nature Knows Best?!
On January 19, 1996,
President Clinton issued Executive Order (EO) 12986,
which stated, in part: "I hereby extend to the
International Union for Conservation of Nature and
Natural Resources [IUCN] the privileges and immunities
that provide or pertain to immunity from suit .... This
designation is not intended to abridge in any respect
privileges, exemptions, or immunities that the
International Union for the Conservation of Nature and
Natural Resources may have acquired or may acquire by
international agreements or by congressional action."
Few Americans have ever heard of EO 12986; fewer still
could identify the IUCN or explain why it merited such
privileged treatment by the President. Simply put, the
IUCN is one of the UN's major instruments in creating
and implementing global environmental policy, and Mr.
Clinton's executive order was intended to insulate it
from legal accountability.
The IUCN is an
accredited scientific advisory body to the United
Nations, and has more than 880 state and federal
governmental agency and non-governmental organization
(NGO) members in 133 countries. As of fiscal year 1993,
the IUCN was receiving over $1.2 million annually in
taxpayer subsidies by way of the U.S. State Department.
The body's official mission is "to influence, encourage
and assist societies throughout the world to conserve
the integrity and diversity of nature and to ensure that
any use of natural resources is equitable and
ecologically sustainable."
Of course, the IUCN
promotes a very peculiar vision of "equity,"
"sustainability," and natural "diversity." The Spring
1996 issue of the IUCN's Ethics Working Group's
publication, Earth Ethics, candidly admits that the IUCN
"promotes alternative models for sustainable communities
and lifestyles, based in ecospiritual practice and
principles ... to accelerate our transition to a just
and sustainable future ... humanity must undergo a
radical change in its attitudes, values, and behavior
.... In response to this situation, a new global ethics
is taking form, and it is finding expression in
international law."
Despite its
pretensions to being a scientific body, the IUCN eschews
the scientific method when doing so is convenient. The
organization"s Commission on Environmental Strategy and
Planning (CESP), for example, claims a mandate to
"change human behavior" by using a strategy "based less
on the facts ... than on the values they hold." Indeed,
the IUCN"s entire approach to conserving the "integrity
and diversity of nature" is based not on facts, but on
essentially religious theories of conservation biology
and "island biogeography." Those theories are themselves
rooted in a version of pantheism, the belief that nature
is God and therefore knows best, and that all human
activity leads to "fragmentation" of ecosystems, which
in turn leads to a depletion of biodiversity.
Fragmentation leaves "islands" of undisturbed ecosystems
that supposedly are too small to maintain biodiversity.
Protecting and expanding those "islands" of biodiversity
thus becomes imperative, as does connecting those
"islands" by "wildlife corridors"; thus the basic
template of the Wildlands Project is directly derived
from the 1UCN's "ecospiritual" assumptions.
From Myth to
Public Policy
The idea that the
continent was an unspoiled, verdant paradise teeming
with biodiversity before the advent of the Europeans has
a certain romance, and it is easy to sell that fantasy
to the ill-informed urban and suburban populations who
provide much of the political support for radical
environmentalism. But fantasy makes a poor foundation
for public policy, and top peer-reviewed scientists have
dispelled the myths behind the IUCN's "ecospiritual"
science. In 1986, B.L. Zimmerman and R.O. Bierregaard
published a highly critical analysis of this approach in
the Journal of Biogeography. "The equilibrium theory of
island biogeography and associated species area
relations have been promoted as theoretical bases for
design of nature [wilderness] reserves," note the
well-respected authors. "However, the theory has not
been properly validated and the practical value of
biogeographic principles for conservation remains
unknown." In simpler terms, the assumption that human
activity has "fragmented" vast, connected ecosystems has
never been scientifically corroborated.
Similar admissions
have come from noted conservation biologists who are
sympathetic to the IUCN's basic assumptions. In 1992,
conservation biologists Daniel Simberloff, James Farr,
James Cox, and David Mehlman acknowledged in the Journal
of Conservation Biology that even while the IUCN was
popularizing island biogeography and the need for
reserves and corridors, "the theory was increasingly
heavily criticized ... as inapplicable to most of
nature, largely because local population extinction was
not demonstrated .... No unified theory combines
genetic, demographic, and other forces threatening small
populations, nor is there accord on the relative
importance of these threats .... There are still few
data, and many widely cited reports are unconvincing." A
similar finding was published by Richard Hobbs in Tree
magazine. According to Hobbs, "natural corridors, along
with other principles of reserve design, have been
quoted in policy documents and textbooks, despite being
supported by few empirical [real] data at the time, and
being subject to considerable debate since."
In other words, there
is simply no reliable scientific evidence to support the
IUCN's basic assumptions. In fact, over the past
half-dozen years, abundant research has clearly shown
that in most cases, creating wilderness core reserves
and corridors causes critical biological diversity to
plummet. In spite of all this, the IUCN has developed
and heavily promoted both its own unreliable theories of
conservation biology since the 1970s, and played a key
role in the development of the Wildlands Project as a
means of implementing those theories.
The Wildlands Project
requires the designation of "core areas" around which
can be constructed the network of "buffer zones" and
"wildlife corridors" that will reprimitivize the land.
This is why the IUCN, acting upon its own discredited
scientific theories, helped develop and promote the
UNESCO-sponsored Man and Biosphere Program (MAB) and the
UN's World Heritage Convention, Convention on Biological
Diversity, and Convention on Desertification, all of
which are intended to be vehicles for transforming the
IUCN/UN "ecospiritual" view into law.
The IUCN is obviously
less interested in "facts" than in "values," and the
organization and its allies perceive themselves to be a
priestly elite. In the very first issue of the IUCN
journal Conservation Biology, this elitist arrogance is
on full display: "By joining together those who are
[wise], the worst biological disaster in the last 65
million years can be averted. We assume that
environmental wounds inflicted by ignorant humans and
destructive technologies can be treated by wiser
humans."
The IUCN-inspired
college textbook Conservation Biology reveals that these
"wiser humans" are literally at war with "ignorant
humans": "Conservation biology is a crisis discipline.
Warfare is the epitome of a crisis discipline. On a
battlefield you are justified in firing on the advancing
enemy."
Of particular concern
is the fact that the IUCN has conscripted various
federal agencies and NGOs as allies into its war against
"ignorant humans," and the IUCN's coalition is
developing joint strategies to implement the "ecospiritual"
theology through international law. Through the IUCN,
government agencies such as the U.S. Fish & Wildlife
Service, the Park Service, the Forest Service, the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) can huddle
in private with the Society of Conservation Biology, the
Sierra Club, the Nature Conservancy, the National
Wildlife Federation, the National Audubon Society, the
Natural Resources Defense Council, and the Environmental
Defense Fund to develop strategies for the
implementation of their shared religious beliefs. And
through EO 12986, the IUCN was immunized from legal
accountability for any injuries it inflicts on private
property owners in the course of its war against
"ignorant humans."
The World
Heritage Treaty
As noted above, IUCN
has been instrumental in creating and promoting the U.S.
government's Man and Biosphere Program (MAB) and the
World Heritage Convention, and both of those
international agreements have proven quite useful in
implementing the Wildlands agenda. Areas that are
inscribed as MAB or World Heritage Sites are prime
candidates to become "core areas" for the Wildlands
Project. This is especially true of Heritage sites. As
was pointed out in the October 6, 1992 issue of
Environment magazine, designation of Heritage sites
"constitutes a unique precedent [as it] implies what
might be called a voluntary limitation of sovereignty"
and a recognition that "other countries have, through
the [World Heritage] convention, an obligation, and
therefore a right, toward these sites."
The World Heritage
Convention was ratified by the Senate in 1973; the MAB
program was unilaterally implemented by the State
Department through "memoranda of understandings" without
input or oversight by Congress. Both programs have been
secretly implemented by federal and state bureaucrats in
collusion with NGOs and with little or no input from
local citizenry, and such secrecy is actually mandated
by policy guidelines. Paragraph 14 of the 1994
Operational Guidelines for the World Heritage Convention
states, "To avoid possible embarrassment to those
concerned, state parties [to the convention] should
refrain from giving undue publicity to the fact that a
property has been nominated for inscription pending the
final decision of the committee on the nomination in
question. "In other words, the UN insists that sites be
nominated for international control without public
notice, meaning that U.S. citizens can wake up one
morning to discover that their back yard has been
designated a UN Heritage site.
Even more ominous is
the fact that the UN claims the right of circumventing
elected representatives altogether in designating
Biosphere Reserves. UNESCO's 1995 Seville Agreement for
Biosphere Reserves states that "national or local NGOs
could be appropriate substitutes" for national or local
governments in identifying and designating such sites.
In practice, this would empower unaccountable
eco-socialist lobbies such as the Sierra Club, the
National Wildlife Federation, and others to actually
substitute for elected federal and local governments in
designating and administering Biosphere Reserves.
Through such secretive machinations, an archipelago of
47 Biosphere Reserves and 20 World Heritage Sites
occupying over 50 million acres of U.S. soil has already
been established without local participation or
congressional oversight.
In the mid-1980s, as a
result of this covert campaign, entrance signs to
national parks and monuments suddenly announced that
those areas had been designated as UN Biosphere Reserves
or World Heritage Sites. Given that these designations
had, in compliance with UN guidelines, been arranged in
secret without public input, they alarmed the public,
and rumors began to spread that our Parks and Monuments
had been surrendered to UN control. This is not entirely
true: The relevant documents concerning these programs
specify that the U.S. maintains sovereignty within the
designated areas.
However, this begs the
question: How is "sovereignty" defined in this context?
While there is no evidence that the United Nations has
ever made a direct management decision for any U.S.
sites, it is clear that the federal government bound
itself to international agreements stipulating that the
United States would manage these lands according to
international dictates in order to achieve certain
international goals and objectives. In other words, the
United States has agreed to limit its right of
sovereignty over these lands by deferring to
international mandates. In effect, the federal
government is implementing mandates from the UN, just as
state governments are compelled to implement
unconstitutional mandates from the federal government.
Trumping U.S.
Law
An example of this
process in action unfolded in 1995, when George Frampton,
Under Secretary of Interior and past president of the
Wilderness Society, invited a delegation from the United
Nations into Yellowstone National Park for the specific
purpose of declaring Yellowstone a World Heritage Site
"in danger." The declaration was intended to stop the
development of a gold mine located about five miles from
the northeast corner of Yellowstone National Park.
Providing "pressure from below" on behalf of the
UN/Clinton Administration initiative was a group of more
than a dozen environmental groups that called itself the
Greater Yellowstone Coalition, which "petitioned" for
the site to be recognized by the UN as "in danger."
This effort was
undertaken, as environmental analyst Alston Chase
observed, because the Clinton Administration feared that
"U.S. law would not prevent a planned gold mine near
Yellowstone National Park...." The company seeking to
build the mine was in compliance with both state and
federal guidelines, and was nearing completion of the
torturous, two-year process of filing state and federal
environmental impact statements. Accordingly, the
Clintonites and their eco-extremist allies simply threw
out U.S. law and enlisted the UN to shut down the mine
in the name of enforcing global law.
"As ratified by
Congress, the provisions of the World Heritage Treaty
have the force and statutory authority of federal law,"
insisted Yellowstone Park Superintendent Mike Finley.
"By inviting the committee to visit the park and assess
the mine's potential impacts, the Interior Department
acted as it was legally required to do." Finley failed
to explain why the Park Service automatically assumes
that the provisions of the World Heritage Treaty, which
lacks federal implementing legislation, nonetheless have
the force and statutory authority of federal law. He
also declined to enlighten the public as to why the Park
Service waited two years before requesting a review of
the mine by the World Heritage Committee, then did so
only after it became apparent that the state and federal
environmental studies would likely find no environmental
problems with the mine development.
Property
Rights Peril
UNESCO's December 1995
designation of Yellowstone as a World Heritage Site "in
danger" did much more than merely shut down a gold mine;
it also opened the door for the federal government to
redefine land-use policy for all private property in
what was called the "Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem." The
area originally affected by the planned designation was
a mere 4,400 acres of federal land near the park. In
August 1995, a presidential decree materialized in the
Federal Register more than quadrupling the affected
acreage: 19,000 acres were to be declared off limits to
mining permits. However, as environmental attorney
William Perry Pendley points out, UNESCO sought to
review all policies dealing with mining, timber,
wildlife, and tourism within the newly designated "core
area", "which takes in about 75 percent of the economy",
and also the impact of human activity in the "Greater
Yellowstone Ecosystem" which includes the two million
acres of the park and the 18 million acres surrounding
it. "If the UN is given the power to set policy in
Yellowstone and the region," Pendley warned, "property
rights will be in peril throughout the Western United
States...."
The same strategy has
been used elsewhere. In 1993, Everglades National Park
was recognized by the World Heritage Committee as a
Heritage Site "in danger." Since that time, farmers
north of the Everglades have been besieged by an
onslaught of regulations and restrictions that have shut
down scientifically sound agricultural conservation
practices. In keeping with the disdain for hard science
displayed by the IUCN, the Park Service, Vice President
Gore, and radical environmental organizations have
indulged in high-octane rhetoric about the threats to an
"international heritage site belonging to all people"
that have supposedly resulted from irresponsible use of
surrounding private property.
In a fashion
reminiscent of the Soviet Union, the eco-bureaucracy
punished a scientist whose findings were at odds with
public policy regarding the Everglades. Dr. Curtis
Richardson of Duke University, who had been given a
federal contract to study the magnitude of the pollution
problem in the Everglades, was suddenly terminated in
1991 after his study concluded that the "Everglades have
been, and are now, receiving excellent quality water."
Upstream farming, in other words, was not significantly
contributing to the problem. Had the Park Service
accepted Dr. Richardson's findings, it would not have
been able to justify the "in danger" status for the
park. Accordingly, it dismissed the study, fired Dr.
Richardson, and, in a gesture worthy of Stalin, barred
the researcher from entering the park.
Not surprisingly, both
Biosphere Reserves and World Heritage Sites are
strategically linked to the Wildlands Project. The MAB
Strategic Plan specifies: "Each biosphere reserve
includes three types of areas: one or more securely
"Protected Areas," [Core Reserves] such as wilderness
areas or nature reserves, for conservation and
monitoring of minimally disturbed ecosystems; "Managed
Use Areas," [Buffer Zones] usually surrounding or
adjoining the protected areas, where experimental
research, educational activities, public recreation, and
various economic activities occur according to
ecological principles; and "Zones of Cooperation,"
[Transition Areas] which are open-ended areas of
cooperation .... Connected by corridors judiciously
linking different ecological units within the
urban-rural and terrestrial/marine landscape, biosphere
reserves could provide the most viable means for the
long-term protection of biodiversity." It is difficult
to find a plainer reiteration of the basic Wildlands
design.
Similarly, paragraphs
17 and 44 from the "Operating Guidelines" for the World
Heritage program stipulate, "An adequate "buffer zone"
around a property should be provided and should be
afforded the necessary protection .... [Buffer zones]
should include sufficient areas immediately adjacent to
the area of outstanding universal value in order to
protect the site ... from direct human encroachment and
impacts of resource use outside of the nominated area.
The boundaries of the nominated site may coincide with
one or more existing or proposed protected areas, such
as national parks or biosphere reserves."
Biological
Diversity
Although proponents of
the Wildlands Project are willing to pursue their
designs incrementally, they obviously would prefer the
power to implement the entire program immediately. This
was the design behind the UN's Convention on Biological
Diversity, which was signed by President Clinton in
1993. It is therefore highly revealing that the first
goal of the UNESCO Seville Strategy for Biosphere
Reserves is to "promote biosphere reserves as a means of
implementing the goals of the [UN] Convention on
Biological Diversity." Similarly, the U.S. Man and the
Biosphere Strategy claims that "U.S. Biosphere Reserves
are important areas for developing the data, technology,
and experience needed to implement the recommendations
of the United Nations Conference on Environment and
Development that relate to global issues, such as
biodiversity, climate change, desertification, forest
management, and sustainable new development."
The Biodiversity
Treaty, which was essentially written for the UN by the
IUCN, would permit an undefined and unaccountable global
bureaucracy to regulate all human activity
that presents potential harm to biological diversity. In
principle, this mandate would cover all human activity,
given that almost anything that humans do is deemed by
the IUCN as harmful to biological diversity. The text of
the treaty itself was merely a skimpy framework, or what
Senator Jesse Helms (R-NC) correctly called "a preamble
falsely described as a treaty." The Senate was asked to
authorize the creation of implementing "protocols" which
would be written later and be binding upon the
signatories. The specific terms of the treaty were to be
explained in detail in a 1,140-page Global Biodiversity
Assessment (GBA) produced by the IUCN in collaboration
with the UN Environmental Programme (UNEP).
The Senate was poised
to ratify the Biodiversity Treaty in September 1994 when
the American Sheep Industry obtained a draft of the GBA
from the IUCN. Section 10.4.2.2.3 of the draft GBA
(Section 13.4.2.2.3 in the final document) provided the
"smoking gun": It proved the Wildlands Project to be the
template for protecting biodiversity. To carry out the
terms of the Treaty, according to the GBA,
"Representative areas of all major ecosystems in a
region need to be reserved," and such "[reserved] blocks
should be as large as possible ... buffer zones should
be established around core areas and ... corridors
should connect these areas. This basic design is central
to the Wildlands Project in the United States ... a
controversial ... strategy ... to expand natural
habitats and corridors to cover as much as 30% of the US
land area." In fact, Wildlands would reprimitivize no
less than 50 percent of the U.S. land area.
Hostility to
Western Values
In addition, the GBA
documented that the Biodiversity Treaty is a testament
to the pantheistic worldview championed by the IUCN and
its allies, and that it is militantly hostile to any
monotheistic tradition, and to the Bible-based Western
worldview in particular. The biblical worldview,
according to the GBA, "is characterized by the denial of
sacred attributes of nature ... [which] became firmly
established about 2000 years [ago] with the
Judeo-Christian-Islamic religious traditions ....
Societies dominated by Islam, and especially
Christianity, have gone farthest in setting humans apart
from nature."
By way of contrast,
the UN study continues, "the worldview of traditional
societies tends to be strikingly different from the
modem worldview. They [IUCN proponents] tend to view
themselves as members of a community that not only
includes other humans, but also plants and animals as
well as rocks, springs and pools. People are then
members of a community of beings, living and non-living.
Thus rivers may be viewed as mothers. Animals may be
treated as kin." Like the Wildlands Project, which seeks
to turn the clock back to the pre-Columbian era, the
Biodiversity Treaty is intended to eradicate Western
culture and exalt a pagan worldview in which humans
enjoy no special status in nature.
Hours before the
scheduled vote, three groups, the American Sheep
Industry, Environmental Perspectives, Inc., and the
Maine Conservation Rights Institute, provided the U.S.
Senate with a draft copy of the GBA, along with maps
depicting the impact that implementation of the
Wildlands Project would have on the U.S. The
documentation was introduced on the Senate floor by
Senator Kay Bailey Hutchinson (R-TX) on September 30,
1994, one hour before the scheduled cloture vote that
would have cut off all debate on the treaty. Senate
Majority Leader George Mitchell (D-ME) responded by
quietly removing the treaty from floor consideration.
This was particularly dramatic in light of the fact that
the UN had consistently lied about the GBA, repeatedly
telling the Senate that no draft of the document existed
and that there were no plans to create one.
Ignoring the
Law
But the Clinton
Administration, the UN, and its radical eco-allies are
not about to be deterred by their defeat in the Senate.
In August 1993, the EPA published a Working Document
outlining the Administration's environmental strategy:
"Natural resource and environmental agencies ... should
... develop a joint strategy to help the United States
fulfill its existing international obligations (e.g.
Convention on Biological Diversity, Agenda 21) .... The
executive branch should direct federal agencies to
evaluate national policies ... in light of international
policies and obligations, and to amend national policies
to achieve international objectives.
"The "Agenda 21"
document referred to is the mammoth blueprint for global
eco-socialism unveiled at the 1992 UN "Earth Summit" in
Rio de Janeiro. It sets forth (in the words of Daniel
Sitarz, who edited the mass-marketed edition of the
document) "an array of actions which are intended to be
implemented by every person on earth," a plan which
"will require a profound reorientation of all human
society, unlike anything the world has ever
experienced." Thus, by its own admission, the Clinton
Administration clearly recognizes an "international
obligation" to carry out a UN-mandated "profound
reorientation" of American society. Furthermore,
notwithstanding the Senate's refusal to ratify the
Biodiversity Treaty, elements of that treaty have simply
been written into administrative policies governing the
Park Service, the Fish and Wildlife Service, the EPA,
and the Bureau of Land Management. The Clinton
Administration has also arranged public subsidies for
radical environmental groups that are agitating for
implementation of local and regional versions of the
Wildlands design. And as documented above, both the MAB
and World Heritage programs are explicitly carrying out
the elements of the Wildlands Project.
However, resistance to
those designs has been steadily growing. As Americans
have learned of the dangers presented by Heritage sites
and Biosphere Reserves, they have organized to block any
new designations. In the last several years, grassroots
activists prevented the designations of a Catskills
Biosphere Reserve in New York and an Ozarks Highlands
Biosphere Reserve in Southern Missouri and Northern
Arkansas. The most potent weapon in these campaigns was
the text of the actual U.S. and UNESCO documents which
boldly presented the true agenda behind the proposed
designations. Also of tremendous value were maps
depicting how such sites can be used in implementing the
Wildlands scheme.
Citizen groups in
Kentucky, where three Biosphere Reserves have been
created, used the same documentation to convince their
state Senate to pass a unanimous Resolution in June 1997
condemning MAB: "The General Assembly of the
Commonwealth of Kentucky is unalterably opposed to the
inclusion of any land within the borders of the
Commonwealth within the purview of the Biodiversity
Treaty or any biodiversity program without the express
consent of the General Assembly of the Commonwealth of
Kentucky, as provided by the Constitution of the United
States and the Constitution of Kentucky."
The Clinton
Administration's blatant effort to subvert the rule of
law concerning land-use policy in Yellowstone angered
conservative members of Congress. Earlier this year,
Congressman Don Young (R-AK) introduced H.R. 901, the
American Lands Sovereignty Protection Act, a bill
intended to preserve the sovereignty of the United
States over public lands and acquired lands owned by the
United States, and to preserve state sovereignty and
private property rights in non-federal lands surrounding
those public and acquired lands. The bill has 168
co-sponsors and specifically mandates that:
- Any nominated
World Heritage Site get congressional approval
before it is so designated.
- Designation of a
given site be prohibited if the Department of the
Interior finds that any viable commercial activity
will be harmed within the site or a ten-mile buffer
zone around the proposed site.
- The impact of
such a designation on any natural resource
utilization be defined.
- Federal officials
refrain from nominating any new Biosphere Reserves
as a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve.
- Protection be
extended to cover non-federal lands intermixed or
surrounding a designated World Heritage Site.
Buffeted by public
outcry, UNESCO and the U.S. Park Service have furiously
back-pedaled. Paragraph 14 of the World Heritage
Operational Guidelines, which mandates the use of
secrecy in nominating sites and excludes local
participation in deliberations, was mysteriously excised
from UNESCO's January 1997 revision of the Operational
Guidelines. The U.S. Park Service also conducted a
literal whitewash of the whole operation: It quietly
painted over and reversed all the Park Service entrance
signs which had included Word Heritage Site or Biosphere
Reserve designations.
Tools for
Tyranny
The means that have
been used in pursuit of the UN/IUCN Wildlands Project
have been unconstitutional and conspiratorial.
The secrecy is understandable: Each time local citizens
have been informed of the full extent of the Biosphere
Reserve, World Heritage, and related programs, they have
been able to effectively stop their implementation. The
role of informed citizens in throwing obstacles in the
path of the march to global governance has repeatedly
vindicated Thomas Jefferson's belief that there is "no
safe depository of the ultimate powers of the society
but by the people themselves. And if we think them not
enlightened enough to exercise their control with a
wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it from
them but to inform their discretion by education."
But stopping
the march to global governance won't happen unless
principled Americans unite, get the facts straight, and
expose the Wildlands Project, Agenda 21, the World
Heritage Convention, the Biosphere Reserve program, and
related endeavors as lethal threats to our independence
and constitutional order.
The above article was
originally published
August 17, 1997.
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