Translating the tyrannic Agenda Davos 2030
Prague, 8.9.2024
With its apparent concern for the universal “common good,” leftist ideology provides the best cover for disguising totalitarian ambitions. Leftist totalitarians attempt to exert control over the world for the supposed welfare of the masses, the community, the disadvantaged, the developing world, women, children, the economy, and “the planet.”
As we have seen, when not avowedly socialist themselves, elites have allied themselves with communists, socialists, fascists, and other such political ideologues and their camps. Having the same object in view as the elites—a singular world system—these ideologues and camps serve the elite’s totalitarian ambitions. This explains why globalist billionaires like George Soros routinely support leftist causes and groups while plebeian leftists essentially act as their unwitting foot soldiers and dupes.
As for the elites themselves, there is no sure way to know for sure—other than from confessions or Freudian slips—whether they consciously pursue totalitarianism, or whether they believe the egalitarian ideology and rhetoric that they apparently embrace.
Meanwhile, the totalitarian ambitions of the UN have long been descried and criticized. As the CATO Institute’s Doug Bandow wrote in 1985: [T]he UN has been actively promoting a comprehensive and totalitarian system of global management…The overriding UN ideology is one of international control of natural, financial, and informational resources, as well as the global regulation of economic and even cultural activities2
Bandow goes on to state that “world socialism” is the UN’s philosophy. This is illustrated in hundreds of UN reports and declarations. Consider these statements from the 1976 Vancouver Declaration on Human Settlements regarding land ownership, for example:
It is with such socialist, statist, and elitist inclinations in mind that we must read “Transforming Our World: The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development” (hereafter “Agenda 2030”).6
While Agenda 2030 does not address climate change exclusively, the document is shot through with climate change catastrophism and an overall environmental alarmism. The belief that the planet is facing a climate emergency and worsening environmental degradation informs the entire agenda. The state of emergency is used as a pretext for exerting centralized control.
The words “sustainable,” “sustainability,” “sustainably,” and “sustainable development” are used over 200 times in the 41-page document, including the word “sustainable” in the title, although the terms are never defined. The meaning of these cognate terms can be gleaned by tracing their historical roots.
The UN also promotes birth control, including abortion,15 as well as advocating “gender equality,”16 which, as we have seen, amounts to the exclusive promotion of careerism and birth control for women, both largely advanced to reduce reproduction. The UN also opposes unlimited, unfettered, and uncontrolled economic growth, which is intimately connected to population growth. The main pretext for problematizing economic growth for the UN is the protection of the environment, especially in connection with climate change. The enviro-Neo-Malthusian preoccupation with unfettered growth, including population growth, is embodied in Agenda 2030. Furthermore, given its collectivist ethos, its penchant for advocating centralized control over the economy, and its climate catastrophism, the solutions are always top-down dictates. To avert disaster, a statist and “stakeholder” elite must steer the economy and manage/reduce world development and control population.
https://thinktanklatam.org/el-control-secreto-del-mundo/
Republicans of the Congress proclaim the danger of WHO and the UN: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YYV0RjaVuhg
Agenda 2030 includes 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and 169 targets. The SDGs are the successors to the UN’s Millennium Development Goals (MDGs)17 and UN Agenda 21,18 the latter of which was launched as the result of the 1992 UN Conference on Environment and Development held in Rio de Janeiro and led by WEF board member Maurice Strong.19 The 17 SDGs, along with my translations, follow:
Goal 1: End poverty in all its forms everywhere.
Translation: Exert centralized government and stakeholder control using central banks, the International Monetary Fund (IMF), and the Word Bank, possibly using central bank digital currencies (CBDCs; see Part IV) to rapidly redistribute wealth.
Goal 2: End hunger, achieve food security and improved nutrition and promote sustainable agriculture.
Translation: Exert centralized governmental and stakeholder control over agriculture with the consolidation of land ownership by the state or preferred owners; reduce/eliminate nitrates in fertilizers; eliminate pesticides in farming; introduce vertical urban farming; introduce new “sustainable” sources of protein (insects and synthetic meats); redistribute wealth to draw down consumption in the developed world.
Goal 3. Ensure healthy lives and promote well-being for all at all ages.
Translation: Redistribute health care with centralized governmental and stakeholder planning and control; promote mandatory vaccinations through the World Health Organization (WHO); possibly use technology to monitor organs and organ systems reporting to central databases (the Internet of Bodies (IoB); see Part IV).
Goal 4: Ensure inclusive and equitable quality education and promote lifelong learning opportunities for all.
Translation: Exert centralized government and intergovernmental control over education; eliminate ideological opposition to UN objectives; promote collectivist ideology (propaganda and reeducation).
Goal 5: Achieve gender equality and empower all women and girls.
Translation: Promote careerism as the path for women as well as governmental and intergovernmental sponsored family planning through birth control (including abortion) to reduce population growth.
Goal 6: Ensure availability and sustainable management of water and sanitation for all.
Translation: Exert centralized governmental and stakeholder control over water resources; dictate acceptable access to and use of rivers and streams by controlling and/or eliminating unapproved industries that rely on water resources (such as fracking); privatize water with ownership in the approved hands, etc.
Goal 7: Ensure access to affordable, reliable, sustainable and modern energy for all.
Translation: Promote and legislate renewable energy to the exclusion of fossil-fuel-based energy; exercise centralized control of energy production and distribution using government sanctions, subsidies, taxes, and financial pressure on corporations (ESGs); outmode/outlaw gasoline consumption and gas-driven locomotion; monitor and restrict carbon-based energy use with individual carbon footprint tracking (see Part IV); allow/encourage/mandate the purchase of carbon credits from the poor by the wealthy.
Goal 8: Promote sustained, inclusive and sustainable economic growth, full and productive employment and decent work for all.
Translation: Exert centralized control of the economy by governments and stakeholders using subsidies and sanctions to curtail/redirect growth in line with climate change catastrophist projections; provide state-based employment for the unemployed.
Goal 9: Build resilient infrastructure, promote inclusive and sustainable industrialization and foster innovation.
Translation: Exert centralized governmental and stakeholder control over infrastructure development to eliminate fossil-fuel-powered infrastructure with subsidies for renewables and sanctions and prohibitive taxes on fossil fuels.
Goal 10: Reduce inequality within and among countries.
Translation: Redistribute wealth by central planners within and especially between nation states; transfer wealth from the developed to the developing world to prevent development not in line with climate catastrophism and to fund sustainable development.
Goal 11: Make cities and human settlements inclusive, safe, resilient and sustainable.
Translation: Exert centralized governmental and stakeholder control over urban planning through government-backed architectural projects; limit living space through “smart” architectural designs and zoning laws; limit resource use through “smart” monitoring technologies and smart cities; locate populations within reach of public transportation to reduce/eliminate automobile use; overwrite zoning laws that prevent the building of high-rise housing in the suburbs.
Goal 12: Ensure sustainable consumption and production patterns.
Translation: Exert centralized governmental and stakeholder control over production and consumption to reduce/eliminate the use of fossil fuels and meat consumption and enforce the use of renewable energy in factories and plants through subsidies, sanctions, and taxes; implement and mandate ESGs across all sectors of the economy (the WEF helps here); exert governmental and stakeholder control over farming to reduce “greenhouse gas” emissions; introduce new “sustainable” sources of protein (insects and synthetic meats).
Goal 13: Take urgent action to combat climate change and its impacts. (Acknowledging that the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change is the primary international, intergovernmental forum for negotiating the global response to climate change.)
Translation: Climate change catastrophism stemming from IPCC reports must dictate energy policies and all other resource use policies, which must be directed by the UN. All other sources of information must be deemed “misinformation” or “disinformation” and dismissed/condemned as climate change “denialism” or akin to violent extremism.
Goal 14: Conserve and sustainably use the oceans, seas and marine resources for sustainable development.
Translation: Exert centralized governmental, intergovernmental, and stakeholder control over oceans and other large bodies of water; control access to oceans and bays; limit/outlaw drilling on ocean floors; control fishing rights, etc.
Goal 15: Protect, restore and promote sustainable use of terrestrial ecosystems, sustainably manage forests, combat desertification, and halt and reverse land degradation and halt biodiversity loss.
Translation: Exert centralized governmental and stakeholder control over land use; revert farmland to nature conservatories (see the following chapter); induce states and/or approved stakeholders (private buyers) to accumulate and control land to prevent unsustainable/unwanted farming and development; reintroduce wild species and reduce the population of farm animals that putatively contribute to global warming.
Goal 16: Promote peaceful and inclusive societies for sustainable development, provide access to justice for all and build effective, accountable and inclusive institutions at all levels.
Translation: Peacekeeping must come from UN dictates; unapproved wars are “unsustainable,” and states must be controlled by international law stemming from the UN; punish violators and “violent extremists,” including those who resist UN dictates; use international bodies like NATO to pressure nations to abide by UN decrees; law becomes international by virtue of universal governmental adoption of UN policy recommendations. Introduce digital identity and make the allocation of “human rights” hinge on its adoption.
Goal 17: Strengthen the means of implementation and revitalize the Global Partnership for Sustainable Development.
Translation: Turn policy recommendations into law; enroll corporate and state partners in the efforts to meet the SDGs (the WEF and its corporate partnerships apply here).