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Probe Ministries
UN Conferences
Kerby Anderson
Habitat II and Sustainable Development
Although United Nations conferences have been taking place
frequently over the last two decades, most Americans have ignored
the proceedings and their ominous implications. Recent conferences
in Cairo, Beijing, and Istanbul have been a vivid reminder of the
radical ideology of the UN and the threat it poses to our faith,
family, and freedom.
The direction of the last few conferences illustrates this point.
The 1992 Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro established an
environmental foundation for all the UN's radical social and
economic agendas. The 1994 Cairo Conference focused on population
control and attempted to push abortion and contraception as
solutions to the perceived "problem" of overpopulation. The 1995
Women's Conference in Beijing, China, proved to be the most radical
of all. It continued to push abortion as a human right and
attempted to make sexual orientation a human right by promoting the
idea that genders are not clearly defined but are socially
constructed. The White House has already created an Inter-Agency
Council to implement the Beijing platform in the private sector and
every executive agency.
The recently completed conference in Istanbul, Turkey, built upon
the foundation of the other conferences and was the culmination of
the conferences. Wally N'Dow, Secretary General of Habitat II,
predicted that the conference would be a "new beginning that will
reflect and implement the actions called for at the unprecedented
continuum of global conferences that have marked this closing
decade of the century." He said that "a new global social contract
for building sustainable human settlements must be forged" for the
"new global urban world order." Mindful of the controversy
surrounding the other conferences, he declared, "There will be no
roll-back of any of the conferences, including Beijing."
Habitat II focused on the problems of urban centers. Its goal was
to create "economically, socially and environmentally thriving
urban communities" in order to better the lives of people living in
third-world countries. Although the goals were commendable, the
agenda of the conference participants went far beyond urban blight.
A key concept in the Habitat II agenda was sustainable development.
In the school curriculum developed by the UN, sustainable
development was defined as "meeting the needs of the present
generation without damaging the Earth's resources in such a way
that would prevent future generations from meeting [their needs]."
It includes "changing wasteful consumption patterns" and
"emphasizing equitable development" in order to "bridge the gap
between rich and poor countries." In practice, sustainable
development is a radical concept that will limit the amount of
food, energy, or general resources that citizens of a nation can
consume. Rather than consuming what they can afford, "rich" nations
(like the U.S.) might only be allowed to consume what they need to
stay alive.
One UN publication declares that we "must learn to live
differently" and calls for this international agency to "ensure
that the benefits of development are distributed equally." To
achieve this so-called "equal distribution," there must be a
redistribution of wealth throughout the planet. The UN has already
drafted specific plans for implementing sustainable development in
the U.S. In spite of the frightening implications of these
conferences, U.S. taxpayers have been footing the bill for them and
their radical agendas.
Habitat II: Global Taxes and National Sovereignty The
most recent conference in Istanbul, Turkey, known as Habitat II is
illustrative of another major concern: namely, the threat these
conferences pose to our national sovereignty.
Habitat II called for national governments to manage economic
systems. These include public and private investment practices,
consumption patterns, and public policy. UN Secretary Boutros
Boutros Ghali told the first plenary session that he wanted the
conference to be a "Conference of Partners."
Another section was devoted to the international community and its
involvement with national governments. The Global Plan of Action
calls for the international community to force changes in the
world's economic structures.
The UN also intends to reach sustainable development by changing
the structure of national governments. In fact, the Habitat agenda
depends upon UN oversight of national, regional, state, and local
governments. The document asks city administrators to re-design
their regulations, political systems, and judicial and legislative
procedures. It was no accident that the conference was filled with
mayors from many U.S. cities as well as from cities around the
world.
The Habitat document proposed that "government at all levels should
encourage . . . walking, cycling, and public transport . . .
through appropriate pricing . . . and regulatory measures."
Governments are charged with the responsibility of encouraging
citizens to walk, ride bicycles, or take public transportation.
This would be accomplished by the heavy taxation and burdensome
regulations often found in socialist economies.
UN Secretary General Boutros Boutros Ghali has also called for
global taxes on international currency transactions, energy, and
travel to fund the United Nations. During the conference, the U.S.
was harshly criticized for being delinquent in its payment to the
UN. It currently owes $1.5 billion. Currently the U.S. pays about
25 percent of the UN budget and nearly 40 percent of the
"peacekeeping" costs. The UN hopes that in the next few years they
are able to implement this global tax so they can be free of U.S.
influence and enact their radical global agenda.
This global tax proposed by Boutros Boutros Ghali would be received
from international currency transactions, energy shipments, and
international travel. If implemented, it would remove the UN's
dependence on sovereign nations. No longer would the United States
or other countries have a check and balance against an
international organization. The UN could pay for its activities,
fund UN peacekeeping forces, and conduct many of its affairs
independently of the United States.
Canadian developer Maurice Strong is often considered a likely
candidate to become the future Secretary General of the United
Nations. He has called for a shift in our current thinking. He has
stated that this change in thinking "will require a vast
strengthening of the multilateral system, including the United
Nations. . . . We must now forge a newEarth Ethic' which will
inspire all people and nations to join in a new global partnership
of North, South, East and West."
This global vision should especially concern Christians mindful of
end-times prophecy. At the time when the world seems to be moving
swiftly towards global government, the prospects of a stronger
United Nations autonomous of sovereign nations is a scary scenario.
This bolder and stronger United Nations would further erode U.S.
sovereignty and strengthen the hand of world leaders who are
promoting globalist visions of a one-world government.
UN Conferences: Four Areas of Concern
Now I want to discuss the possible effects of the UN conferences on
our families and communities. I see several issues on great concern
to Christians.
The first issue is education. Many of the concepts from Habitat II,
like "sustainable development," have already infiltrated America's
schools. Textbooks promote global citizenship and minimize national
sovereignty. Other textbooks blame rich northern countries (like
the U.S.) for retarding the growth and development in lesser
developed countries. "Tolerance" and "global peace" are emphasized
as the ultimate aims of society. The Goals 2000 federal program for
education in this country provides the perfect mechanism to
transmit these global UN philosophies into school curricula. A
second issue is the impact on families. The Habitat II conference
continued the UN attempt to redefine the family. Many UN leaders
see the traditional family as an obstacle to UN dominance.
The Habitat II platform stated that "in different cultural,
political and social systems, various forms of the family exist."
Many participants asked that "sexual orientation" be included as a
civil rights category. In many ways, this merely extended the
concept promoted during the Beijing Women's Conference that gender
be defined not as male and female, but as one of five genders that
are socially constructed. Habitat II also promoted "gendered
cities" which are to be organized in terms of "gender roles." The
third issue has to do with population. The UN Population Fund says
that population growth is a key inhibitor of sustainable growth. UN
recommendations of population control are based upon the faulty
premise that the world is in the midst of a population explosion
that cannot be controlled. Participants raised the fear of losing
resources even though there is empirical evidence to the
contrary.
Because of the UN's anti-population bias, the Habitat II document
emphasizes "sustainable development" as the mechanism for
population control. Thus, "family planning" is a key concept, and
the document therefore emphasizes surgical abortions and chemical
abortions (RU-486). The Habitat platform specifically mentions
"reproductive health services" for women in human settlements and
calls for government management of economic and population growth.
A final issue concerns the area of ecology and pollution. At the
1992 UN Earth Summit, Canadian developer Maurice Strong stated, "It
is clear that current lifestyles and consumption of large amounts
of frozen convenience foods, use of fossil fuels, appliances, home
and workplace air conditioners and suburban housing are not
sustainable." Many believe Maurice Strong will probably succeed
Boutros Boutros Ghali as UN Secretary General and are rightly
concerned about his New Age views on ecology. The Habitat II
document encourages nations to use heavy taxation and various
regulations to ensure that citizens walk, ride bicycles, and take
public transportation.
The threats posed by these UN Conferences (including the recent
conference in Istanbul) are real. American citizens must fight
these radical ideas and ensure that our politicians do not give
away our sovereignty on the pretext of easing ecological problems.
We should be good stewards of the environment, but we should not
place that responsibility in the hands of those in the United
Nations who want to use it as a tool for global dominance.
Globalism and the Traditional Family
Now I would like to turn our attention to the goals of the
globalists. Though they are a diverse and eclectic group of
international bankers, politicians, futurists, religious leaders,
and economic planners, they are unified in their desire to unite
the planet under a one-world government, a single economic system,
and a one-world religion. Through various governmental programs,
international conferences, and religious meetings, they desire to
unite the various governments of this globe into one single
network.
Although this can be achieved in a variety of ways, the primary
focus of globalists is on the next generation of young people. By
pushing global education in the schools, they believe they can
indoctrinate them to accept the basic foundations of globalism.
According to one globalist, global education seeks to "prepare
students for citizenship in the global age." Globalists believe
that this new form of education will enable future generations to
deal effectively with population growth, environmental problems,
international tensions, and terrorism.
But several obstacles stand in the way of the globalists' goals.
Consequently, they have targeted three major institutions for
elimination because their continued existence impedes their designs
to unite the world under a single economic, political, and social
global network.
The three institutions under attack by globalists today are: the
traditional family, the Christian church, and the national
government. Each institution espouses doctrines antithetical to the
globalist vision. Therefore, globalists argue, these institutions
must be substantially modified or replaced.
The traditional family poses a threat to globalism for two reasons.
First, it is still the primary socializing unit in our society.
Parents pass on social, cultural, and spiritual values to their
children. Many of these values such as faith, hard work, and
independence collide with the designs of globalists who envision a
world in which tolerance for religion, dependence on a one-world
global community, and international cooperation are the norm. These
values are not taught in traditional American families, therefore
globalists seek to change the family.
Second, parental authority in a traditional family clearly
supersedes international authority. Children are taught to obey
their parents in such families. Parents have authority over their
children, not a national or international governmental entity.
Globalists, therefore, see the traditional, American family as an
enemy, not as a friend.
Well-known humanist and globalist Ashley Montagu speaking to a
group of educators declared that, "The American family structure
produces mentally ill children." From his perspective, the
traditional family which teaches such things as loyalty to God and
loyalty to country is not producing children mentally fit for the
global world of the twenty-first century.
One of the reasons globalist educators advocate childhood education
begin at earlier and earlier ages is so that young children can be
indoctrinated into globalism. The earlier they can communicate
their themes to children, the more likely will be the globalists'
success in breaking the influence of the family.
But the traditional family is just one of the institutions
globalists seek to change. We must now turn our attention to
globalistic attacks on these other institutions.
Globalism Opposes Christianity and Nationalism
We have seen that globalists oppose the traditional family, but we
must also be aware that they believe that the Christian church and
a sense of national identity are contrary to their vision.
Globalists feel that the Christian church threatens their global
program because of its belief in the authority of the Bible. Most
other religious systems (as well as liberal Christianity) pose
little threat. But Christians who believe in God, in sin, in
salvation through faith in Jesus Christ alone, stand in the way of
the globalist vision for a one-world government and a one-world
religion.
The coming world religion will merge all religions and faiths into
one big spiritual amalgam. Hinduism and Buddhism are syncretistic
religions and can easily be merged into this one-world religion.
But orthodox Christianity cannot.
Jesus taught that "I am the way, and the truth, and the life; no
one comes to the Father, but through Me" (John 14:6). Globalists,
therefore, see Christianity as narrow, exclusive, and intolerant.
Paul Brandwein even went so far as to say that, "Any child who
believes in God is mentally ill." Belief in a personal God to which
we owe allegiance and obedience cannot remain if globalists are to
achieve their ultimate vision.
National governments also threaten globalism. If the goal is to
unite all peoples under one international banner, any nationalism
or patriotism blocks the progress of that vision.
Globalist and architect Buckminster Fuller once said that,
"Nationalism is the blood clot in the world's circulatory system."
Among nations, the United States stands as one of the greatest
obstacles to globalism. The European community has already
acquiesced to regional and international plans, and other emerging
nations are willingly joining the international community. By
contrast, the United States remains independent in its national
fervor and general unwillingness to cooperate with international
standards. Until recently, Americans rejected nearly everything
international, be it an international system of measurements
(metric system) or an international agency (such as the United
Nations or the World Court).
The globalist solution is to promote global ideas in the schools.
Dr. Pierce of Harvard University speaking to educators in Denver,
Colorado, said, "Every child in America who enters schools at the
age of five is mentally ill, because he comes to school with
allegiance toward our elected officials, toward our founding
fathers, toward our institutions, toward the preservation of this
form of government." Their solution, therefore, is to purge these
nationalistic beliefs from school children so they will come to
embrace the goals of globalism.
All over the country programs on Global Education, Global History,
and Global Citizenship are springing up. Children are being
indoctrinated into a global way of thinking. Frequently these
programs masquerade as drug awareness programs, civics programs, or
environmental programs. But their goal is just the same to break
down a child's allegiance to family, church, and country, and to
replace this allegiance with the globalists' vision for a one-world
government, a one-world economic system, and a one-world religion.
These then are three institutions the globalists believe must be
modified or destroyed if they are to achieve their globalist
vision. Christians must, therefore, be diligent to defend their
family, their church, and their country.
© 1996 Probe Ministries
About the Author
Kerby Anderson is the president of Probe
Ministries International. He received his B.S. from Oregon State
University, M.F.S. from Yale University, and M.A. from Georgetown
University. He is the author of several books, including Genetic
Engineering, Origin Science, Living Ethically in the 90s, Signs of
Warning, Signs of Hope, and Moral Dilemmas. He also
served as general editor for Marriage, Family and Sexuality.
He is a nationally syndicated columnist whose editorials have
appeared in the Dallas Morning News, the Miami
Herald, the San Jose Mercury, and the Houston
Post.
He is the host of "Probe," and frequently serves as guest host on
"Point of View" (USA Radio Network). He can be reached via e-mail
at kerby@probe.org.
What is Probe?
Probe Ministries is a non-profit corporation whose mission is to reclaim the
primacy of Christian thought and values in Western culture through media,
education, and literature. In seeking to accomplish this mission, Probe provides
perspective on the integration of the academic disciplines and historic
Christianity.
In addition, Probe acts as a clearing house, communicating the results of
its research to the church and society at large.
Further information about Probe's materials and ministry may be obtained by
writing to:
Probe Ministries
1900 Firman Drive, Suite 100
Richardson, TX 75081
(972) 480-0240 FAX (972) 644-9664
info@probe.org
www.probe.org
Copyright (C) 1996-2008 Probe Ministries
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Leadership U. All rights reserved.
Updated: 14 July 2002
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