UN – World Commission on Environment and Development
On December 19, 1983 the General Assembly of the United Nations adopted Resolution A/RES/38/161. Process of preparation of the Environmental Perspective to the Year 2000 and Beyond . The resolution called for the creation of a Special Commission to develop the Environmental Perspective. The formal name of the commission was the World Commission on Environment and Development. Informally, it was called the Brundtland Commission after the Chairwoman, Gro Harlem Brundtland of Norway.
William D. Ruckelshaus, first Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) when it was created in 1970, was re-appointed to be the fifth Administrator of the EPA in 1983. He represented the United States on the Brundtland Commission.
The Common Thread: William Ruckleshaus, the Garbage Gangster
The United Nations General Assembly adopted the Brundtland Report (Our Common Future) on August 4, 1987, A/42/427. The Secretary General’s Note states, “the report of the special commission should in the first instance be considered by the Governing Council of use as basic material in the preparation, for adoption by the Assembly, of the Environmental Perspective to the Year 2000 and Beyond.
On December 11, 1987, a framework document titled, Environmental Perspective to the Year 2000 and Beyond was adopted by the General Assembly as resolution A/RES/42/186 . On the same day, resolution A/RES/42/187 was adopted calling on all governing bodies to make full use of the Brundtland Commission Report, Our Common Future, calling all governments to “ask their central and sectoral economic agencies to ensure that their policies, programmes and budgets encourage sustainable development and to strengthen the role of their environmental and natural resource agencies in advising and assisting central and sectoral agencies in that task; to address the problems of population growth and of conserving and enhancing the resource base, reorienting technology and managing risk, and merging environment and economics in decision-making and more.
Ronald Reagan
Image Here
On August 14, 1983, President Ronald Reagan signed a treaty with Mexican President Hurtado. The treaty was for border environmental clean-up. The environment is the being used for world government takeover.
UN – Business Council for Sustainable Development
Mid 1990
Maurice Strong, Secretary General of the 1992 U.N. Conference on Environment and Development asked Swiss Industrialist Steven Schmidtheiny to serve as principal advisor for business and industry. Schmidtheiny accepted and invited roughly 50 business leaders to become members of the Business Council for Sustainable Development. The book Changing Course was written based on the meetings of the Business Council. Of the American business leaders on the Council, Kenneth Derr, Chevron, Samuel Johnson, S.C. Johnson & Son, Dave Buzzelli, Dow Chemical, William Ruckelshaus, Browning & Ferris Industries were appointed to Clinton’s President’s Council on Sustainable Development (PCSD) when it was constituted in 1993. Dave Buzzelli was selected by Clinton to be the Co-Council of the PCSD.
The story: Blueprint for Reinvention of Government
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The President’s Council on Sustainable Development
June 14, 1993 – White House Press Release, on Earth Summit Anniversary, President Creates Council on Sustainable Development
June 14, 1993 – VP Al Gore speaks at the UN to the Commission on Sustainable Development. Environmental Issues Post Rio Earth Summit, broadcast on C-SPAN.
June 15, 1993 – White House Press Release, President’s Council on Sustainable Development
June 22, 1993 – Remarks by President Clinton to the US Conference of Mayors (Note: federal money to the cities rather than the states)
June 29, 1993, Executive Order 12852 Establishing the Council
Vision Statement: Our Vision of a Sustainable United States of America
Note to readers
Almost all of the PCSD reports and documentation are in html format only and the documents are spread out across 5 or 6 websites. Because of that, the html documents were copied to WORD and were saved in PDF format for convenience and to provide continuity of thought as to what they were thinking and doing to the American government and civil society. The footer area of each report has the link to the Clinton archive from which it was extracted.
October 18, 1993
The President’s Council on Sustainable Development (PCSD), second meeting was broadcast on C-Span. Ron Brown, Secretary of Commerce, hosted the meeting. Both he and Al Gore gave introductory remarks at the beginning. During the meeting, the Agenda for Change report was discussed as being their guidance document.
The Agenda for Change report was produced by the Centre for Our Common Future, Geneva Switzerland. The Centre for Our Common Future was the UN World Commission on Environment and Development (Brundtland Commission) with a new name after their report, Our Common Future was published in 1987.
The Story: Strategy for Treason
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October 19, 1993
Global Warming Announcement Utilities the target
April 21, 1994
Global Environment Briefing; Katie McGinty, Hazel O’Leary, Bruce Babbitt, Carol Browner
April 22, 1994
Global Environment Briefing – GLOBE program
Articles written about Energy, Environment and Racketeering
The Renewable Racket, article, Hazel O’Leary
Energizing Cannibals, article, Carol Browner, Michael Porter
Government Overthrow of the People, article
Interagency Ecosystem Management Task Force, 1993
The Ecosystem Approach – Volume I-Overview
National Urban Policy Report, 1995
The Clinton Administration’s National Urban Policy Report – Draft [Note: The government agencies often leave reports in draft status. When you see a report in this status, see what actions and reports follow to determine if the report was left in draft to be able to claim plausible deniability.] The status does not affect the content.
PCSD Phase 1
Phase 1 Final Reports
Sustainable America: A New Consensus for the Prosperity, Opportunity and a Healthy Environment for the Future, February 1996
This report is about the campaign to sell the idea of sustainable development – planning for total immersion in “green think” including propagandizing school children. They shifted the focus of K-12 education from foundational learning to building a brainless “green” army for the future. This paper introduces the idea of government, business and “community citizens” working collaboratively to form a syndicate that in the future becomes the metro mobsters – collectivizing and building a “governance” structure that is not accountable to the citizens.
Intro – federal Empowerment Zone/Enterprise Community Program; operating and organizing funds for community communists (p.96)
Charter Revision
President’s Council on Sustainable Development – Overview – Revised Charter
PCSD Interim Between Phase 1 and Phase 2
Task Forces created for the Final Report
This report focuses on the concept of change in the earth’s climate due to the activities of mankind. They needed a propaganda campaign for world government as big as sustainable development to justify global communism. The message sold to the public is that people will destroy the earth if we don’t collectivize and restrict the use of natural resource RIGHT NOW! Of course the environmental lawyers and their corporate partners collaborate to save the planet and they buy politicians to help them in that endeavor. That collaboration – collusion actually considers people as merely “workers” or useless eaters. The asymmetric warfare being waged against the people can be considered herd management tools.
Environmental Management Task Force
International Leadership Task Force
Metropolitan and Rural Strategies Task Force
This task force focuses on —land use, ecosystems, transportation, public safety, affordable housing–spread beyond the arbitrary lines of political jurisdiction. The mission of the Metropolitan and Rural Strategies Task Force was to encourage and support local and regional collaboration among Federal, State, and local government agencies; public interest and community groups; and businesses to advance sustainable development in metropolitan and rural communities.
Building on Consensus: A Progress Report on Sustainable America, 1997;
Three new Task Forces were recommended:
The Innovative Local, State, and Regional Approaches Task Force
The New National Opportunities Task Force
The International Leadership Task Force
Page 9 – Interagency Working Group
The Road to Sustainable Development: A Snapshot of Activities in the United States, 1997 *****
Proceedings – Eco-Industrial Park Workshop, 1996-1997
Proceedings – Extended Product Responsibility, 1996-1997
Lessons Learned from Collaborative Approaches, 1997
EPA and DOE – collaborations with heavy industrial companies – Collaborations
Dow Chemical
Georgia-Pacific
General Motors
Utilities
- +White House Conference on Global Climate Change, October 6, 1997
Opening – (start listening at 33:40)
https://www.c-span.org/video/?92413-1/global-climate-change1st Panel, Scientists, John P. Holdren
https://www.c-span.org/video/?92578-1/science-global-climate-change2nd Panel – technology, Federico Pena, new economy, end regulatory monopoly of utilities
https://www.c-span.org/video/?92579-1/role-technology-reducing-global-warming2nd session
Hillary Clinton – Global Climate Change
https://www.c-span.org/video/?92574-1/global-climate-change3rd Panel, Kyoto Conference and U.S. National Interests, Madelein Albright
https://www.c-span.org/video/?92580-1/kyoto-conference-us-national-interests4th Panel, Larry Summers, economists, Richard Sandor
https://www.c-span.org/video/?92581-1/climate-change-policy-us-economyOctober 6, 1997 Climate Conference Reaction – utility industry
https://www.c-span.org/video/?92566-1/climate-conference-reaction
Phase 2
US Business and Environmental Leaders Agree, 1998
Draft Final Report, January 9, 1999 (vicky – link to html
A Con Game of Epic Proportions
Market-based Environmental Policies: What can we learn from U.S. Experience (and Related Research)?
Robert Stavins, July 2, 2003.
Final Reports – End Project Documentation
Final Report: Towards a Sustainable America: Advancing Prosperity, Opportunity and a Healthy Environment for the 21st Century, May 1999
Vicky – fix here
Letter to the President
Press Release
Fact Sheet
U.S. Environmental and Business Leaders Agree on Climate Change Action, May 1999
National Town Meeting for a Sustainable America, May 1999
Council on Environmental Quality, 2000
Report: Eight Years of Peace, Progress and Prosperity
- Key Accomplishments
- Timeline of Major Actions
- Historic Economic Growth
- Strengthening American Families
- Expanding Education Opportunity
- Lowest Crime Rates in a Generation
- Improving the Nation’s Health Care
- Protecting Our Environment and Public Health
- Unleashing the New Economy and Expanding Access to Technology
- A Foreign Policy for the Global Age
- Building One America
- National Service and Philanthropy
Full Report: Eight Years of Peace, Progress and Prosperity
United Nations Millennium Summit
September 6-8, 2000