THE UNITED NATIONS TOWN INFLUENCE
International Council for Local Environmental Initiatives/NGO'S
Folks,
When we begin to unpeel the onion skin about this United Nations movement called AGENDA 21 we can certainly see a relationship between our local city, county and state governments as early as the late 90's. Remember, it was George Herbert Walker Bush who signed the Rio Declaration with 178 other countries back in 1992 but it was Bill Clinton, who implemented much of the bureaucracy that was to come in the decades to follow.
In fact, back in late 90's, The American Planning Association designed a legislative guidebook called
"GROWING SMART LEGISLATIVE GUIDEBOOK" : Model Statutes for Planning and the Management of Change
https://www.planning.org/growingsmart/
To understand this further one must not just recognize this document as a "GUIDEBOOK" but as a "BLUEPRINT"
It contains sample legislation, ordinances, rules, regulations and statutes to be incorporated into the General Plans of every single city and county in the United States. By 2002, every planning department and every local, state, and federal department that governs land use had a copy and was implementing the practices. Every University, every college, every junior college, private school and teaching institution in our nation was using "GROWING SMART" in it's curriculum.
And this is just the beginning .....
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THE UNITED NATIONS TOWN INFLUENCE
Termed Smart Growth, Urban Islands, Smart Cities, and now 15-Minute cities, these blueprint communities radicalize sustainability by limiting personal land and renovation choices, financial opportunities, and systematically herding community members into condensed, predetermined quasi-urban lifestyles.
Increasing restrictions and surveillance are Smart Cities’ enforcement tools. From condensed living, restricted zones and limited automobile use, to video on lampposts and ubiquitous plate readers that can:
recognize identities,
detect crowd and transmit associations for cataloguing,
track vehicles of interest,
connect with online payments,
enforce regulations,
manage low emissions, manage protected zones,
pull driver details, and more.
Integrated data and networked sensors are part of a platform the feeds into the city’s central digital recording and management system.