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Agenda 2030: A Primer

By Ben McClintock, Wednesday, 11 Jun 2025.

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In recent years, the rising cost of food, fuel, and housing has pushed many to the brink. But beyond surface-level economics, a deeper, more orchestrated agenda reveals itself—one that has been in development for decades. This article aims to unravel how global and national policies under the banners of Agenda 21 and Agenda 2030 are being used to fundamentally restructure society.

A Blueprint for Control: What is Agenda 21?
In 1992, the United Nations hosted the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro, launching Agenda 21. This initiative called for a “profound reorientation of all human society, unlike anything the world has ever experienced” (UNCED, 1992). Later iterations, most notably Agenda 2030 and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), reinforced these aims with more direct strategies.

Their vision goes beyond conservation. It’s about control—economic, geographic, and even demographic. The documents demand that environmental consequences of every human action be considered in both individual and collective decision-making, an ominous doorway to regulating virtually all aspects of life.

The Tools of Transformation: Economic Warfare
A key tactic in this restructuring is the use of economic tools to compel behavioral change. This isn’t mere theory; it is laid out plainly. The President’s Council on Sustainable Development openly stated the need to “stabilize the U.S. population” and restructure consumption patterns (PCSD, 1996). This means less meat, fewer vehicles, and limited access to appliances and private housing—all under the guise of sustainability.

We are already seeing this play out in real time

The Population Question
One of the most disturbing elements is the open conversation among global planners about population control. UNESCO-affiliated publications and globalist thinkers like Jacques Cousteau have floated the idea of eliminating up to 350,000 people per day to stabilize global population levels (UNESCO Courier, 1991).

unesco-kill-people2.jpg 30.7 KB

The Erasure of Freedom Through Infrastructure
Spencer Cox, Utah’s governor, proposed making public transportation permanently free. In tandem, vehicle costs are rising, gas prices are manipulated, and electric car propaganda floods the media. This is not coincidence; it is the funneling of the populace into pre-approved, trackable forms of movement.

Living in Resistance
What can individuals do in the face of this massive, multilateral effort?

1. Reclaim Food Independence
2. Energy and Transport Autonomy
3. Land Ownership
4. Economic Self-Reliance

Conclusion: Naming the War
What we are facing is nothing short of economic warfare and domestic terrorism—defined as the use of coercion and violence to achieve political ends. Every policy, every price hike, every zoning law is a salvo in a quiet war to remake civilization under centralized, unelected global oversight.

We must recognize this for what it is, not just debate climate science or environmental impacts. The question is one of freedom versus control. The path forward is not only ideological but practical—through resilience, preparation, and courage to act locally while resisting globally.

Check out the resources here for more information on Agenda 2030
https://treeoflibertysociety.com/?s=agenda+2030

References
– United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED). (1992). Agenda 21.
– President’s Council on Sustainable Development (PCSD). (1996). Sustainable America.
– San Francisco Chronicle (2008). Obama on Cap-and-Trade.
– Washington Post (2021). State-Level Mileage Tax Trials.
– Brookings Institute (2020). Zoning Reform Momentum.
– UNESCO Courier (1991). Population and the Environment.

Explore Related Themes:

Agenda 21 / 2030 Constitution liberty

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