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U.N. Influence on Domestic Policy ( Long but worth the read )
http://eco.freedom.org ^ | Monday,February 04,2002 | By Michael Coffman Ph.D., and Henry Lamb

Posted on 02/04/2002 4:08:03 PM PST by ATOMIC_PUNK

The United Nations now administers more than five hundred treaties, of which 175 treaties and protocols directly influence policies of the federal, state, and local government. These treaties and agreements often have noble goals and seem to address a real need within the global community. However, obscure or statist language inherent within the treaties often results in U.S. law, and subsequent regulations, that conflict with the principle of individual sovereignty interwoven into the Constitution of the United States (hereafter called the Constitution).

An Example

For instance, to meet the letter of the Endangered Species Act of 1973, the DOI had to cut off irrigation water to 1400 farmers in the Klamath River Irrigation District in Southern Oregon during the growing season of 2001. While at best unpleasant for the Bureau of Reclamation which was initially responsible for cutting off the water at the head gates, it was devastating for the 1400 families who saw their land value plummet from around $850 per acre, to $50 per acre.

Their means of making a living was denied by a law that gave higher priority to sucker fish than American citizens. All the while, the farmers claim that they had legal entitlement to the Klamath River water rights that should have been protected under the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution. The farmers were not the only ones harmed in this action. Those businesses that depended on local agriculture were also hard hit, impacting the economic base of the entire county by hundreds of millions of dollars and an estimated 6,000 jobs.

Yet, a close review of the five international treaties that authorized the ESA would have revealed a potential conflict with the Constitution.

The Convention on Nature Protection and Wildlife Preservation in the Western Hemisphere (hereafter called the Western Convention) calls for preserving,

To assure that the species have "natural habitat...over areas extensive enough to assure them from becoming extinct" the treaty calls for the establishment of national parks, national reserves, nature monuments and wilderness areas. While the protection of endangered species is a legitimate use of these designated areas, Article V of the treaty calls for the government to also control land use "within their [the nation's] national boundaries but not included in the national parks, national reserves, nature monuments, or strict wilderness reserves," i.e. all affected private land.

It seems likely that such language led directly to Section 4a(3) of the ESA whereby

Such habitat, by definition in Section 3(5)(A)(i and ii) means

Such land use restrictions on designated critical habitat are to be applied to private land as well as public land, just as stated in the Western Convention. Such land use restrictions "for public use" are Constitutional under the Fifth Amendment providing the government pay "just compensation" for the use of the land. After all, most endangered species listings consider the species as being endangered because of human destruction of its sustaining habitat.

The application of the Fifth Amendment in this case would justly compensate a landowner (or property owner in the case of water rights) for using their property to restore to health a species that is endangered because of the actions of all citizens. Society caused the species to become endangered, so society should pay the bill to restore it. That enormous financial cost should not be imposed on the few property owners who still have some of the habitat remaining, as has been the case until recently. This is but one recent example of many in which international treaties are systematically undermining the Constitution needlessly. The question then becomes, why?

Two Opposing Philosophies at Play

While the intent and goals of international treaties and agreements are noble, they are almost invariably statist in their application. In almost every instance, private rights are lost to the direct control of government authority. The emerging statist approach to creating and applying law in the United States has enormous implications and threatens the very foundations that have made America the greatest nation in history. Indeed, the seriousness of the threat to America, its people, and its environment cannot be appreciated without at least a rudimentary understanding of the dynamics of two historical philosophies that have been struggling for supremacy for the past 250 years; those of John Locke and Jean Jacques Rousseau.

America's Constitution is rooted in the thought of John Locke (1632-1704), whose Two Treatises on Government (1689), provided a framework for England's Glorious Revolution of 1688 and the American Revolution of 1776. This political philosophy, with its basis in individual rights and embodiment in limited constitutional government, has been under attack for nearly two centuries by the ideas of Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778), whose Social Contract (1762), with its focus on the abstract "general will" of the people, was hailed by the extremists of the French Revolution. (1)

Locke demonstrated that the foundation of a progressive civilization, as outlined in his Second Treatise of Government, begins with natural rights - rights to what Locke terms "life, liberty and estate." These rights do not derive from government, according to Locke, but are essential to mankind as part of the scheme of nature.

The great scholars Frederic Bastiat and Sir William Blackstone refined these ideas until Thomas Jefferson made them the cornerstone of the Declaration of Independence. The underlying principle of this enlightenment was simple. Civilization is governed by certain natural laws. Violating these laws does not break nature's physical laws, but only results in man breaking himself. Blackstone claimed that these natural laws are:

The purpose of government, according to Locke is to join with others to:

Since much of the Constitution was based on Locke's pattern of governance, it is not surprising that James Madison claimed this belief as the backbone of the Constitution,

Except for a very few instances, such as the government of the Anglo Saxons, the American form of governance based on property rights and individual sovereignty within a constitutional republic has stood nearly alone in history.

In contrast, the statist approach has dominated the governments of almost every nation for millennia. It is best expressed in recent history through the writings of Rousseau who provided the foundational philosophy that spawned the bloody French Revolution and inspired the writings of Immanuel Kant, Georg W. F. Hegel and Karl Marx (5), thereby planting the seeds for the European model of socialism and Russian communism.

Rousseau attacked the Lockean model in the name of the wholeness of man, arguing that it divides man by focusing on self-interest, individual rights, and property. Instead, Rousseau sees

Rousseau seeks to achieve this equality through a vague metaphysical concept called the "general will." To overcome the tension between individual interests and the community, Rousseau argues for the creation of the common good as embodied through an abstract, objective public will, a will that is free from our subjective selves and personal interests. The state determines the general will, or common good of the people.

Rousseau likewise places strict social control on private property to prevent the inequalities that he believes will lead to social division and private interest. In the Social Contract, Rousseau acknowledges the great force of the state by admitting that raw force can be used to bring consent to the general will;

So much is Rousseau against property rights that he states that "you are lost if you forget that the fruits of the earth belong to all, and the earth to no one!" (8)

Property rights, claims Rousseau, was designed by the rich to place

Hence, the state should be supreme over its citizens;

In the struggle between these two major philosophies of governance, nowhere is the Rousseau model more evident than in the United Nations and the international and national environmental movements.

International Treaties and the Rousseau Model

Rousseau's model of the general will, land policy and property rights was officially articulated by the United Nations in Agenda Item 10 of the Conference Report for the United Nations Conference on Human Settlements (Habitat I), held in Vancouver, May 31 - June 11, 1976:

Throughout this United Nations document, Rousseau's model for private property rights is set forth as the basis for future United Nations policy:

In 1976, when Habitat I was held, there was no unifying science to justify the need for having government control of property rights to protect the global environment. Hence, during the 1980s a new science was created by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) and the World Wildlife Fund, both science advisors to the United Nations.

The IUCN, consisting of 112 governmental agencies - including U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, U.S. National Park Service and NOAA - and 735 mostly environmental non-governmental organizations, created the holistic science of conservation biology, (11) ostensibly to develop a science with "a new ethic, embracing plants and animals as well as people." (12)

Conservation biology is based on the unproven assumption that nature knows best and that all human use and activity should follow natural patterns within relatively homogenous soil-vegetation-hydrology landscapes called ecosystems. (13)

Since ecosystems cross man-made property lines, and since conservation biology called for holistic management of entire ecosystems to ostensibly protect the perceived fragile web of life, environmental law had to be superior to property rights.

To legitimize this unproven science, the Society of Conservation Biology was created by the IUCN in 1985 and was initially funded by various foundations. The true goal of conservation biology was made clear when the journal Conservation Biology began publication in 1987. Michael Soulé, founder and then president of the Society of Conservation Biology, outlined the radical purpose of conservation biology:



TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: biodiversity; epa; iucn; sustainability; unlist; wildlandsproject; wwf

1 posted on 02/04/2002 4:08:03 PM PST by ATOMIC_PUNK
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To: *UN_list
bump
2 posted on 02/04/2002 4:23:08 PM PST by One More Time
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To: ATOMIC_PUNK
WOW, it was worth the read.
3 posted on 02/05/2002 3:19:15 PM PST by The Bat Lady
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To: dixie sass,chesty puller,antivenom,bigun,smallstuff,pocat,sunshine,jd792,stanleypie,joan_30,annie
.
4 posted on 02/05/2002 4:15:54 PM PST by ATOMIC_PUNK
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