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Someone is planning your future (United Nations)
worldnetdaily.com ^
| May 7, 2005
| Henry Lamb
Posted on 05/07/2005 9:19:29 AM PDT by nextthunder
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To: ClaireSolt
To: nextthunder
You've provided a number of good links on this thread.
I'd like to add two more.
The journalist Joan Veon has written an extremely well researched expose of the UN : United Nations Global Strait Jacket as well as numerous articles on UN conferences she has attended.
She's worth reading. She's one of the good guys.
To: DumpsterDiver
Patrick Henry thought it was insane....
23
posted on
05/07/2005 9:59:42 AM PDT
by
sdpatriot
(remember waco and ruby ridge)
To: nextthunder
Neither Congress, nor any state legislature, has ever voted to approve any of the 47 U.N. Biosphere Reserves in the United States. The management policy for the millions of acres covered by these reserves is crafted by international committees of bureaucrats, none of whom is elected.No taxation without representation. This needs to be brought to peoples attention. I wish the news would report this type of stuff rather than 24/7 Michael Jackson. The gossip news is a distraction from the real news, so no one notices their sovereignty being lost. When it's too late, they'll not be able to stop it.
To: nextthunder
To: Freebird Forever
To: sdpatriot
Patrick Henry thought it was insane....He was referring to EOs, right? If so, I couldn't agree with him more.
"Give me liberty or give me death or I'll have to shoot you."
To: DumpsterDiver
Kerry's U.N. Connection
Twelve staffers have filed a complaint against a senior U.N. official, alleging that his paid leave of absence to work on John Kerry's presidential campaign violated the U.N. charter. The New York Sun (search) reports that Justin Leites, the head of one U.N. agency's internal communications, stands accused of violating the U.N.'s spirit of neutrality by serving as a Kerry adviser.
What's more, the complaint accuses Leites of endangering U.N. election workers worldwide by involving the agency in politics. A U.N. spokesman says no rules were broken, but the agency's charter stipulates that any political involvement by employees be "consistent with the independence and impartiality required by their status as international servants."
To: nextthunder
29
posted on
05/07/2005 10:19:46 AM PDT
by
BenLurkin
(O beautiful for patriot dream - that sees beyond the years)
To: kcar
30
posted on
05/07/2005 10:20:45 AM PDT
by
BenLurkin
(O beautiful for patriot dream - that sees beyond the years)
To: nextthunder
Someone is planning theirs (God).
31
posted on
05/07/2005 10:34:34 AM PDT
by
avenir
(That was a brillion years ago, before I discovered spiritualicity!)
To: mcar
32
posted on
05/07/2005 11:02:44 AM PDT
by
kcar
(The UNsucks.com)
To: IslamoCommieObserver; SierraWasp; AuntB; farmfriend
I received the following e-mail (excerpted): To members of the public interested in state watershed programs and policy: The California Resources Agency and California Environmental Protection Agency, working with 17 departments, boards, offices and conservancies, developed the attached 18 Month Action Plan to implement the 2004 interagency watershed protection MOU and to update the California Agency Watershed Management Strategic Plan. The strategic plan, developed in 2003, included goals to improve watershed program coordination and efficiencies, collective investments, and local involvement in watershed management, and to demonstrate improvements in watershed health. We welcome comments on this plan. Please send them to me (cathy.bleier@resources.ca.gov ) or Rick Brausch (rbrausch@calepa.ca.gov). Since several actions in this plan are already under way, the Steering Committee will consider your comments and suggestions at our next meeting. We will also establish a site on the California Watershed Portal to post information about the state's progress on the Action Plan. I responded: In a cursory review of the document, I failed to find recognition and acknowledgement of the Countys primary role in local land and resource planning as an expression of its constitutionally delegated police powers. ARTICLE 11 of the California constitution entitled Local Government, SEC. 1. declares that: (a) The State is divided into counties which are legal subdivisions of the State... (b) The Legislature shall provide for county powers
SEC. 7. further declares: A county or city may make and enforce within its limits all local, police, sanitary, and other ordinances and regulations not in conflict with general laws. In 1937, the State Legislature in providing for county powers required all counties to adopt General Plans. This requirement was recodified as law in 1951 under Government Code 65000, et seq. California Planning Law requires the adoption of a comprehensive plan for the physical development of land within the county. It delegates that authority to local counties and cities: "Each planning agency shall prepare and the legislative body of each county and city shall adopt a comprehensive, long-term general plan for the physical development of the county or city, and any land outside its boundaries which in the planning agency's judgement bears relation to its planning." -Government Code Section 65300 Section 65300.7. Recognizes the need for local control over planning: "The Legislature finds that the diversity of the state's communities and their residents requires planning agencies and legislative bodies to implement this article in ways that accommodate local conditions and circumstances, while meeting its minimum requirements." The Conservation Element of the County General Plan addresses the conservation, development, and use of natural resources including water, forests, soils, rivers and minerals. Government Code 65302 states: (d) A conservation element for the conservation, development, and utilization of natural resources including water and its hydraulic force, forests, soils, rivers and other waters, harbors, fisheries, wildlife, minerals, and other natural resources. The conservation element shall consider the effect of development within the jurisdiction, as described in the land use element, on natural resources located on public lands, including military installations. That portion of the conservation element including waters shall be developed in coordination with any countywide water agency and with all district and city agencies that have developed, served, controlled or conserved water for any purpose for the county or city for which the plan is prepared. Coordination shall include the discussion and evaluation of any water supply and demand information described in Section 65352.5, if that information has been submitted by the water agency to the city or county. The conservation element may also cover the following: (1) The reclamation of land and waters. (2) Prevention and control of the pollution of streams and other waters. (3) Regulation of the use of land in stream channels and other areas required for the accomplishment of the conservation plan. (4) Prevention, control, and correction of the erosion of soils, beaches, and shores. (5) Protection of watersheds. (6) The location, quantity and quality of the rock, sand and gravel resources. (7) Flood control. The conservation element shall be prepared and adopted no later than December 31, 1973. State regulation of land and resource use on private lands is exercised through specific agencies that have been delegated very restricted authorities by the legislature. These authorities have been codified. These agencies do not have general land use planning authority. These agencies would include the Department of Fish and Game, the Board of Forestry, the North Coast Regional Water Quality Control Board, the Department of Water Resources. Initially, watershed assessment and planning was done as a framework to support purely voluntary participation in restoration and enhancement projects. With the listing of endangered species and declarations of watercourses as impaired, watershed planning has become an indirect way to regionally regulate land, water and other resource use. It is my opinion that County governments should have the lead role in local land and resource management planning. Local governments should be recognized as having the authority to validate watershed planning that affects the private property of constituents. If appropriate, local governments may then chose to formally adopt policies and ordinances to implement these plans. It is most appropriate that this type of planning occur at the local level through duly elected officials who are directly accountable to the People.
33
posted on
05/07/2005 11:07:56 AM PDT
by
marsh2
To: nextthunder; All
Click this picture & go to the "last" for the latest UN scandals:
If you aren't informed about this stuff, you will be made sick. If you are informed, you will be made mad, all over again.
34
posted on
05/07/2005 11:27:29 AM PDT
by
backhoe
(-30-)
Comment #35 Removed by Moderator
To: ariamne
good article by Henry Lamb!
A.A.C.
36
posted on
05/07/2005 11:53:52 AM PDT
by
AmericanArchConservative
(Armour on, Lances high, Swords out, Bows drawn, Shields front ... Eagles UP!)
To: DumpsterDiver
To: quietolong
Well, thank God
[unless that's illegal] somebody is looking out for us and planning our lives down to the last detail. Without them the world would be in chaos!
/sarcasm
To: Carry_Okie; PatrickHenry; RightWhale; FairOpinion
39
posted on
05/07/2005 1:58:45 PM PDT
by
King Prout
(blast and char it among fetid buzzard guts!)
To: CHARLITE
40
posted on
05/07/2005 1:59:45 PM PDT
by
King Prout
(blast and char it among fetid buzzard guts!)
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