Subject: UN rapidly moving to launch One World Govt



From: William Bacon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Against Constitutional terrorists <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: The search network <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Saturday, 10 June 2000 09:25
Subject: SNET: This Is A MUST READ for today...Bob (fwd)


visit my web site at  http://www.voicenet.com/~wbacon

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Date: Fri, 09 Jun 2000 09:08:43 -0700
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Subject: SNET: This Is A MUST READ for today...Bob



-------- Original Message -------- Subject:  ## IMMENSELY URGENT! ##
      Date:  Wed, 7 Jun 2000 21:34:19 -0700
      From:  "Don Stacey" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
      To:       [EMAIL PROTECTED]



This is a must read! The UN is moving rapidly in launching the ONE WORLD
GOVERNMENT. To ignore this is to make a huge mistake. It is happening, it
threatens you and your family and it is developing at a breathtaking pace.
DO
NOT IGNORE THIS!
Don Stacey

Millennium Forum meets in New York
eco-logic report
The Millennium Forum concluded its five-day meeting at the United Nations in
New York, May 26, adopting a conference document that is supposed to
represent the views of "civil society" on how the world should be governed
in
the 21st century. Approximately 1600 NGOs (non-government organizations)
were
represented at the forum.

The event represents the implementation of a recommendation first made by
the
Commission on Global Governance (CGG) in its 1995 report Our Global
Neighborhood (p.257 f). The CGG called for the creation of a "Peoples
Assembly" consisting of 300 to 600 representatives of "civil society" who
would meet annually before the U.N. General Assembly to provide input to the
policy makers. Since the 1995 report, the NGO community has been building
the
structure, framework, and propaganda to support the new United Nations body.

It is no surprise that the document produced by the NGO Millennium Forum
calls for the implementation of the recommendations made by the Commission
on
Global Governance. NGOs began working on a "Charter for Global Democracy"
shortly after the CGG report was published. The "Charter" reduced the entire
slate of CGG recommendations into 12 principles described in the Charter.
The
Millennium Forum further refined these principles and recommendations into
six "Themes" that guided the conference.

It is no surprise that the six themes parallel the agenda already published
for the U.N. Millennium Assembly to be held in September. The six themes
are:

  1. Peace, security and disarmament;
  2. Eradication of poverty, including debt cancellation and social
development;

  3. Sustainable development and environment;

  4. Financing the challenges of globalization;

  5. Achieving equality, justice and diversity; and

  6. Strengthening and democratizing the U.N. and international
organizations.

Among the dignitaries to address the Forum was Kofi Annan, U.N.
Secretary-General, who told the group the "...the poor are poor not because
of too much globalization, but because of too little. I believe," he said,
"the overarching challenge of our times is to make globalization mean more
than bigger markets."
Indeed, the agenda of the Forum, as well as that of the Millennium Assembly,
deals with much more than bigger markets.

The opening session began with a barrage of proposals to democratize the
U.N.
by enlarging the Security Council and eliminating the veto and permanent
member status. This idea came from the CGG report (pp 240 f). Calls for debt
cancellation for developing nations, enforceable human rights standards,
U.N.
regulation of multinational corporations, and control of small arms, were
all
issues of great concern. Each of the recommendations first appeared in the
CGG report, Our Global Neighborhood.

The exact method of attaching the NGO body to the United Nations, which is
itself undergoing significant restructuring, has not yet been decided. An
influential, but minority segment of the NGO community, wants a "civil
society" body that is elected at large by the citizens of member nations.
This body would function as a lower house, while the General Assembly would
function as a Senate in a loosely defined parliamentary system. This is
similar to the model advanced by the World Federalist Association.

The majority influence, supported by the U.N., favors a much more controlled
system in which selected NGO leaders would develop a process of selecting
individual representatives from NGOs accredited by the U.N. Economic Social
and Economic Council, to participate in the annual Forum which would be, in
fact, the Peoples' Assembly. This is the procedure that was followed to
select the participants in last week's Forum. Applicants had to be bone fide
members of an accredited NGO, and then submit a written application
explaining why they should be selected to participate. A committee of NGO
leaders, blessed by the U.N., made the final selection of those individuals
who were allowed to participate. This is civil society according to the
United Nations.

NGOs are destined to play a vital role in both the formulation and
implementation of international policy. Annan told the gathering "Worldwide
alliances among like-minded NGOs, which have already proved so successful on
issues like debt relief and the International Criminal Court (another
recommendation of the CGG), are the shape of things to come - on a much
wider
scale and on a more continuous basis."

A series of additional meetings have been scheduled by the NGOs to promote
their conference document all the way to the U.N. Millennium Assembly in
September - and beyond.

  June 5 - World Environment Day - events around the world.
  June 5 - 9 - Beijing+5 - a review of accomplishments since the Nairobi
conference.

  June 2000 - a global forum on peace in Costa Rica at the U.N. University

  July 21-30 - Young General Assembly (delegates under 18) held in Australia

  August 9 - International Day of World's Indigenous People - events around
the world

  August 28-31 - Millennium Summit of Religious & Spiritual Leaders at the
U.N.

  September 6 - Opening of the Millennium Assembly

  September 3-10 - State of the World Forum at the New York Hilton to
coincide with the Millennium Assembly and Summit.

The formalization of NGO participation in United Nations activity is an
essential part of the global governance system envisioned by the Commission
on Global Governance. Most of these accredited NGOs are also members of the
International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) from which flows
policy initiatives such as the Convention on Biological Diversity, the
Convention on Climate Change, and Agenda 21. They are also the organizations
funded by various U.N. institutions such as the Global Environment Facility
and the U.N. Development Program, to actually implement U.N. programs at the
local level. They are also the primary agitators for policy issues in the
local, state and national political arenas.
The Commission on Global Governance has recommended that the U.N.
Trusteeship
Council be given control over the global commons, which it defines to be
"outer space, the atmosphere, non-territorial seas, and the related
environment that supports human life" (p. 251). The CGG has called for 23
representative from "civil society" to constitute the U.N. Trusteeship
Council.

Moreover, the CGG has called for the creation of a "Petitions Council,"
consisting of selected members of civil society, to receive petitions of
early warning from NGOs in the field. These petitions would come from an
"early warning network" of NGOs around the world, and then be routed to the
appropriate U.N. agency for investigation and enforcement of international
law.

The event just concluded in New York is a major milestone toward global
governance. There was very little news coverage in the mainstream media, and
even less reporting on the background and purpose of the event. There is
nothing secretive about it. Full reports are available at the U.N. web site.
[http://www.un.org/millennium/]

All the documents are available for public inspection

--------------------------------------------------

>From the UN website:

http://www.un.org/millennium/


"We, the Peoples": Millennium Report of the Secretary-General



   "The occasion of the third millennium presents a timely opportunity for
the only global organization, in terms of its membership as much as of its
areas of work, to identify the challenges that it will face in the future
and
to engage in an imaginative exercise to enhance and strengthen a unique
institution".
         Secretary-General Kofi Annan



      On 17 December 1998, the General Assembly of the United Nations
adopted
resolution 53/202 by which it decided to designate the fifty-fifth session
the General Assembly to be opened on 5 September 2000 as " The Millennium
Assembly of the United Nations" and to convene a "Millennium Summit of the
United Nations". In endorsing the proposal for the Millennium Assembly and
Millennium Summit, which has been put forward by the Secretary-General, the
General Assembly decided that the turn of the century constitutes a unique
and symbolically compelling moment for the membership of the United Nations
to articulate and affirm an animating vision for the United Nations in the
new era.
      When the Heads of State and/or Government of the Member States of the
United Nations converge on the Headquarters of the United Nations in New
York
to participate in the Millennium Summit starting on 6 September 2000, it is
likely to be the largest single gathering of Heads of State and/or
Government
ever held in the world. The Summit will be a historic opportunity to agree
on
a process for fundamental review of the role of, and challenges facing the
United Nations in the new century.

      As a companion event, and further to the Secretary-General's
recommendation, civil society organizations will organize and hold on 22-26
May 2000 at United Nations Headquarters a "Millennium Forum".

      In preparation for the Millennium Assembly and of the report to be
submitted by the Secretary-General to the Millennium Assembly, five informal
regional hearings have been held in Beirut for Western Asia, in Addis Ababa
for Africa, in Geneva for Europe, in Santiago de Chile for Latin America and
the Caribbean, and in Tokyo for Asia and the Pacific, to elicit the views of
civil society with respect to the Millennium Assembly.


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