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Hijacking "Spaceship Earth": claiming that Earth is a spaceship with limited resources requiring central control, globalists are steering humanity into the black hole of UN-dominated world government. (Cover Story: Science Fiction).


[T]he ethical system which will dominate the world-state will be shaped primarily to favor the procreation PROCREATION. The generation of children; it is an act authorized by the law of nature: one of the principal ends of marriage is the procreation of children. Inst. tit. 2, in pr.  of what is fine and efficient and beautiful in humanity.... And for the rest -- those swarms of black and brown and yellow people who do not come into the needs of efficiency? Well, the world is not a charitable institution, and I take it they will have to go. The whole tenor and meaning of the world, as I see it, is that they have to go.

--H.G. Wells, Anticipations, 1901

Our society is turning toward more and more needless consumption. It is a vicious circle A Vicious Circle (1996) is a novel by Amanda Craig which dissects and satirizes contemporary British society. In particular, it describes the world of publishing -- its aspiring young authors, busy agents and opportunist literary critics.  that I compare to cancer.... Should we eliminate suffering, diseases? The idea is beautiful, but perhaps not a benefit for the long term. We should not allow our dread of diseases to endanger the future of our species.

This is a terrible thing to say. In order to stabilize world population, it is necessary to eliminate 350,000 people per day. It is a horrible thing to say, but it's just as bad not to say it.

--Jacques Cousteau

UNESCO Courier (French language edition), November 1991

The choices that confront humanity are starkly drawn: We must either take "control of our own destiny" by making immediate and radical changes in the way we live, or our planetary biosphere biosphere, irregularly shaped envelope of the earth's air, water, and land encompassing the heights and depths at which living things exist. The biosphere is a closed and self-regulating system (see ecology), sustained by grand-scale cycles of energy and of  will collapse. This message is a staple of apocalyptic science fiction. Used as a plot for an escapist novel or big-screen thriller, that premise can be entertaining. But it is potentially deadly in the hands of real-world coercive utopians, of whom Wells and Cousteau were typical. Though the writings and pronouncements of such people often seem derived from the farthest fringes of science fiction, they are deadly serious in their ambition to make sci-fi into science fact by seizing global power.

Collectivist col·lec·tiv·ism  
n.
The principles or system of ownership and control of the means of production and distribution by the people collectively, usually under the supervision of a government.
 politics require public acceptance of a scarcity-based mindset mind·set or mind-set
n.
1. A fixed mental attitude or disposition that predetermines a person's responses to and interpretations of situations.

2. An inclination or a habit.
, in which people defer to the directives of an anointed "Anointed" redirects here. For the process of anointing, see Anointing.

Anointed is a Contemporary Christian music duo consisting of siblings Steve and Da'dra Crawford. Their musical style includes elements of R&B, funk, and piano ballads.
 elite regarding distribution of wealth and resources. In promoting this mindset, coercive utopians have found the sci-fi-inspired concept of earth as a "spaceship" to be singularly useful.

Eco-science Gone Mad

The 2002 edition of The Living Planet, an annual report from the World Wildlife Fund (WWF See Windows Workflow Foundation. ), usefully illustrates the convergence between science fiction and radical environmentalism. Published in anticipation of the forthcoming UN "Earth Summit" in South Africa, the report earned a wave of headlines for predicting that unless drastic measures are taken to curb human reproduction and consumption, by 2050 the Earth will "expire" -- and humanity will be forced to colonize col·o·nize  
v. col·o·nized, col·o·niz·ing, col·o·niz·es

v.tr.
1. To form or establish a colony or colonies in.

2. To migrate to and settle in; occupy as a colony.

3.
 two earth-type planets elsewhere in the cosmos.

"Using the image of the need for mankind to colonize space as a stark illustration of the problems facing Earth, the [WWF] warns that either consumption rates are dramatically and rapidly lowered or the planet will no longer be able to sustain its growing population," summarized the July 7th Guardian of London. "It seems things are getting worse faster than possibly ever before," declared Martin Jenkins of the World Conservation Monitoring Centre The United Nations Environment Programme's World Conservation Monitoring Centre or UNEP-WCMC is an executive agency of the United Nations Environment Programme, based in Cambridge in the United Kingdom.  in Cambridge, England, which helped produce the report. "Never before has one single species had such an overwhelming influence. We are entering uncharted territory."

The "one single species" referred to by Jenkins is humanity -- a group to which he and his fellow eco-radicals belong, their pose of Olympian detachment from the rest of us notwithstanding. The WWF report's stilted stilt·ed  
adj.
1. Stiffly or artificially formal; stiff.

2. Architecture Having some vertical length between the impost and the beginning of the curve. Used of an arch.
 language - a mixture of apocalyptic warnings and clinical descriptions of humanity as merely one "species" within a global "biosphere" - offers echoes of science fiction themes The following is a list of science fiction themes. Overarching themes

See also: Science fiction genre

  • Cosmology
  • Creation of the Universe
 found in countless novels and films. And some of the environmental solutions offered by the WWF and its eco-radical comrades could be derived from the "mad scientist" premise frequently found in the horror genre.

In familiar fashion, the WWF indicts "population growth" for causing humanity's ecological "overdraft." More than a decade ago, Britain's Prince Philip, who heads the WWF, grimly suggested that if he were to be reincarnated he would return as a "killer virus" with a mission to decimate dec·i·mate  
tr.v. dec·i·mat·ed, dec·i·mat·ing, dec·i·mates
1. To destroy or kill a large part of (a group).

2. Usage Problem
a.
 the surplus human population. Genocidal daydreams of this sort abound among radical environmentalists. "Human happiness, and certainly human fecundity fecundity /fe·cun·di·ty/ (fe-kun´dit-e)
1. in demography, the physiological ability to reproduce, as opposed to fertility.

2. ability to produce offspring rapidly and in large numbers.
, are not as important as a wild and healthy planet," opined David Garber, a research biologist with the National Park Service. "Until such time as Homo Sapiens should decide to rejoin nature, some of us can only hope for the right virus to come along."

While world-renowned transplant surgeon Sir Ronald Calne, author of the book Too Many People, doesn't endorse unleashing a lethal virus on the population at large, he does call for developing "the 'O' virus, a hypothetical fertility limiter lim·it·er  
n.
1. One that limits: a limiter of choices.

2. Electronics A circuit that prevents the amplitude of a waveform from exceeding a specified value. Also called clipper.
," which would be injected into women worldwide and reversed only upon government approval. In addition, Calne recommends imposing global population controls akin to those used in Communist China, including a system of "reproduction licenses" and a strict two-child quota.

David Brower of Friends of the Earth agrees that "Childbearing [should be] a punishable crime against society, unless the parents hold a government license.... All potential parents [should be] required to use contraceptive chemicals, the government issuing antidotes to citizens chosen for childbearing." In his 1990 Gaia Atlas of Future Worlds, Dr. Norman Myers, an advisor to the World Bank, the World Resources Institute Founded in 1982, the World Resources Institute (WRI) is an environmental think tank based in Washington, D.C. WRI is an independent, non-partisan and nonprofit organization with a staff of more than 100 scientists, economists, policy experts, business analysts, statistical , and various UN agencies, praised Communist China's population control program, which employs coerced abortion and infanticide infanticide (ĭnfăn`təsīd) [Lat.,=child murder], the putting to death of the newborn with the consent of the parent, family, or community. Infanticide often occurs among peoples whose food supply is insecure (e.g.  to meet strict demographic targets. "Is it too farfetched to imagine that one day people might be issued with a warrant entitling them to have a single child--a type of green stamp?" wrote Dr. Myers. "This warrant might even carry commercial value, allowing individuals to decide not to have children at all and to sell their entitlements to others wanting larger families."

Myers' "green stamp" idea revisited a proposal made decades ago by the late economist Kenneth Boulding, who advised both the UN and the League of Nations. Boulding recommended issuing women a marketable license permitting them to have a limited number of children: "The right to have children should be a marketable commodity, bought and traded by individuals but absolutely limited by the state."

"Spaceship Earth"

Boulding may not have been the first to urge imposing such draconian measures, but he did devise a cunning justification of a global garrison state: The concept of "Spaceship Earth," a closed, finite system in which resources must be centrally regulated for the good of all. "Earth has become a spaceship, not only in our imagination but also in the hard realities of the social, biological, and physical system in which man is enmeshed en·mesh   also im·mesh
tr.v. en·meshed, en·mesh·ing, en·mesh·es
To entangle, involve, or catch in or as if in a mesh. See Synonyms at catch.
," stated Boulding in a May 1965 address at Washington State University Washington State University, at Pullman; land-grant and state supported; chartered 1890, opened 1892 as an agriculture college. From 1905 to 1959 it was the State College of Washington. . "Man is finally going to have to face the fact that he is a biological system living in an ecological system.... It is clear that much human behavior and many human institutions in the past, which were appropriate to an infinite earth, are entirely inappropriate to a small closed spaceship."

"We cannot have cowboys and Indians, for instance, in a spaceship, or even a cowboy ethic," Boulding continued. "We cannot afford unrestrained conflict, and we almost certainly cannot afford national sovereignty in an unrestricted sense." The creation of "machinery for controlling the total numbers of population" is a pressing priority, Boulding maintained. In a separate essay entitled "Toward a World Social Contract," Boulding examined possible global mechanisms to abate abate v. to do away with a problem, such as a public or private nuisance or some structure built contrary to public policy. This can include dikes which illegally direct water onto a neighbors property, high volume noise from a rock band or a factory, an improvement  conflict within "Spaceship Earth," including "universal policed disarmament down to internal police levels" and "the organizational union of the armed forces of the world under a limited world government" -- both of which are key elements of unfolding official U.S. government disarmament policies envisioning a world "effectively controlled" by the United Nations. *

Eagerly embraced by the opinion-molding elite, Boulding's concept captured the public imagination following the dramatic Christmas 1968 voyage of Apollo 8 -- the first manned spacecraft to orbit the moon. The three Americans aboard that vessel were the first humans ever to see the entire globe at once. An international television audience was treated to that stunning spectacle during a dramatic live Christmas Eve telecast from the spacecraft: As the earth rose over the lunar horizon, Commander Frank Borman and his crew read the creation account from the Book of Genesis Noun 1. Book of Genesis - the first book of the Old Testament: tells of Creation; Adam and Eve; the Fall of Man; Cain and Abel; Noah and the flood; God's covenant with Abraham; Abraham and Isaac; Jacob and Esau; Joseph and his brothers
Genesis
. Along with millions of others, Borman and his shipmates Shipmates was an American syndicated television show that ran for two seasons from 2001 - 2003.

Reruns later ran on the cable channel Spike TV. The show was created by Hurricane Entertainment and the executive producer was John Tomlin. Chris Hardwick was the host.
 looked on the awe-inspiring sight as a testament to the Creator. Opinion-molding elites bent on indoctrinating the masses in the gospel of globalism glob·al·ism  
n.
A national geopolitical policy in which the entire world is regarded as the appropriate sphere for a state's influence.



glob
 worked to misdirect mis·di·rect  
tr.v. mis·di·rect·ed, mis·di·rect·ing, mis·di·rects
1. To aim (a blow or projectile, for example) badly.

2. To give wrong instructions or directions to.

3.
 that reverence by focusing it on the creation, rather than the Creator.

In 1972, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), international organization that came into being in 1961. It superseded the Organization for European Economic Cooperation, which had been founded in 1948 to coordinate the Marshall Plan for European , an intergovernmental organization wedded to the UN, published Alternative Educational Futures in the United States and in Europe, by Willis Harman, president of the Institute of Noetic Sciences The Institute of Noetic Sciences (IONS) was co-founded in 1973 by former astronaut Edgar Mitchell and industrialist Paul N. Temple [1]to encourage and conduct research and education programs on mind-body relationships for the purpose of expanding "human possibility by  (INS INS
abbr.
1. Immigration and Naturalization Service

2. International News Service

Noun 1. INS
), a New Age "think tank" specializing in research into "consciousness and human potential." According to Harman: "Nothing less than a new guiding philosophy [of education] will do.... It is not enough to be intellectually aware that at this point in history nationalism is a suicidal course.... Educational experiences must be contemplated which are akin to psychotherapy ... that result in a felt realization of the inevitability of one inseparable world, and a felt shift in the most basic values and premises on which one builds one's life." Educators had a responsibility to preside over "a shift from a parochial to a 'one world' view of 'Spaceship Earth'...."

Harman has done more than his share to bring about this dramatic "shift." He has served as a consultant to the White House National Goals Research Staff, in which capacity, according to his own account, he "formed and led a team to assist the U.S. Office of Education in efforts to apply the newly emerging discipline of futures research to guiding the nation's policies in education and educational research' Harman has been a conspicuous presence at Mikhail Gorbachev's "State of the World" forums, and the former Soviet dictator has long maintained that his vision of "Perestroika" was inspired by the "Spaceship Earth" concept. "The new thinking postulated [that] we are one planet regardless of confrontations, ideological and physiological struggles; we are one planet, one human civilization," Gorbachev told a PBS PBS
 in full Public Broadcasting Service

Private, nonprofit U.S. corporation of public television stations. PBS provides its member stations, which are supported by public funds and private contributions rather than by commercials, with educational, cultural,
 interviewer in April 2001. "There are others living in the world, so why should we act in a way that could blow up our planet, our spaceship Earth?"

"Every one of us should feel a single crew of Spaceship Earth," declared Gorbachev in a May 24, 1993 speech at The Hague on behalf of his Green Cross International organization. "This symbolic manner of speaking may be a bit trite, but still I think that we cannot yet say that our thinking has adjusted to the idea that we are indeed acting as though we are passengers of one spaceship." As a result, he asserted, "we are facing the task of formulating and processing [new] values and new social goals.... We can even begin to think about renouncing economic growth as it has evolved over the past two centuries. We face a formidable task in reorienting the mentality of mankind towards a more human economy. The yardstick for assessing the effectiveness of such economy would be, above all, the safe and sustainable progress of mankind."

To anybody with even a cursory understanding of Marxism, there is nothing novel about the "new" values and social goals Gorbachev suggests for "Spaceship Earth." Nor is it surprising that Gorbachev describes "mankind" as "a unity [that is] increasingly becoming a single subject in international politics" and calls for the UN being given the role of "'channeling' international development" in the interest of "sustainable development." The UN's agenda for global "sustainable development" -- meaning global regulation of all human activity everywhere on the planet -- is set out in the mammoth Agenda 21 document produced at the 1992 Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro Rio de Janeiro, city, Brazil
Rio de Janeiro (rē`ō də zhänā`rō, Port. rē` thĭ zhənĕē`r
.

From Science Fiction to Religion

That Mikhail Gorbachev, a life-long Communist, is an avowed a·vow  
tr.v. a·vowed, a·vow·ing, a·vows
1. To acknowledge openly, boldly, and unashamedly; confess: avow guilt. See Synonyms at acknowledge.

2. To state positively.
 atheist did not prevent him from working as a co-architect of the UN "Earth Charter," which he described as "a kind of Ten Commandments for the environment, something that no one would be allowed to violate." During the 2000 "Millennium Forum" at UN headquarters, Stephen C. Rockefeller, a member of the Earth Charter Commission and chairman of the Rockefeller Brothers Fund The Rockefeller Brothers Fund (RBF), (Philanthropy for an Interdependent World), is an international philanthropic organisation created and run by members of the Rockefeller family.  (the tax-exempt foundation that funds much of the radical environmental movement), said that the Earth Charter is "a declaration of interdependence and responsibility, [and] a universal code of conduct," as well as "an attempt to formulate an integrated legal framework for all sustainable development and environmental law."

Scheduled to be presented to the General Assembly this year, the Earth Charter is, according to Rockefeller, a "soft" law document that will prepare the way for a "New Covenant" treaty -- a "hard" law treaty through which the UN would claim the power to enforce regulations governing human interactions with the global biosphere. In his remarks to the 2000 UN gathering, Rockefeller -- the Earth Charter's primary author -- said that a July 4, 1994 address by former Czech President Vaclav Havel inspired him to participate in the project. Havel described the need for humanity to understand that "our destiny is not dependent merely on what we do for ourselves, but also for what we do for Gaia...." In the rarefied rar·e·fied also rar·i·fied  
adj.
1. Belonging to or reserved for a small select group; esoteric.

2. Elevated in character or style; lofty.


rarefied
Adjective

1.
 circles of globalist eco-paganism, the earth is referred to as "Gaia," a self-sustaining, holistic entity worthy not only of protection, but also of worship.

In his speech Havel declared: "we are not here alone for ourselves alone, but we are an integral part of higher, mysterious entities against whom it is not advisable to blaspheme blas·pheme  
v. blas·phemed, blas·phem·ing, blas·phemes

v.tr.
1. To speak of (God or a sacred entity) in an irreverent, impious manner.

2. To revile; execrate.

v.intr.
." This occultic vision was enthusiastically "seconded by President Gorbachev," recalled Rockefeller, and it was decided to encapsulate en·cap·su·late
v.
1. To form a capsule or sheath around.

2. To become encapsulated.



en·cap
 that "spiritual vision in an Earth Charter." "Unless human beings take seriously their responsibility to the community of life -- and not just for it -- we [will] not make the major changes in our life that must be made in order to protect the planet," explained Rockefeller. The Charter's insistence that human beings are merely part of a "community of life" inverts the created order described in Genesis, in which man -- acting under God's sovereignty, and complying with His laws -- was given dominion over nature.

By contrast, the Earth Charter affirms "that individual living creatures -- animals, plants, and micro-organisms -- are worthy of moral consideration ... quite apart from their value to human beings," noted Rockefeller. It also commands that humanity "adopt patterns of production, consumption, and reproduction that safeguard Earth's regenerative capacities, human rights, and community wellbeing." This directive would require, in principle, abolishing property rights, and even the right to life, where the "greater good" of the "community of life" requires it. It is a larger and immeasurably more malignant version of the concept embodied in the Endangered Species Act The federal Endangered Species Act of 1973 (ESA) (16 U.S.C.A. §§ 1531 et seq.) was enacted to protect animal and plant species from extinction by preserving the ecosystems in which they survive and by providing programs for their conservation. , which has inflicted unimaginable damage on property rights and livelihoods throughout the Western United States Noun 1. western United States - the region of the United States lying to the west of the Mississippi River
West

Santa Fe Trail - a trail that extends from Missouri to New Mexico; an important route for settlers moving west in the 19th century
.

This September 28th, the Earth Charter Initiative The Earth Charter Initiative is the collective name for the extraordinarily diverse, global network of people, organizations, and institutions who participate in promoting the Earth Charter, and in implementing its principles in practice.  will convene its second annual "Earth Charter Community Summits," a series of satellite-linked events across the country described by the organization as "a simultaneous celebration and commitment to the values and principles of the Earth Charter ... our Declaration of Interdependence." While some may dismiss such devotees of the "Spaceship Earth" notion as mere space cadets, this thought should be kept in mind: if such people continue to amass the power that they seek, how will they treat occupants of the planetary "spaceship" unwilling to defer to their demands?

* For details and documentation about the decades-long campaign by the U.S. government to create an all-powerful UN "peace force' go to getusout.org or point your browser directly to these web pages: http://www.getusout.org/resources/dos_7277.htm http://www.getusout.org/resources/bloomfield_7.htm
COPYRIGHT 2002 American Opinion Publishing, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2002, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Grigg, William Norman
Publication:The New American
Geographic Code:00WOR
Date:Aug 12, 2002
Words:2609
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