Rebutting Rockefeller: the chairman of the Earth Charter drafting committee takes issue with this magazine's expose, "The New World Religion." The facts show that his objections are not sustainable. (Earth Charter).Professor Steven C. Rockefeller Steven C. Rockefeller (born 1936) is the second oldest son of former United States Vice President Nelson Aldrich Rockefeller and his first wife, Mary Rockefeller; he is a fourth-generation member of the Rockefeller family. has objected to my critique of the Earth Charter, "The New World Religion," in the September 23rd issue of THE NEW AMERICAN. (See his full letter on page 3). The article, he says, "contains some misunderstandings" about 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. which he then purports to correct. Below is my response to a number of his points. Rockefeller: "The Earth Charter is the product of a worldwide, cross-cultural, interfaith dialogue on common goals and shared values that has been conducted as a civil society initiative." Response: The global campaign for the Charter is not a grass-roots, bottom-up effort, but a closely controlled, top-down operation masquerading as "dialogue." The Charter was cobbled cob·ble 1 n. 1. A cobblestone. 2. Geology A rock fragment between 64 and 256 millimeters in diameter, especially one that has been naturally rounded. 3. cobbles See cob coal. tr. together under the leadership of Dr. Rockefeller, former Soviet dictator Mikhail Gorbachev (representing Green Cross International), Earth Summit I Secretary-General Maurice Strong (representing the Earth Council), and representatives from the government of the Netherlands. Who are the "eminent persons" -- as Gorbachev calls them -- who have drawn up the Charter's new principles to guide "the conduct of all individuals, organizations, businesses, governments, and transnational institutions," or who have lent their names and fortunes to this effort? Leonardo Boff, the radical Marxist author and proponent of "liberation theology," for one. Some of the more familiar names at Green Cross International include Yoko Ono (widow of John Lennon), Robert Redford, and Ted Turner. Other GCI GCI Ground Circuit Interrupter GCI Getty Conservation Institute GCI Global Commerce Initiative GCI Green Cross International (non-profit international environmental organization) GCI Growth Competitiveness Index GCI Great Cities Institute luminaries are former presidents, prime ministers, ambassadors, etc., with a heavy sprinkling of former UN officials, including: former Israeli Prime Minister Shimon Perez; former Costa Rican President Oscar Arias; former UN Secretary-General Javier Perez de Cuellar Pé·rez de Cuél·lar , Javier Born 1920. Peruvian diplomat who served as secretary-general of the United Nations (1982-1991). ; and Jean-Michel Cousteau, son of the famed oceanographer. Virtually all of these individuals fall along the far left of the ideological spectrum, with a large proportion being members of the Socialist International. The Earth Council, run by billionaire Maurice Strong, is composed of like-minded individuals. Strong himself is a special adviser to UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, and serves on the board of Ted Turner's UN Foundation and the boards of several other high-powered institutions. Earth Council luminaries include Jimmy Carter, Robert S. McNamara, and Bishop Desmond Tutu. Dr. Rockefeller and his associates will point to the "Earth Charter Community Summits" that took place in dozens of cities around the world on September 28th as proof that the Charter has global popular support. In this regard, please see our photo essay on these summits on pages 1821. The so-called community summits demonstrated that despite the hype and funding lavished on this effort, popular support is nil. There was virtually no attendance at the events. Moreover, the organizers and attendees of the summits proved to be ultra-radical political and environmental activists. The organizations represented at these summits, like those at the higher levels run by Rockefeller, Gorbachev, etc., are completely synthetic facades. Without continued funding from 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. (run by Steven Rockefeller), the UN Foundation (funded by Ted Turner), the Ford Foundation, the World Bank, various UN spigots, and other foundation and government grants, this supposed voice of "global civil society" would not exist. Surely Professor Rockefeller knows this full well. This is not genuine diversity and dialogue, but merely the amplified echo-chamber chatterings of like-minded internationalists whose opinions differ only as to the optimum speed of the train, not as to its final destination. Rockefeller: "The Earth Charter is not the product of a United Nations intergovernmental negotiation. To date the United Nations has not endorsed the Earth Charter." Response: Yes, Earth Charter adherents lament that the UN has failed, so far, to endorse the Charter. They had hoped to have that all wrapped up at the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro Rio de Janeiro, city, Brazil Rio de Janeiro (rē`ō də zhänā`rō, Port. rē` thĭ zhənĕē`r in 1992. But alas, the UN still tends to be a fractious frac·tious adj. 1. Inclined to make trouble; unruly. 2. Having a peevish nature; cranky. [From fraction, discord (obsolete). , messy forum, and individual sovereign nations frequently fail to recognize and cooperate in the designs of these illustrious world planners. That is why the UN Secretariat has worked so hard since Earth Summit Ito accredit To give official authorization or status. To recognize as having sufficient academic standards to qualify graduates for higher education or for professional practice. In International Law: hundreds of radical non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and vest them with prestige and authority, as the voice of "civil society" at all UN conferences. These rent-a-mob activists, with the help of the sympathetic liberal-left media, exert pressure on those governments and institutions resisting the "global common good" as defined by UN treaties and agreements. If one "follows the money," invariably in·var·i·a·ble adj. Not changing or subject to change; constant. in·var i·a·bil one finds that these NGO NGOabbr. nongovernmental organization Noun 1. NGO - an organization that is not part of the local or state or federal government nongovernmental organization activists, who materialize by the thousands at all UN functions to demand greater "empowerment" of the UN, are in reality agents (albeit frequently unknowing agents) of those who expect to be the wielders of that power: Rockefeller, Gorbachev, Strong, Annan, et al. Rockefeller: "The Earth Charter initiative encourages the religions of the world and faith communities to embrace an ethic of respect and care for all people.... It is not the purpose or interest of the Earth Charter Initiative to create a 'new world religion'...." Response: Dr. Rockefeller knows better than this. He has been at the forefront of the movement to create a New Age, global, syncretic syn·cre·tism n. 1. Reconciliation or fusion of differing systems of belief, as in philosophy or religion, especially when success is partial or the result is heterogeneous. 2. faith. Along with other members of the Rockefeller family, he has been one of the major patrons of the Episcopalian Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York City New York City: see New York, city. New York City City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S. , one of the most prestigious fonts of New Age proselytizing. The cathedral has been home for many years for the Lindisfarne Institute and the Institute's founder, New Age guru William Irwin Thompson For other persons named William Thompson, see William Thompson (disambiguation). William Irwin Thompson (born July 16, 1938) is known primarily as a social philosopher and cultural critic, but has recently been writing mostly poetry. . According to Thompson: "We have now a new spirituality, what has been called the New Age movement. The planetization of the esoteric has been going on for some time.... This is now beginning to influence concepts of politics and community in ecology.... This is the Gaia [Mother Earth] politique ... planetary culture." What's more, says Thompson, the time of "the independent sovereign state SOVEREIGN STATE. One which governs itself independently of any foreign power. , with the sovereign individual in his private property [is] over, just as the Christian fundamentalist days are about to be over." Rockefeller's close friend and fellow Earth Charter promoter Maurice Strong is a longtime officer of Thompson's Lindisfarne Center and shares his New Age, occult, anti-Christian beliefs. Rockefeller: "Different traditions and organizations celebrate and promote the ethical vision in the Earth Charter in many diverse ways. The Ark of Hope is one example.... The Earth Charter Commission welcomes a diversity of responses...." Response: Orthodox monotheistic "faith traditions" (Christianity, Judaism, Islam) cannot "promote the ethical vision" of the Charter's "evolving universe" and "life's evolution." The document's holistic, materialist conception is wholly at odds with their "dogmatic" beliefs. The Ark of Hope referred to is the blasphemous blas·phe·mous adj. Impiously irreverent. [Middle English blasfemous, from Late Latin blasph replica of the Biblical Ark of the Covenant Ark of the Covenant In Judaism and Christianity, the ornate, gold-plated wooden chest that in biblical times housed the two tablets of the Law given to Moses by God. The Levites carried the Ark during the Hebrews' wandering in the wilderness. that was the centerpiece of a ceremony presided over by Dr. Rockefeller at Shelburne Farms, Vermont. The ark is decorated with pagan art and contains the Temenos For the municipality in Crete see Temenos, Greece. Greek Temenos (τέμενος[1], from the Greek verb τέμνω Books, meditations inspired by animist an·i·mism n. 1. The belief in the existence of individual spirits that inhabit natural objects and phenomena. 2. The belief in the existence of spiritual beings that are separable or separate from bodies. 3. religions and the occultic ruminations of Carl G. Jung. The ark was presented to the UN earlier this year and then made a centerpiece of religious activity at the Earth Summit II in Johannesburg in September. Rockefeller: "The Earth Charter teaches respect for nature, including Earth, our planetary home, but there is nothing in the Earth Charter about the worship of Earth." Response: True, the Earth Charter does not explicitly say anything about worshiping the Earth, but in this it follows the pattern of most UN documents, notorious for vague verbiage verbiage - When the context involves a software or hardware system, this refers to documentation. This term borrows the connotations of mainstream "verbiage" to suggest that the documentation is of marginal utility and that the motives behind its production have little to do with that sounds innocent -- until it is officially interpreted by the internationalist experts. But the Earth Charter advocates and their UN allies have, by word and deed, shown that neo-pagan Earth worship is precisely what they are promoting. They are proceeding as rapidly and openly as they dare, hoping not to alarm or alienate any large segment of the world's religious communities with their subversive agenda before it has become firmly set in place. At the Shelburne Farms Ark of Hope service, Rockefeller and chimpanzee chimpanzee, an ape, genus Pan, of the equatorial forests of central and W Africa. The common chimpanzee, Pan troglodytes, lives N of the Congo River. Full-grown animals of this species are up to 5 ft (1. expert Jane Goodall, both regulars at Gorbachev's State of the World spiritual soirees, joined in what could reasonably be described as an Earth worship ceremony. Perhaps Dr. Rockefeller has another description, but we invite the reader to visit our website and judge for himself (click on the links to the "celebrant s" images). * See the celebrants reverently rev·er·ent adj. Marked by, feeling, or expressing reverence. [Middle English, from Old French, from Latin rever gathered in a circle joining hands around the "sacred" ark, and then with arms upraised to the ark and a banner inscribed in·scribe tr.v. in·scribed, in·scrib·ing, in·scribes 1. a. To write, print, carve, or engrave (words or letters) on or in a surface. b. To mark or engrave (a surface) with words or letters. "Earth." Maurice Strong opened Earth Summit I with a "Declaration of the Sacred Earth," accompanied by "indigenous" animist Earth worship ceremonies -- standard practice at UN convocations. The Charter says protecting Earth is our "sacred trust." Dr. Rockefeller is a leading advocate of the radical "biocentrism Biocentrism is a term that has several meanings but is most commonly defined as the belief that all forms of life are equally valuable and humanity is not the center of existence. ," under which, he says, "the rights of nature are defended first and foremost on the grounds of the intrinsic value Intrinsic Value 1. The value of a company or an asset based on an underlying perception of the value. 2. For call options, this is the difference between the underlying stock's price and the strike price. of animals, plants, rivers, mountains, and ecosystems" against "human oppression." Biocentrists believe that humans are no more important than other life forms or natural objects. Of course, rocks, trees, and ecosystems speak in words only understood by enlightened souls like Rockefeller and company, who have assigned themselves the noble task of defending these "rights of nature." Rockefeller: "The Earth Charter ... does not take a position for or against abortion, and it deliberately does not use the term 'population control.'" Response: My article did not state that the Charter takes an explicit position for abortion or uses the term "population control." It pointed out that the document's call for "universal access to health care that fosters reproductive health and responsible reproduction" is, in reality "a thinly disguised call for socialized medicine socialized medicine, publicly administered system of national health care. The term is used to describe programs that range from government operation of medical facilities to national health-insurance plans. that includes abortion and population control." That is a fact. "Reproductive health" and "responsible reproduction" are the legal code words used in UN documents and policies to justify the brutal forced abortion, sterilization sterilization Any surgical procedure intended to end fertility permanently (see contraception). Such operations remove or interrupt the anatomical pathways through which the cells involved in fertilization travel (see reproductive system). , and other population control measures promoted by the UN Population Fund (UNFPA UNFPA United Nations Population Fund (formerly United Nations Fund for Population Activities) UNFPA United Nations Fund for Population Activities (now United Nations Population Fund) ) in China and other countries. Rockefeller: "The Earth Charter is concerned to articulate the ethical principles that should shape whatever institutions of global governance the human community decides to develop ... but it is not the purpose of the Earth Charter to make proposals about the actual machinery of global governance." Response: Dr. Rockefeller is correct in pointing out that "it is not the purpose of the Earth Charter to make proposals about the actual machinery of global governance." (Emphasis added.) But this is not the same as saying that the Earth Charter has nothing to do with "global governance," a concept Dr. Rockefeller obviously supports. In fact, he acknowledges that "the Earth Charter is concerned to articulate the ethical principles" shaping "global governance." Of course, what Dr. Rockefeller calls "the ethical principles" I dare call "the new world religion." And what Dr. Rockefeller calls "governance" I dare call "government." Rockefeller: "[T]he Earth Charter calls for 'the equitable distribution of wealth within nations and among nations.' Equitable does not mean equal. Equitable means fair and just." Response: What is "fair and just"? Who will decide? In George Orwell's political satire Animal Farm, the animals formed a socialistic so·cial·is·tic adj. Of, advocating, or tending toward socialism. so cial·is society based on the premise that "all animals are equal," but they soon discovered that socialism in practice means that "some animals are more equal than others." And so it is in real life whenever men use the power of government to redistribute the wealth based on their concept of "fair and just." Understanding how socialists use the terms, drawing a distinction between "equitable" and "equal" makes no more sense than drawing a distinction between "governance" and "government." Drawing such a distinction confuses rather than clarifies the issue, and that of course is the intent. The reality is that "the equitable distribution of wealth" under global government would be neither equal nor equitable, neither fair nor just. Except, of course, in the minds of those controlling the instruments of power! Rockefeller: "The Earth Charter is not designed, as your article asserts, to promote 'global socialism in a super-regulated global state.'" Response: The Charter calls for "implementation of the Earth Charter principles with an international legally binding instrument on environment and development." These are references to Agenda 21, the Kyoto Protocol, and other UN agreements that are unquestionably un·ques·tion·a·ble adj. Beyond question or doubt. See Synonyms at authentic. un·ques tion·a·bil prescriptions for global socialism and a super-regulated global state. The Earth Charter Initiative website candidly states that it views the Charter as "soft law," meaning an important preparatory step toward later "hard law" that will mandate compliance by nation states. Rockefeller: "Cooperation and partnership are essential." Response: "Cooperation and partnership" really mean coercion and compulsion. Dr. Rockefeller's Earth Charter "boss," Mr. Gorbachev, spoke quite plainly in his 1993 Green Cross founding speech, calling for "change in the status of the United Nations. Inevitably, it must assume some aspects of a world government." Last year he declared that UN treaties on climate change, biodiversity, desertification desertification Spread of a desert environment into arid or semiarid regions, caused by climatic changes, human influence, or both. Climatic factors include periods of temporary but severe drought and long-term climatic changes toward dryness. , and others "should be ratified without delay" and that the UN should be given "more power for actions and the enforcement of UN decisions for peace and stability." The real goal is power, force, and coercion. * www.thenewamerica.com/focus/earth_charter/essay.htm |
|

thĭ zhənĕē`r
i·a·bil
Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion