Forget Agenda 21: UN’s 2030 Agenda Will ‘Transform the World’
Once again Germany has stepped forward with their ideas of how to speed up the arrival of a one-world government.
While all eyes were on Obama and his creepily NWO speech, the German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier gave an address which went largely unnoticed. It was a lengthy speech – you can read his entire address here – but these are some takeaway points:
“The United States is also faced with a
choice; in six weeks’ time, here too, the choice is about the supposed
withdrawal from a crisis-ridden world – which some are calling for – or
cooperation with international partners to solve some of those problems,
he continues, noting that this choice “is important for all of us.”
Indeed, “withdrawal, resignation, going it alone, or, responsibility for
a better future; that is the choice in many places,” he said.
The United Nations would remain the
central forum, for tackling these issues, he said. In the context of all
the crisis meetings, “it gives me hope that we have made an important
choice, the right choice, of the direction we want to take and that we
have chosen unity and sustainability,” he said calling the 2030 Agenda a global pact that is the point of convergence for dealing with poverty and underdevelopment.
Now we know when they want the takeover to be complete: 2030.What is the 2030 Agenda?
We have all heard of Agenda 21, but the 2030 Agenda isn’t quite so familiar. Agenda 2030 emphasizes gender and racial equality, eradication of poverty, and the total abolition of violence and hate. It lays out that the future world is based entirely on these goals and that the only way to achieve these things is through sustainable development and control of climate change. Oh – and the planet will also be totally poverty free by 2030 as well.
Here are a few of the pertinent points:
It actually came into effect in January 2016.
Its full title is ‘Transforming Our World: the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.
The areas covered by the Agenda are people, planet, prosperity, peace, and partnership.
The 17 goals and 169 targets of the Agenda seek to build on the Millennium Development Goals and complete those that were not achieved.
The ‘Declaration’ agreed upon at the United Nations meeting in New York has 53 points.
Point 2 sets the tone: ‘On behalf of the peoples we serve, we have adopted a historic decision on a comprehensive, far-reaching and people-centred set of universal and transformative goals and targets. We commit ourselves to working tirelessly for the full implementation of this Agenda by 2030’.