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http://www.bill-wink.com/GEORGE-SOROS-AGENDA-21.htm
George Soros, if you search that name in Google you get this: About 2,280,000 results,
in Bing you get this: 1,280,000 results.
George Soros is founder and Chairman of the Open Society Institute (OSI).
The President of OSI and the Soros Foundation Network is Aryeh Neier. (here)
OSI endorsed a 2000 document called the Earth Charter, which blames
capitalism for many of the world's environmental, social, and economic problems.
According to the Charter, “the dominant patterns of production and consumption
are causing environmental devastation, the depletion of resources, and a
massive extinction of species.” “The benefits of development,” adds the Charter,
“are not shared equitably and the gap between rich and poor is widening."
OSI endorsed the Civil Liberties Restoration Act (CLRA) of 2004, which was
designed to roll back, in the name of protecting civil liberties, vital national-
security policies that had been adopted after the 9/11 terrorist attacks.
A strong advocate of gun control, OSI funds the Network on Small Arms, which
has lobbied the United Nations to pass a measure outlawing private gun
ownership and effectively overturning the U.S. Constitution’s Second
Amendment.
Few nations on earth are pumping more money into the global gun-ban
movement than these six supposedly "free" countries: Great Britain,
Sweden, The Netherlands, France, Japan and Belgium.
Along with globalist billionaire George Soros — who spent over $26 million
of his own personal fortune to try to elect gun-ban Senator John Kerry to
the White House last year - these six countries alone have already
bankrolled the UN. gun-ban campaign to the tune of tens of millions of
dollars... with still more to come. (here)
Open Society Institute supports UN Agenda 21 – The plan to subvert American freedom
and liberty.
Each year, OSI sponsors a number of fellowships, among them, the Soros Justice
Fellowship which is awarded to "outstanding individuals" who will implement
projects aimed at reforming the American criminal-justice system. Most notably,
OSI seeks to end "the over-reliance on incarceration and harsh punishment, and
the lack of equal justice—especially for people of color and the poor." One of the
more infamous recipients of this fellowship was the radical communist Linda
Evans, a former member of the Weather Underground. In the 1970s, Evans and
accomplice Susan Rosenberg took part in the deadly Brinks armored-car robbery
in Nyack, New York, where two security guards and two police officers were
shot, three of them fatally. Three years later, the women were finally
apprehended. At the time, they had 740 pounds of explosives (which they
admitted were earmarked for bombings) in their possession. Rosenberg was
sentenced to 58 years in prison, Evans to 40 years. (She was later pardoned by
President Bill Clinton in January 2001.) According to FBI files, Evans, during a
1969 trip to Hanoi, was shown an anti-aircraft gun, cradled it in her arms, and
said, "[I wish] an American plane would fly over." Her OSI award was intended
to aid her efforts to "increase civic participation of former prisoners."
On August 16, 2005, OSI (in collaboration with the Center for American Progress,
the AFL-CIO, the Service Employees International Union, AFSCME, and the
United Steelworkers Union) launched a new organization called the Progressive
Legislative Action Network (PLAN). Led by Democratic activists David Sirota and
Steve Doherty, PLAN’s mission is to seed state legislatures with prewritten
"model" legislation reflecting leftist visions of justice.
Between 1998 and 2003, OSI received more than $30 million from U.S.
government agencies. Various State Department documents indicate that OSI
has been paid to run what the Department describes as "democratization
programs" in a number of countries, including Uzbekistan, Burma, and regions of
Central Asia.
In an effort to present itself in the most positive light to the American people,
OSI uses the services of the public relations firm Fenton Communications.
In October 2010, OSI announced that it was donating $1.8 million to National
Public Radio, in order to enable NPR to add 100 journalists at its affiliate radio
stations across the United States.
Funding:
The Dutch government, the Open Society Institute, the European Union.
Project Overview
The Local Agenda 21 Charters Project has the following development objectives:
1. To assist local authorities in all regions in actually implementing the Local Agenda 21
plans that they developed and to provide both technical assistance and limited financial
support to concrete, practical projects which meet the objectives and commitments in a
community's Local Agenda 21.
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