But beneath its green veneer lies a controversial and far-reaching agenda that critics argue threatens individual freedoms and reshapes societies in ways many citizens may not fully understand.
In her book "Behind the Green Mask: UN Agenda 21," Rosa Koire, a former land use expert and property rights advocate, pulls back the curtain on what she describes as a stealthy global strategy to redefine the balance between individual rights and collective control.
Koire's journey into the heart of Agenda 21 began unexpectedly. While challenging a redevelopment project in Santa Rosa, California, she uncovered what she calls the "hidden machinery" of sustainable development policies. What she found was not just a set of environmental guidelines but a comprehensive plan to reshape communities, economies and governance structures worldwide.
At the core of Agenda 21, Koire argues, is the philosophy of
Communitarianism, which seeks to balance individual rights with the
so-called rights of the community. However, the definition of "community
rights" is fluid, often subject to reinterpretation by those in power.
This ambiguity, Koire warns, allows for the erosion of personal freedoms,
particularly property rights, in the name of the greater good. She uses
a vivid analogy to illustrate her point: "Imagine two glasses on a
table – one filled with water, representing a Constitutional Republic,
and the other with milk, symbolizing a Communitarian State. When you
pour them into a pitcher, you don't get a balanced mixture. You get
milk. The water – your individual rights – is subservient to the milk,
the collective rights of the community."...<<<Read More>>>...