“Sustainable justice” = redistribution of scarcity

The UN Rio+20 agenda means less freedom, happiness, true justice and human rights progress

Guest post by Paul Driessen and Duggan Flanakin

Presidential candidate Barack Obama promised that his Administration would “fundamentally transform the United States of America.” He gave a clue to exactly what he had in mind when he told now-congressional candidate Joe “The Plumber” Wurzelbacher: “When you spread the wealth around, it’s good for everybody.”

Not necessarily – especially when activists, regulators, politicians and ruling elites do all they can to ensure there is less and less wealth to spread around.

Just this week, the Civil Society Reflection Group on Global Development Perspectives released a new report to the United Nations Rio+20 Earth Summit on Sustainable Development. The executive summary of No Future Without Justice begins with the heading, “The World Is in Need of Fundamental Change.” The document then offers “solutions,” which include “universal fiscal equalization” and a “massive and absolute decoupling of well-being from resource extraction and consumption.”

The 18-member Group includes no Americans – but condemns the US and other governments for their dedication to economic growth, rather than wealth redistribution, and demands that governments play a key role in promoting “sustainability” and welfare. They insist that all governments provide universal access to public health care, guaranteed state allowances for every child, guaranteed state support for the unemployed and underemployed, and basic universal pensions and universal social security.

It is, in short, the total nanny state – but with little or no resource extraction or economic growth to support it. In other words, it guarantees sustained injustice and redistribution of increasing scarcity.

The Group admits that human civilization “will still need some form of growth in large parts of the world, to expand the frontiers of maximum available resources for poor countries.” However, the massive investments needed to shift to a totally renewable energy and resource-based economy will require “massive de-growth (shrinkage) of products, sectors and activities that do not pass the sustainability test” – as devised by them, affiliated organizations and the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP).

Key financial support for the push toward “sustainability” includes a “greener” and “more progressive” tax system featuring a financial transaction tax, abolition of subsidies for all but renewable energy, cutting military spending while dramatically increasing “stimulus” spending, a compensation scheme to pay off “climate debts” to poor countries supposedly impacted by hydrocarbon-driven climate change, a new regulatory framework for financial markets, a financial product safety commission, and still more regulations for hedge funds and private equity funds. The Group also demands public control of financial rating agencies and a government takeover of international accounting standards.

To ensure that “sustainable development” permeates every aspect of society, the Group proposes a new “Sherpa” for Sustainability (with cabinet rank), a parliamentary committee on policy coherence for sustainability, a UN Sustainability Council, a Universal Periodic Review on Sustainability, and an Ombudsman for Intergenerational Justice and Future Generations. It also proposes an International Panel on Sustainability that builds on the “success” of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

Of course, guiding all this would be the world’s premiere political body and bastion of freedom, fairness, democracy and human rights – the UN General Assembly.

To guide this “fundamental” shift toward the sustainability paradigm, the Group laid down eight principles – the key being the “precautionary principle,” which forbids any activity that might involve risk or “do harm.” Its own sustainability prescriptions are, of course, exempted from any reviews under the precautionary principle.

The objective, they state, is to build economies that drastically limit carbon emissions, energy consumption, primary resource extraction, waste generation, and air and water pollution. Society must also stop the asserted and computer-modeled loss of species and ruination of ecosystems.

All this naturally will require mandatory changes in consumption patterns and lifestyles (at least for the common folk), and the recognition that work (unlike capital) is not a production factor. Indeed, says the Group, work is not even a commodity. Moreover, only “decent” work qualifies under the sustainability paradigm. (While “decent work” is never defined, it presumably includes backbreaking sunup-to-sundown labor at subsistence farming, which under the Group’s agenda would be called “traditional” or “organic” farming and would not be replaced by modern mechanized agriculture.)

What is the source of all of this gobbledygook? Agenda 21, the centerpiece of the original Rio Earth Summit – which is being perpetuated, refined and redefined at parallel proceedings in Belo Horizonte, Brazil, while the main sustainability discussions are ongoing in Rio de Janeiro.

Agenda 21 states, for example, that “achieving the goals of environmental quality and sustainable development will require … changes in consumption patterns.” This too would be achieved under UN auspices because, as Earth Summit creator Maurice Strong has explained, the days of national sovereignty are over, and the world needs to embrace a system of wealth transfer to ensure environmental security.

In short, “sustainable development” is a system that requires a redefinition of business activity, away from the pursuit of personal profit – and of government activity, away from the pursuit of individual happiness and justice – and toward the pursuit of societal good, as defined by activists and the UN.

Simply put, as Brian Sussman points out in his new book, Eco-Tyranny, the ultimate goal of those who endorse the sustainability paradigm is to expunge “the most precious” rights expressed in the American Declaration of Independence: “that all Men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among them are Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness – that to secure these Rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just Powers from the Consent of the Governed.”

The Agenda 21 and sustainability paradigm also rejects and undermines Adam Smith’s belief that mankind’s natural tendency toward self-interest, profit and self-improvement results in greater prosperity, opportunity, health, welfare and justice for all.

Most of all, the UN/Maurice Strong/ Civil Society Reflection Group vision is merely the latest embodiment of Plato’s Republic. Under Plato’s thesis, an educated, elite, but benevolent and mythical, ruling class acts on the belief that its self-appointed philosopher kings have all the right answers, and do not require the Consent of the Governed. The rest of humanity must fall into lockstep or face the consequences; however the results will be exemplary.

Unfortunately, as Alexander Hamilton observed, men are not angels. Moreover, it defies experience and common sense to suppose that the elitist UN, UNEP and environmental activist community will ever display wisdom detached from ardent ideology – or benevolence toward the humans they seek to govern.

____________

Paul Driessen is senior policy advisor for the Committee For A Constructive Tomorrow (www.CFACT.org and www.CFACT.tv) and author of Eco-Imperialism: Green power – Black death. Duggan Flanakin is director of research and international programs for CFACT.

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June 19, 2012 8:37 am

Thoughs of Animal Farm, this morning:
When it comes to sustainable actions, there must be no more vacations. Expending energy to travel is something that cannot be tolerated. Of course, there must stilll be Agenda21 meetings to progress the agenda. So some vacationers are more sustainable than others.

Daryl M
June 19, 2012 8:38 am

I spent the last two weeks in Rio on business. From the first week to the second week, the price of hotels doubled, due to the deluge of delegates for this circus. After the people arrived in Rio for the conference, my hotel was crawling with delegates, many of whom were young people proudly wearing shirts proclaiming their participation in the “youth sustainability” events. It made me sick to think that they were there because of government funding. These UN sponsored events are nothing but shameless and grotesque wastes of money.

SocialBlunder
June 19, 2012 8:49 am

Ian – While charter schools are an interesting attempt to solve the education problem, when population and environmental factors are controlled charter results are no different than non-charter results. US K-12 education has never been very good, where we excel is our college+ education. College education is now a requirement for middle class and the cost of a good education is now out of reach of the middle class.
A quick glance at the Texas HHS (http://www.hhsc.state.tx.us/help/index.shtml) indicates that very limited care is available for extremely poor children, women, and families – but not men. This limited care does not include even basic preventative doctor’s visits.
While there will always be Horatio Alger stories of exceptional people who clamber out of poverty, setting up a society where power and wealth are concentrated in the hands of increasingly few and then expecting those few to share their wealth (as you appear to do with charity health care) seems ignorant of the real world. The US is less economically mobile than nearly all European countries. It matters more who your parents are here than it does over there.

Mike M
June 19, 2012 8:50 am

quidsapio says: But what’s wrong with universal health care?

Well, nothing unless you happen to be a doctor or other health care professional suddenly indentured against your will to provide that care for whatever some politician decides it is worth rather than what every living breathing individual decides it is worth to them personally. How about “universal car care” or “universal food service” or “universal education”? Whenever you take capitalism out of the equation – surplus and quality are the first to leave the scene.
Excepting slavery, without competition there is no incentive for quality. Without capitalism there is no incentive to create a surplus or innovate to reduce costs. (And surplus is the ONLY true source of government revenue.)

Mike M
June 19, 2012 8:56 am

tadchem says:
In other words,
“A government that robs Peter to pay Paul can always depend on the support of Paul.” – George Bernard Shaw

Taphonomic
June 19, 2012 9:15 am

Luther Wu says:
“Ask the simplest of questions… “what does sustainability mean?” … “so, mandatory means- sending men with guns?”… persist as they mumble nonsense.”
But Luther, there is a full blown journal dedicated to the study of sustainability: the International Journal of Sustainable Economy
http://www.inderscience.com/jhome.php?jcode=ijse
and it publishes such wonderful articles as: “Why are some people greener than others?”
http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-06/ip-was061212.php
which contains such sterling prose as:
“In the face of climate change, rising sea levels, melting icecaps, the depletion of natural resources, the destruction of rainforests, species extinction and many other environmental concerns, the notion of sustainability is high on the agenda. If we are to address the environmental issues then finding alternative ways to maintain or improve our lifestyle without further damaging the environment is essential to progress. The concepts of gender and income inequality, literacy rates, education possibilities, life expectancies and poverty alleviation must also be incorporated into the sustainability equation.
To explore the root of sustainable behavior, values and attitudes of different populations were probed and correlated against sustainable behavior. The values pivoted around the basic beliefs different populations harbored towards actions that may support sustainability. For example, being unselfish is an important quality to encourage as is being prepared to do something to improve the conditions in your community. The attitudes also hinged on priorities individuals set when considering sustainable agendas. For instance, sustainable development should be a priority for society while the social responsibility of business leaders should be high towards society.”
Oh, never mind, I guess this just demonstrates your point about mumbling nonsense.

Curiousgeorge
June 19, 2012 9:20 am

I wonder if the letters FO mean anything to this “Whatever” .
” Environmental concerns have caused one high-ranking UN official to declare that “the West” does not need more cars, televisions, and other consumer luxuries.
http://cnsnews.com/blog/paul-wilson/un-official-western-nations-dont-need-more-cars-more-tv-whatever

kim2ooo
June 19, 2012 9:23 am

Soooooooo…The Question:
“Can you define sustainability? ICLEI can’t…”

H/T CFACT

Ged
June 19, 2012 9:28 am

These guys are insane.
Have they read 1984? Sure seems like they’re trying to take all the pages out of that book.

Frank K.
June 19, 2012 9:34 am

Curiousgeorge says:
June 19, 2012 at 8:24 am
“This is the group (C40) that is chaired by none other than estimable Mayor Bloomberg of NYC. The same Mayor who has recently declared war on large soda’s, popcorn and milkshakes, among other things. What an asinine idiota.”
Ah yes – big gulp soda from 7-11, BAD – “tall” Starbucks mocha latte with whipped cream, GOOD. /facepalm.
It is both sad and comical to see climate “science” and the “green” movement going the way of the #Occupy movement…

Pamela Gray
June 19, 2012 9:40 am

The problem with any school, be it charter, public, home-school, private, or religious is lack of high standards and fire when a student does not perform at a proficient or exceeded level. Study after study clearly and unequivocally demonstrates that when low performance is faced with “pants on fire” strategies to improve performance, performance improves, regardless of who or what you are as a student, or in what income bracket your school is in.
I also know that being told to teach some kind of environmentalism or communist curriculum is way down the list and is often ignored by districts struggling to raise achievement in language arts, math, and science.
So when commentors here post some off the cuff comment about public schools, I am reminded of the off the cuff belief statements about AGW. Much bias, little fact.

more soylent green!
June 19, 2012 9:44 am

The US is less economically mobile than nearly all European countries. It matters more who your parents are here than it does over there.

Pure twaddle and claptrap, two words which could be used to describe nearly your entire post. Upward mobility is not created by the government. Upward mobility is created by freedom and individual effort.
Vouchers are a better answer than charter schools.

June 19, 2012 9:51 am

Sustainable development as it is being used in this UN literature is simply an updated, more palatable sounding version of what used to be known as “ecological humanism.” Back in the 70s this was the idea that economic and population growth be halted. Technology would be controlled (that happens to be in most of the UN reports for the 21st century I have read). And then gross inequalities of income are done away with. That latter is consistent with that line of plenty now being pushed in UN lit.
The basic tenet of ecological humanism is the reality illiterate idea that sees “the purpose of the economy as the service of community.” That would explain the mandated altruism we see in Purple America and the reenvisioned definitions of civics education currently being proposed.
Finally and most troubling is the idea that the concept of the individual needs to be replaced. The new concept under ecological humanism then and sustainable development today is that the individual only really exists in relation to others. Doing for others is the new 21st century definition of living. “Person-in-community” may sound a bit like slavery or serfdom to us. Its proponents also believe, literally, that there were many good elements to feudalism that make it “worthy of careful consideration” as a new, redesigned economic system for the benefit of community.
And we all know precisely who is volunteering for the positions of liege lords. And ladies too in these gender equity days.

Taphonomic
June 19, 2012 10:01 am

Curiousgeorge says:
“Environmental concerns have caused one high-ranking UN official to declare that “the West” does not need more cars, televisions, and other consumer luxuries.”
This statement from Helen Clark. Makes you wonder when she will be giving up all her creature comforts and redistributing her wealth?
“Surprisingly, Clark owns an Auckland villa worth $720,000, a Wellington townhouse worth about $350,000, an apartment in Christchurch, property at Rodney, and is ‘a beneficiary of two family trusts’. Her joint annual income with her husband is estimated at $500,000.”
http://liberation.typepad.com/liberation/2007/01/money_power.html

Bob Diaz
June 19, 2012 10:16 am

RE: “When you spread the wealth around, it’s good for everybody.” & “wealth redistribution”
These are nice sounding terms for Marxist Communism. On paper it looks great, BUT in reality the movement of wealth goes from the middle class to the ruling elite.

June 19, 2012 10:25 am

On vouchers, any legislation needs to deal with the unconstrained dictatorship that modern-day accreditation has become. Or the public schools stay poisoned and you open the voucher receiving private schools to the accreditors gutting academics.
Pamela-I am not sure who you are talking to but someone wanting to spread communism via the schools emphasizes the socialist theory of the mind, not who owns what a redistribution. The socialist theory of the mind emphasizes emotion and rejects any distinction between feelings and reason. Secondly, it puts a premium on physical activity like projects and otherwise creating artefacts like posters or videos. It rejects the idea that there is any such thing as rational thought or an ability to construct a private mental world. That’s why it also rejects teaching reading beyond a basic level of functionality in daily life.
On environmentalism, listen to that CFACT video. The articulate gentleman describing “systemic thinking” is how environmentalism comes in and becomes a permanent component of an individual’s filtering mindset. Probably not even a conscious quality either.

Pollyanna
June 19, 2012 10:34 am

Haven’t read all the comments . . . . But I say . . . IF . . .IF . . . ALL those really, really, really, rich people decided to give ALL THEIR . . . money to the poor, or whoever else they wanted to, including “everybody in the whole wide world” . . . . there is nothing in US law that says they can not; . . .and: all the complainers here would be getting in the line for their share . . . . if only to give to their favorite “other”!
. . . . . In MY opinion! . . .

Keitho
Editor
June 19, 2012 10:35 am

The really irritating thing about these people and their absurd ideas is that within a few decades their ideology will be discarded as stupid and the market will return. Unfortunately many will have perished needlessly but such is ideological life, you have to break a few eggs to make the omelette.
The Dunning-Kruger effect is at work and unfortunately cocaine is turbo-charging it.
Only the market has value and indifference. The market only cares about success which is why this hippies fear it. They don’t even realize that their unreality is being sold in the market. Agenda 21 is ridiculous it needs to be stopped , just like Alabama has done.

Gail Combs
June 19, 2012 10:40 am

Andrew says:
June 19, 2012 at 6:12 am
Sorry but this is one of the few sites which has even noticed rio20. I aint seen any news about it anywhere which shows hoe little interest there is is AGW except here LOL
_________________________________
Of course you will not see anything about it in the news. The news is the propaganda arm of the Progressives, Fabians, Comunitarians, Bankers or as Dr Evans so nicely explained it The Regulating Class

SunderlandSteve
June 19, 2012 10:41 am

“The World Is in Need of Fundamental Change.” The document then offers “solutions,” which include “universal fiscal equalization” and a “massive and absolute decoupling of well-being from resource extraction and consumption.”
communism, pure and simple!

Curiousgeorge
June 19, 2012 10:52 am

Pollyanna says:
June 19, 2012 at 10:34 am
Haven’t read all the comments . . . . But I say . . . IF . . .IF . . . ALL those really, really, really, rich people decided to give ALL THEIR . . . money to the poor, or whoever else they wanted to, including “everybody in the whole wide world” . . . . there is nothing in US law that says they can not; . . .and: all the complainers here would be getting in the line for their share . . . . if only to give to their favorite “other”!
. . . . . In MY opinion! . . .
***************************************************************
Do you really think that “all those rich people”, simply have bags of gold stashed under their beds? No. Their wealth is tied up in investments such – as businesses that employ other people. If they gave away all their wealth to “the poor”, it would simply mean more poor resulting from the economic collapse that such a give away would cause. Millions would be instantly unemployed and governments would go bankrupt trying to save everyone.
Grow up.

SocialBlunder
June 19, 2012 11:06 am

more soylent green! says:
June 19, 2012 at 9:44 am
Pure twaddle and claptrap, two words which could be used to describe nearly your entire post. Upward mobility is not created by the government. Upward mobility is created by freedom and individual effort.

I was as surprised to hear that the US is not as economically mobile as you appear to be. Please take a moment (several actually) to read The Economist Special Report on Meritocracy in America. The Economist is a staunch right-wing free enterprise journal. It is especially ironic that many of the efforts to make America more mobile (such as federal funding for advanced education) are now factors in it becoming even more rigid.

Pamela Gray
June 19, 2012 11:21 am

It is pretty funny when you consider the commonly held stereotype of rich people sitting in warehouses filled with coinage. Wealth is not in coinage, it’s in investment net worth. Let’s hope the wealthy do not ever decide en’ masse to cash out their net worth. Unemployment now would be like heaven on Earth compared to what would happen in a cash-out.
As for school vouchers, regardless of no limits or strict limits, the law of unintended consequences would be in full swing. Underprivilaged students will not do as well in non-public schools, and allowing vouchers for others would turn into subsidized wellfare for people who don’t need it.

Pollyanna
June 19, 2012 11:21 am

Curiousgeorge says: . . . . . . Grow up???? . . . .
Question is . . . . am I right???? . . . Just what do you think “IF” is for? IF not for making an specific point!

June 19, 2012 11:24 am

Social Blunder says:
“The Economist is a staunch right-wing free enterprise journal.”
Not as much as it used to be. I subscribed for more than thirty years. When John Micklethwait was appointed to run the Economist, it started getting off course and I decided I could get a better range of views for free on line, so I canceled my subscription.
As far as economics goes it’s still not too bad [but given the competition that’s easy], but Micklethwait’s specific job is to push the global warming / sustainability / climate change ideology, and he flogs them incessantly [he wrote a book preposterously titled A Future Perfect: the Challenge and Hidden Promise of Globalisation]. A ‘future perfect’? Hm-m-m. His direction to subordinatess permeates every article, wherever it is possible to insert an editorial comment about “carbon”, global warming, etc., in what should be straight reporting. The insinuation is always that human activity is leading to climate disruption. No exceptions allowed.
With such heavily biased reporting on a subject that is still shrouded with unknowns, it is best to take everything at the Economist with a tablespoon of salt. Sad, because it really used to be the best of the lot. But money corrupts, and it has corrupted the Economist no less than the climate journals.