“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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H.R.
June 20, 2012 12:41 pm

Mike M says:
June 20, 2012 at 5:00 am
“Feed your Family on Ten Billion Dollars per day”
http://iowahawk.typepad.com/iowahawk/2011/03/feed-your-family-on-10-billion-a-day.html
Wonderful link, Mike. I had not run across that before though I’ve seen similar examples that use parts of the takes the Iowahawk uses.
Thanks!

June 20, 2012 1:38 pm

Pollyanna,
I have asked this question repeatedly on WUWT, and no one has ever given me a percentage:
“Exactly how much should the top 10% pay? Give me a specific number.”
Neither you, nor anyone else, has ever provided a specific answer.
I think I know the reason: you are consumed with envy at the success of other people. What you really want is to take all their earned assets away from them, because you personally do not have what it takes to be successful [BTW, I am not nearly ‘rich’]. You are jealous of their success.
You plainly covet your neighbors’ goods. And if you cannot get your hands on their assets by hook or by crook, then the next best thing is for the State to confiscate what they have earned. Right?
If I’m wrong, quit being a hypocrite and give me a number. What specific percentage of the federal tax burden should be paid by the top 10% of wage earners? And should 50% of the population pay zero federal taxes? Be honest.

Pollyanna
Reply to  dbstealey
June 20, 2012 2:13 pm

Smokey says:
June 20, 2012 at 1:38 pm
It’s a simple question. There is no depends about it. Have you quit beating your dog yet?
You say: “”I think I know the reason: you are consumed with envy at the success of other people. What you really want is to take all their earned assets away from them, because you personally do not have what it takes to be successful [BTW, I am not nearly ‘rich’]. You are jealous of their success.””
That would be quite a leap to a conclusion . . . just as “”I think I know the reason: you are consumed with envy at the success of other people. What you really want is to take all their earned assets away from them, because you personally do not have what it takes to be successful [BTW, I am not nearly ‘rich’]. You are jealous of their success.”” this is a false conclusion.
and this “”If I’m wrong, quit being a hypocrite and give me a number. What specific percentage of the federal tax burden should be paid by the top 10% of wage earners? And should 50% of the population pay zero federal taxes?””” Be honest is a bait and switch . . . just like . . . Have you quit beating your dog yet?
Last ditch effort to try to clarify my perspective . . . IF, you are inheriting all your money from somewhere . . . and a tax is levied for that inheritance . . . . are YOU paying any tax . . .?
And no one has ever given YOU a percentage: . . .“Exactly how much should the top 10% pay? Give me a specific number.” IS a very poorly formed question . . especially since it depends on several factors therefor is a variable! I don’t even care what your answer is because it is rationally irrelevant, extraneous, & immaterial.
If you wanted to be serious . . . I would first ask you to define a wage earner under current tax law. . . but I bet you would think that the definition is rationally irrelevant, extraneous, & immaterial.
when in fact: http://codes.lp.findlaw.com/uscode/26/C/24/3401
Search 26 U.S.C. § 3401 : US Code – Section 3401: Definitions
(a) Wages
For purposes of this chapter, the term “wages” means . . . .

Pollyanna
Reply to  dbstealey
June 20, 2012 2:27 pm

@Smokey says:
June 20, 2012 at 1:38 pm
It’s an add on to:
when in fact: http://codes.lp.findlaw.com/uscode/26/C/24/3401
Search 26 U.S.C. § 3401 : US Code – Section 3401: Definitions
(a) Wages
For purposes of this chapter, the term “wages” means . . . .
because if you keep reading it says: . . .except that such term shall not include
remuneration paid –
then there are 22 points . .
and then as you read on there is
“The term “wages” includes any amount includible in gross income of
an employee under section 409A and payment of such amount shall be
treated as having been made in the taxable year in which the amount
is so includible.”

timg56
June 20, 2012 2:07 pm

LazyTeenager,
As Americans they (and the rest of us) are beholden to no master. Exactly why the 2nd Amendment to the Constitution was written.
Hope you are at least thankful there are people willing to go in harm’s way to maintain your right to express sometimes assinine opinions whenever you want.

June 20, 2012 3:13 pm

Pollyanna,
Two mealymouthed responses in a row. Just give me a number you think is fair.

Galane
June 20, 2012 5:25 pm

“the Civil Society Reflection Group on Global Development Perspectives ” Come on, you can say it. They’re just a bunch of communists wanting to be on top of the heap with the entire world as their slaves.
[SNIP: No, Galane, we are not going to promote that. -REP]

H.R.
June 20, 2012 6:19 pm

@Smokey
I’ll bite. $30k and up; 12% of wages. Below $30k; 5% of wages. No deductions. Everyone should have skin in the game. Everyone.
I don’t see why the Federales can’t manage the mint, the military, and courts with that take. They can buy a lot of fencing with the leftover money. The other fluff programs? No business of the Feds anyway. I figure the old dead white guys that started us off have been turning in their graves since at least the mid-1800s.
(See… Pollyanna… that… wasn’t so “difficult”)

RACookPE1978
Editor
June 20, 2012 7:24 pm

Well, let’s see.
Right now, about 48% of the (US) population pays no federal income taxes at all, but receive “rebates” and “tax credits” from the rest. That is, the people earning the least pay NO taxes at all. In addition, many (if not all) at the poverty line and below are eligible for and receive governments handouts and programs and subsidies.
At the top, right now, the upper 20% of earners pay over 50% of their salaries in combined federal, state, and local wage taxes, plus local sales taxes, local property taxes, national gas taxes, telephone fees, garbage taxes, recycling fees for batteries and tires, medicare, social security, and toll roads and the like..
5% of wages? I’d settle for a tax cut to “only” 45% of wages …….

H.R.
June 21, 2012 8:35 am

Do over, Smokey.
I crunched some WAG numbers based on some vague semblence of reality and added in for the fence and it looks like 7% & 3% will keep the lights on in the U.S.
: Yeah, that cut would be nice. You’ll have to pardon my fantasizing about flat rates for a limited government, but someone needed to show Pollyanna the way to the light. “Smokey… ‘asked’ an… “””easy question”” and it’s been more fun watching the avoidance contortions by Pollyanna than it is watching my cat chase a laser pointer; all over it but never getting hold of it.
On a brighter note, at least the Federal gas tax is per gallon and not a percent of sale price. That’s a rare slip-up by the politicians. I’m sure it won’t happen again.

Pollyana the mealymouthed
June 21, 2012 8:59 am

@Smokey & H.R.
Neither of you give a flip about what I think is FAIR! To show “Pollyanna the way to the light”!?
Fine, then tell me why there is an entire CHAPTER 24- COLLECTION OF INCOME TAX AT SOURCE ON WAGES . . if it wasn’t important or significant?

H.R.
June 21, 2012 9:29 am

Pollyanna, I thought about it a while and gave Smokey what I thought was a fair tax on wages for the top 10% of wage earners. That was the question he asked of you (and elsewhere in the past).
I threw in the lower percentiles while I was at it. Smokey didn’t ask, but I threw in that as a freebie. Smokey also didn’t ask, but I at least alluded to what my suggested level of taxation should fund.
CHAPTER 24 – COLLECTION OF INCOME TAX AT SOURCE ON WAGES won’t change much, if at all, based on the percentage of tax levied on wages. It may or may not be important or significant depending on the percent tax on wages being kicked around. For example, if you suggest that the top 10% of wage earners be taxed 100% on wages over $85k, then I’d get the tax money quickly and directly from the employer before it disappears. If you were to suggest that the tax on the top 10% of wage earners should be 2%, then perhaps CHAPTER 24 could be condensed to “Wage earners shall send a check to the IRS by February 14th, Red Envelope optional.” So CHAPTER 24 can wait.
So now that I’ve blazed a path through the minefield of answering Smokey’s straightforward question and demonstrating how easy it is to answer a direct question with a direct answer (bonus opinions thrown in, gratis), you are cordially invited to answer Smokey’s question. Your avoidance has been going on long enough that inquiring minds, including mine, really do want to know what you think the top 10% of wage earners should pay in taxes.

Pollyanna the mealymouthed
Reply to  H.R.
June 21, 2012 10:47 am

@Smokey & H.R.
. . . . “Another means of silently lessening the inequality of property is to exempt all from taxation below a certain point, and to tax the higher portions of property in geometrical progression as they rise.” –Thomas Jefferson to J. Madison, 1785.
http://press-pubs.uchicago.edu/founders/documents/v1ch15s32.html
Now, would you please define “fair”? How about “fat chance”?

more soylent green!
June 21, 2012 11:11 am

more soylent green! says:
June 20, 2012 at 6:38 am
What fair share of your income, wealth, labor and other property am I entitled to, Pollyanna? How much of what you own do I deserve?
Just curious….
more soylent green! says:
June 20, 2012 at 11:21 am
Pollyana: It’s a simple question. There is no depends about it. What part of your income do I deserve? How much of the fruits of your labor do you own, and how much are mine?

ANSWER TO BOTH OF THE ABOVE: I’m not entitled to any of your property, income, wealth or labor. The fruits of your labor belong to you. I don’t deserve any of it, any you aren’t entitled or deserving of anyone else’s, get it?

Pollyanna the mealymouthed
June 21, 2012 11:29 am

Ok! Now, how to divy up the fruits of “Mother Nature”! Land, for planting, Trees, for heating & shelter, Wild Critters, for eating, Water, for drinking? Etc. . . Etc. . . Etc. . . (as the king would say)

Crispin in Waterloo
June 21, 2012 12:30 pm

@Allen MacRae
From your quoted text: “Importantly, an increasing number of scientists are affirming the new findings which demonstrate it’s not possible for CO2 – or any so-called “greenhouse” gas – to “trap” energy in Earth’s atmosphere – a frequently cited claim of global warming alarmists. Critics of the GHE say the latest findings comport with satellite data and indicate that Earth emits as much infrared heat as it receives from the sun and thereby proves there is no magical atmospheric effect in play making our planet warmer than it would otherwise be. Despite these groundbreaking new findings dozens of government agencies are avoiding addressing them.”
I am given to understand that the ‘heat signature’ in the troposphere at 8-16 km altitude that is supposed to be the hallmark effect of CO2 trapping heat in the tropics is completely absent. I am not saying this based on the excellent paper on the subject by Monckton, but on the coming AR5 which will avoid the topic completely. Instead of producing for the first time the evidence-based science (known as ‘measurements’) that shows unequivocally that the heat signature of CO2’s ‘greenhouse effect’ is present, they will, rather, not show the science that demonstrates clearly the hot spot simply does not exist and apparently never did. They will concentrate their comments on the other parts of the troposphere where nothing is supposed to be happening and show that, well… nothing is happening.
I must say I am really disappointed in the IPCC which, following ClimateGate, should have pulled up their socks and taken out some of the most obvious fraud and weasel wording. If something as essential to the CAGW business as that ‘heat being captured’ is absent, how can any of the rest of the report by viewed as meaningful? If there is no discernible ‘greenhouse effect’ with its ‘back radiation’ then a large error in judgement has been made about the dangers posed by elevated CO2 concentrations. A weighty tome that contains absolutely fundamental errors and omits the most revealing data has no value save as a door stop and later, a paper supply for the 2-holer.

H.R.
June 21, 2012 12:59 pm

UNCLE!
I’ve tapped out.

June 21, 2012 4:08 pm

Pollyanna the mealymouthed says:
June 21, 2012 at 10:47 am
“Now, would you please define ‘fair’? How about ‘fat chance’?”
Pollyanna, I will be happy to answer your questions. But first, you have to stop acting like a slippery eel, and give me the numbers I’m asking you for. Because I asked first. [My questions to you: What specific percentage of the federal tax burden should be paid by the top 10% of wage earners? And should 50% of the population pay zero federal taxes?]
We both know why you’re avoiding answering. It’s difficult being on the hot seat. But give it a try.
Otherwise, we know the real answer: if you could, you would simply steal all the ‘rich’ folks’ assets and pocket them for yourself. Then you would be rich, and they would be poor. But if that is not possible, your second choice would be revel in the schadenfreude of seeing their earned income confiscated by the government – all of it – if you could make that happen. Because you shamelessly covet your neighbors’ goods. Your green-eyed envy is so thick you could cut it with a knife.
I am not rich. But I know that no poor person creates jobs. And jobs are what we desperately need to get the economy up and running again. You are shooting yourself in the foot by hating those who earn more than you do. You’re like Obama, when he was asked why he didn’t lower tax rates since lower tax rates always result in more government revenues. His answer: it’s a matter of ‘fairness’. You would rather have what you perceive to be ‘fair’ than to have a growing economy, high employment, and everyone getting a bigger piece of the pie. I cannot imagine a more selfish attitude.

June 21, 2012 8:43 pm

Pollyanna,
I’ve found your intellectual soul mate:

Gail Combs
June 21, 2012 10:09 pm

Smokey says: June 21, 2012 at 4:08 pm
….I am not rich. But I know that no poor person creates jobs. And jobs are what we desperately need to get the economy up and running again. You are shooting yourself in the foot by hating those who earn more than you do. You’re like Obama, when he was asked why he didn’t lower tax rates since lower tax rates always result in more government revenues. His answer: it’s a matter of ‘fairness’. You would rather have what you perceive to be ‘fair’ than to have a growing economy, high employment, and everyone getting a bigger piece of the pie. I cannot imagine a more selfish attitude.
________________________________________
You missed the corollary. More Taxes=> More Bureaucrats => More RED TAPE => LESS business => LESS jobs.
Ridiculous bureaucracy is killing the American Dream
Also Pollyanna still hasn’t figured out the difference between the working stiffs (wage earners) who pay taxes and the idle Rich who OWN the corporations and have all sorts of ways to dodge taxes.

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