I just read a piece that made our possible human future sound wonderful. This piece was posted on commondreams.org, a site that I usually trust. However, something about it just felt fishy. I smelled Agenda 21. What were the clues? Usually, both the scope of a project and the language used. If the scope is global, and the language is warm and fuzzy, then I tend not to trust it. Am I nuts? I don’t think so. Oh yes, and if whatever is being promoted is also favored by the U.N., my concern doubles.
Here’s the post in question, with an excerpt:
Laying the Foundations of a World Citizens Movement
Recent conference of international civil society organizations explore path forward to deep global change
November 26, 2014
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa – Has organised civil society, bound up in internal bureaucracy, in slow, tired processes and donor accountability, become simply another layer of a global system that perpetuates injustice and inequality?
How can civil society organizations (CSOs) build a broad movement that draws in, represents and mobilises the citizenry, and how can they effect fundamental, systemic transformation, rather than trading in incremental change?
This kind of introspective reflection was at the heart of a process of engagement among CSOs from around the world that gathered in Johannesburg from Nov. 19 to 21 for the “Toward a World Citizens Movement: Learning from the Grassroots” conference.
Organised by DEEEP, a project within the European civil society umbrella organisation CONCORD which builds capacity among CSOs and carries out advocacy around global citizenship and global citizenship education, the conference brought together 200 participants.
“It is important that people understand the inter-linkages at the global level; that they understand that they are part of the system and can act, based on their rights, to influence the system in order to bring about change and make life better – so it’s no longer someone else deciding things on behalf of the citizens”
– Rilli Lappalainen, Secretary-General of the Finnish NGDO PlatformKey partners were CIVICUS (the World Alliance for Citizen Participation, which is one of the largest and most diverse global civil society networks) and GCAP (Global Call to Action Against Poverty).
_____
A.K. again: Check out this testimonial from the head of the U.N. on the IPS website.
Don’t get me wrong. It’s not that I don’t want us to evolve into global citizens. I do! Obviously, we need to stop identifying with warring “nation states” and come into harmony as a species. However, just how we get there is the issue, for that process itself will in part determine the end result. Are we going to submit to top-down hierarchical control that, in its initial stages, looks like bottom-up networking, but is, in actuality, not? Instead, it’s entirely possible that grass-roots folks and organizations are being gradually, subtly, and invisibly corralled and and funneled by globalist/corporatist forces working through the U.N. into the 1993 Agenda 21 plan for a subdued, robotic, transhuman worker base to power “sustainable industrial development” that sooner or later sucks the remaining life force out of both Earth and Earthlings.
Just to follow through on my “shit-detector,” I googled Civicus, one of the prominent brand names in the article, and sure enough, clear connections to Agenda 21. Yuck.
Rather than emphasizing sustainable growth, how about de-growth. Now that’s an idea I can get behind, equally far-seeing, in terms of a world-wide reach and hopefully, impact, but distinctly not inside the predatory capitalist world-view.
Oops! I just read through a report on the Fourth International De-Growth Conference held in Leipzig in September, this year. And guess who wrote this report, also published in commondreams? IPS!
Down With Sustainable Development! Long Live Convivial Degrowth!
November 22, 2014
For anyone who recently attended the Fourth International Conference on Degrowth in Leipzig, Germany, listening in on conference talk, surrounded by the ecologically savvy, one quickly noticed that no one was singing the praises of sustainable development.
Nonetheless, development per se and all that this entails did take center stage, as a crowd of three thousand participants and speakers debated ongoing trends in the fields of environment, politics, economics and social justice.
Given that it may not be immediately clear why a rallying cry anchored to ecological principles would call for the demise of sustainable development – which in generic terms could be described as the environmentalist program dating back several decades – it seems that a clarification or two would be in order.
As is the case with social movements, they evolve and go through periods of transformation like anything else does. When the term sustainable development came into use in the 1970s and 1980s, it did support the assumption that general environmental principles and minimum ecological limits should be respected when going about the everyday business of development.
However, according to Federico Demaria, author and member of Research & Degrowth in Barcelona, the idea of sustainable development is based on a false consensus. Once this term and its underlying situations are properly deconstructed, Demaria tells IPS, “we discover that sustainable development is still all about development. And that is where the problem lies.”
Development is indeed a dirty word in degrowth circles. From the vantage point of economic realism, development is inextricably connected to economic growth. However, degrowthers carry the deeply-held belief that economic growth simply does not deliver what it promises: increased human welfare.
“Thus we find ourselves at a place where we need to readdress the flaws of sustainable development with a fresh perspective,” says Demaria.
It is with the hopes to do just that in a clear and powerful way that Demaria, along with Giorgos Kallis and Giacomo D’Alisa, have produced the new book Degrowth: A Vocabulary for a New Era, which has just been released by Routledge.
This volume includes 50 entries that all touch on specific aspects of degrowth and go a long way towards elucidating the distinguishing factors of degrowth, as well as properly defining concepts ranging from conviviality to bioeconomics, societal metabolism and many others.
The historical development of the degrowth movement is also spelled out. Thus we learn that in the 1970s, at the time of the first phase of the degrowth debate, when The Limits to Growth by Dennis and Donella Meadows and others was published, resource limits was the talk of the town. Yet now, in what can be called the second stage, criticism of the hegemonic idea of sustainable development has come to the forefront.
It was Serge Latouche, an economic anthropologist, who defined sustainable development as an oxymoron in A bas le développement durable! Vive la décroissance conviviale! (‘Down with sustainable development! Long live convivial degrowth!’) at a conference in Paris in 2002, affiliated with the U.N. Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) and concerned with the issues of development.
Latouche and others in the French-speaking world began to give shape to the French movement, which called itself décroissance and eventually spread to other countries, entering Italy as decrescita and Spain as decrecimiento. Eventually, by 2010, degrowthemerged as the English-language term, well suited for universal applicability.
For many of the attendees of the degrowth conference in Leipzig, the set of vocabulary of the degrowth movement and even the very name degrowth begged to be dealt with carefully. There were a few proposals to switch to a name carrying positive connotations, instead of defining a movement based on opposition to something – growth in this case.
But Latouche and Demaria both argue that the word degrowth most concisely defines one chief objective of the movement – the abolition of economic growth as a social objective. Referred to as a missile word, it is disturbing for some, exactly because it intends to be provocative; as such, this has borne fruit.
There are certainly positive concepts to highlight in the degrowth movement. These include voluntary simplicity, conviviality and economy of care. Yet none of these terms are broad enough to be inclusive and representative of the breadth of ideas that make up the entirety of degrowth.
Perhaps Francois Schneider, another of the degrowth pioneers, put it best when he defined degrowth as: “equitable downscaling of production and consumption that will reduce societies’ throughput of energy and raw materials.”
The goal in all of this, according to the authors of the new book, is not simply to have a society that can manage with less, but to have different arrangements and a different quality. That is where the idea of societal metabolism (that is, energy and materials within the economy) comes into place, because it explains how a degrowth society will have different activities, rearranged forms or uses of energy, and significantly different allocations of time between paid and non-paid work.
Taking social relations as well as the time-work relationship a step further, the theory of dépense, also described in the new book, comes in handy. Dépense signifies the collective consumption of ‘surplus’ in a society.
Nowadays, surplus time and energy is often re-invested in new production or used in an individualistic manner. This follows the dictum of capitalism whereby there should not be too many wasteful expenses; at the most individuals can employ their own all-too-brief methods to unwind from stressful life in the rat race.
Yet degrowth advocates point to the habits of older civilizations where surplus was dedicated to non-utilitarian purposes, be they festivals or celebrations. Degrowthers prefer to see an application of dépense to community-based uses that place conviviality and happiness-inducing activities above economic factors.
While no one can predict when and how the degrowth transition will take place, Demaria stresses that examples of this transition are already here. “Look no further than the transition town movement in the United Kingdom or Buen Vivir in South America,” says Demaria.
Demaria and others also hope that one specific effect of the Leipzig conference, as well as the brand new volume on degrowth, will be to re-politicise environmentalism. Sustainable development de-politicises real political oppositions and underlying dissonance, contributing to the false imaginary of decoupling: perpetuating development without harming the environment.
“Once we decide that we are not afraid to talk about the full implications of development, be they economic, social or political,” says Demaria, “then we begin to see that it is actually utopian to think that our societies can be based on economic growth for ever. Degrowth, by contrast, really offers the most common sense of all.”
A.K. So the U.N. will have its way with Agenda 21, one way or another? It sure looks that way, unless we the people wise up and rise up.
1 thought on ““Sustainable Development” or “Convivial De-growth”: Controlled Opposition?”
The cabal ‘never’ wastes a good crisis, and ‘always’ uses the same Hegelian Dialectic problem reaction solution template to elicit CONsent from a critical mass of humans.
By Ken
The globalists are in the process of running a problem / reaction / SOLUTION scam on us, not a problem / reaction / PROBLEM scam. https://ourgreaterdestiny.wordpress.com/2014/11/27/multilateralmultipolar-new-world-order-will-seem-like-heaven-at-first/
Until a critical mass of humans replace divisive, reactionary thinking, with higher awareness and action, CONsent remains the greatest CON of man. http://jhaines6.wordpress.com/2014/10/26/bradley-loves-the-great-con-of-man-esoterics-the-supernatural-magicians-mind-control-and-the-new-world-order-part-one/