The United Nations plan for global socialist rule

At the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, last month, the United Nations Development Programme promoted its plan to institute a global socialist economic system, says Henry Lamb, executive vice president of the Environmental Conservation Organisation (ECO), and chairman of Sovereignty International. The plan is detailed in a book entitled "The New Public Finance: Responding to Global Challenges," published by Oxford University Press.

The U.N. plan identifies seven trillion dollars – that's $7,000,000,000,000 - to be taken from developed nations for use by the U.N. to solve all the world's problems, says Lamb.

  • The plan would impose the "Tobin Tax," a global tax on foreign currency exchange, with an estimated yield of $2.9 trillion.

  • A global pollution permit trading scheme would produce another $3.64 trillion in revenue, according to the U.N.

    This is a glorified version of the emissions trading scheme envisioned in the Kyoto Protocol, says Lamb. Here is a simplified example of how such a scheme would work:

  • The U.N. would establish arbitrary limits on the quantity of pollution each nation could produce.

  • If a nation exceeded the limit, it would have to pay substantial penalties or, the polluting nation could purchase "credits" from developing nations that produce less pollution than allowed by the U.N.

  • Either way, money from developed nations is redistributed to developing nations – through the U.N.

    The U.N. claims that another $2.9 trillion could be realised for developing countries by reducing their borrowing costs, and another $600 billion by linking loan repayments to their economic output. The plan also recommends the creation of a "Chapter 11 bankruptcy" procedure for nations, overseen by the U.N., says Lamb.

    Even a cursory reading of "Our Global Neighbourhood," published by the Commission on Global Governance, or the UNDP's latest plan, can produce no other conclusion: The United Nations is, indeed, working diligently to install global, socialist rule, says Lamb.

    Source: Henry Lamb, The U.N.'s plan for global socialist rule, WorldNetDaily, February 4, 2006; and United Nations Development Program, The New Public Finance: Responding to Global Challenges, Oxford Press, January 28, 2006.

    For text: http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=48656

    For U.N. text: http://www.undp.org/dpa/pressrelease/releases/2006/20060128-book.shtml

    For more on International: http://www.ncpa.org/pi/internat/intdex1.html

    FMF Policy Bulletin/ 14 February 2006
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