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Exposing the Sustainable Development Goals

Mon Jul 24 2023
United NationsAgenda 2030Sustainable Development GoalsGender EqualityWater AccessEconomic GrowthClimate ChangeGlobal Partnerships

Description

The episode discusses the United Nations Agenda 2030 and the 17 sustainable development goals, their categorizations, and the means of implementing them. It explores the potential consequences of implementing the goals, including issues related to gender equality, water access, economic growth, climate change, and global partnerships. The episode also highlights concerns about brainwashing, social credit systems, and the Great Reset initiative. Overall, it emphasizes the importance of resistance against the implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals to prevent global tyranny.

Insights

United Nations Agenda 2030

The United Nations Agenda 2030 aims to create a sustainable and inclusive future through the 17 sustainable development goals.

Categorizations and Secret Goals

The sustainable development goals are categorized in various ways, including the SDG pyramid and based on the biosphere, society, economy, and partnership. There are also bids for a secret 18th SDG.

Implementing ESG and SDGs

There are three approaches to implementing ESG and the sustainable development goals: top-down power of public-private partnerships, education to transform youth, and rewriting the social contract.

Concerns about Implementation

There are concerns about the unrealistic nature of some goals, contradictions in promoting sustainable agriculture while achieving food security, and massive wealth redistribution that may harm economies and people's lives.

Climate Change and Global Partnerships

The sustainable development goals address climate change and its impacts, but there are concerns about the United Nations' power and the potential consequences of the Great Reset initiative.

Chapters

  1. United Nations Agenda 2030 and the 17 Sustainable Development Goals
  2. Struggle Sessions and Transforming the World
  3. Categorizations and Secret Goals
  4. Approaches to Implementing ESG and SDGs
  5. Agenda 2030, Mao's Programs, and Gender Equality
  6. Gender Equality, Water Access, and Economic Growth
  7. Sustainable Economic Growth and Infrastructure
  8. Cities, Consumption Patterns, and Climate Change
  9. Terrestrial Ecosystems, Peaceful Societies, and Global Partnerships
  10. Revitalizing Global Partnership and Implementing Sustainable Development Goals
  11. Implementing Sustainable Development Goals and Global Partnership
  12. Implementing Sustainable Development Goals and Global Partnership (Continued)
  13. Means of Implementation and Global Partnership
  14. Science, Technology, Innovation, and Global Partnership
  15. Combating Climate Change and Global Partnerships
Summary
Transcript

United Nations Agenda 2030 and the 17 Sustainable Development Goals

00:07 - 07:45

  • The United Nations Agenda 2030 and the 17 sustainable development goals are openly promoted by the UN.
  • The goals are visible in various places like airports, buildings, and websites.
  • The goals aim to create a desire for unity and criticize contradictions to achieve a sustainable and inclusive future.
  • These contradictions include racism, transphobia, homophobia, emissions from transportation and fireworks, and environmental issues caused by farming.
  • The approach is similar to Mao Zedong's method of resolving contradictions within the Communist Party for achieving unity.
  • Mao's formula was 'unity criticism unity', starting with a desire for unity, criticizing or struggling against contradictions, and arriving at a new basis of unity.
  • This method was used successfully within the Chinese Communist Party in 1942 to achieve party unity before launching a revolution in 1946.

Struggle Sessions and Transforming the World

07:15 - 14:23

  • Struggle sessions are a form of psychological torture used to pressure people into conforming to a new basis.
  • The sustainable development goals of the United Nations Agenda 2030 aim to transform our world.
  • The number 17 is significant in cult numerology and represents a spiral of dialectical change.
  • There are 17 goals and 169 targets in the sustainable development goals.
  • The targets are divided into categories, including those oriented toward people.

Categorizations and Secret Goals

13:58 - 21:13

  • The 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) are divided into different categories and organized in various ways.
  • One categorization is the SDG pyramid, which has 10 goals oriented toward people, 5 goals oriented toward ecology, and 2 spiritual goals at the top.
  • Another categorization is based on the biosphere, society, economy, and partnership. The biosphere goals focus on the environment, while societal goals include gender equality and zero hunger. The economy builds upon these goals.
  • Goal number 17 is partnership for all the other goals.
  • There are two bids for a secret 18th SDG: space exploration and inner development goals focused on personal transformation.
  • UNESCO plays a significant role in promoting the SDGs in education. Higher education is expected to align with the SDGs by around 2025, while K-12 education already incorporates curriculum related to the goals.
  • The SDGs are aspirational targets that individuals are expected to aspire to achieve. Social-emotional learning is used to overcome cognitive dissonance and stress associated with adopting the SDG agenda in education.

Approaches to Implementing ESG and SDGs

20:48 - 28:05

  • There are three approaches to implementing ESG and the sustainable development goals (SDGs): top-down power of public-private partnerships, education to transform youth, and rewriting the social contract.
  • The goal is to create global citizens who live in accordance with the SDGs.
  • Global citizenship education focuses on responsibilities and duties rather than rights.
  • The implementation of SDGs will involve a strong social credit system and ruthless enforcement.
  • The SDGs include ending poverty and hunger, but these goals are unrealistic and serve as excuses for power grabs.
  • Promoting sustainable agriculture while achieving food security is contradictory and may lead to synthetic foods.
  • Massive wealth redistribution is expected, which will collapse economies and harm people's lives.
  • The Great Reset aims to bring us to Agenda 2030 and implement the SDGs as a new model.

Agenda 2030, Mao's Programs, and Gender Equality

27:40 - 34:40

  • Agenda 2030 aims to reset to a sustainable model with the sustainable development goals.
  • Mao's centrally planned agricultural programs resulted in millions of deaths.
  • Goal 3: Ensure healthy lives and promote well-being for all at all ages raises concerns about liberty and redistribution.
  • Goal 4: Inclusive and equitable quality education is incompatible with producing quality education.
  • Lifelong learning opportunities may lead to lifelong brainwashing victims.
  • Goal 5: Achieve gender equality and empower all women and girls, including trans women.

Gender Equality, Water Access, and Economic Growth

34:17 - 41:20

  • Goal five of achieving gender equality and empowering all women and girls is biased against men.
  • Goal six of ensuring availability and sustainable management of water and sanitation for all can be used as an excuse for ideological control over water access.
  • Goal seven of ensuring access to affordable, reliable, sustainable, and modern energy for all will likely result in brownouts and unreliable energy sources.
  • Goal eight of promoting sustained, inclusive, and sustainable economic growth may lead to redistribution and subjective determination of decent work.

Sustainable Economic Growth and Infrastructure

40:56 - 48:02

  • Goal eight promotes sustained inclusive and sustainable economic growth.
  • Sustainable capitalism is the model being warned about, where sustainability becomes a tyranny of the future.
  • ESG compliance and social credit are used to control economic growth and consumer behavior.
  • Goal nine focuses on building resilient infrastructure and promoting inclusive and sustainable industrialization.
  • The United Nations aims to have control over infrastructure layouts and ensure global cooperation.
  • Goal ten aims to reduce inequality within and among countries, which can be seen as a form of global communism.
  • Goal eleven emphasizes making cities and human settlements inclusive, safe, resilient, and sustainable according to their agenda.

Cities, Consumption Patterns, and Climate Change

47:46 - 55:11

  • The SDGs aim to make cities and human settlements inclusive, safe, resilient, and sustainable.
  • Goal 12 is about ensuring sustainable consumption and production patterns.
  • Klaus Schwab suggests moving away from an economy of production and consumption towards an economy of sharing and caring.
  • The stakeholders running the SDGs will determine what counts as sustainable consumption and production patterns.
  • Goal 13 focuses on taking urgent action to combat climate change and its impacts.
  • The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change is seen as the primary forum for negotiating global response to climate change.
  • Goal 13 empowers the United Nations to be a tyrannical global government entity in the name of combating climate change.
  • The United Nations plans to set up a program that can declare crisis shocks over member nations, overriding national laws and obliterating national sovereignty.
  • Climate change is used as an excuse to seize power whenever necessary.
  • Goal 14 aims to conserve and sustainably use oceans, seas, and marine resources for sustainable development.
  • This goal gives decision-making control over these resources to stakeholder councils of experts.

Terrestrial Ecosystems, Peaceful Societies, and Global Partnerships

54:59 - 1:02:25

  • Goal 15 of the sustainable development agenda aims to protect, restore, and promote sustainable use of terrestrial ecosystems.
  • This goal can be used as an excuse for seizing power over land and resources, allowing global institutions like the United Nations to decide what happens.
  • Goal 16 focuses on promoting peaceful and inclusive societies for sustainable development.
  • Inclusive societies are used to control borders and agitate for various causes by labeling them as racist or transphobic.
  • Justice for all is redefined as social justice, which prioritizes group rights over individual rights.
  • Access to justice for all means more woke tyranny and the pursuit of fully realized communism.
  • Goal 17 aims to strengthen the means of implementing sustainable development goals and revitalize global partnerships.
  • The goal is to ensure everyone is on board with the agenda and strengthen methods like social emotional learning and social credit systems.

Revitalizing Global Partnership and Implementing Sustainable Development Goals

1:01:58 - 1:09:44

  • The United Nations Agenda 2030 aims to revitalize the global partnership for sustainable development.
  • There are 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) in total, with an additional goal called SDG plus one.
  • The SDGs focus on social emotional learning, brainwashing, and under education for all.
  • The inner development goals aim to bring the SDGs internally into the mind.
  • The agenda seeks to transform the world and strengthen universal peace and freedom.
  • Eradicating poverty is seen as the greatest global challenge, but it does not address its causes effectively.
  • All countries and stakeholders will collaborate to implement this plan, with stakeholders being representatives of the inner circle.
  • The agenda aims to free humanity from poverty and want while healing and securing the planet.
  • It emphasizes the need for bold and transformative steps to shift towards a sustainable path under their control.
  • No one will be left behind on this collective journey according to the agenda.
  • The new universal agenda consists of 17 Sustainable Development Goals and aims to build upon previous Millennium Development Goals.

Implementing Sustainable Development Goals and Global Partnership

1:09:22 - 1:16:33

  • They seek to build on the Millennium Development Goals and complete what they did not achieve.
  • They expanded to 17 goals in order to realize the human rights of all.
  • The universal declaration of human rights from the United Nations never talks about individual rights, only collective species being rights.
  • They aim to achieve gender equality and empower all women and girls.
  • The sustainable development goals are integrated and balanced across economic, social, environmental, and spiritual dimensions.
  • The goals and targets will stimulate action over the next 15 years in areas of critical importance for humanity and the planet.
  • We are halfway through this 15-year period, but everything they do makes everything worse.
  • They are determined to end poverty, hunger, ensure human potential is fulfilled in dignity and equality, protect the planet from degradation, ensure prosperous lives in harmony with nature, foster peaceful societies free from fear and violence.
  • No sustainable development without peace and no peace without sustainable development. Threats are made if their vision is not followed.
  • They aim to mobilize means required for implementation through a global partnership focused on the needs of the poorest and most vulnerable.

Implementing Sustainable Development Goals and Global Partnership (Continued)

1:16:08 - 1:23:31

  • The sustainable development agenda will be implemented through a revitalized global partnership.
  • All countries and stakeholders are expected to participate, regardless of their choice.
  • Some people are considered enemies, while others are part of the people.
  • The interlinkages and integrated nature of the sustainable development goals are crucial for achieving the agenda's purpose.
  • A total of 91 paragraphs outline the goals, means of implementation, and global partnership.
  • The implementation will require a strong global partnership and ambitious means of implementation.
  • Government, civil society, private sector, United Nations system, and other actors will be involved in the implementation process.
  • The means of implementation targets under each goal are equally important as other goals and targets.
  • The Addis Ababa Action Agenda supports and complements the 2030 agenda for sustainable development.

Means of Implementation and Global Partnership

1:23:07 - 1:30:53

  • The Addis Ababa action agenda supports the 2030 agenda for sustainable development.
  • It relates to domestic public resources, domestic and international private businesses and finance, international development cooperation, international trade as an engine for development, debt and debt sustainability, science, technology, innovation and capacity building, and data monitoring and follow-up.
  • Cohesive nationally owned sustainable development strategies will be at the heart of efforts.
  • Each country has primary responsibility for its own economic and social development.
  • National policies and development strategies cannot be overemphasized.
  • National development efforts need to be supported by an enabling international economic environment.
  • The implementation of relevant strategies and programs of action is supported.
  • The major challenge in conflict countries to achieve durable peace and sustainable developments is recognized.
  • Middle-income countries still face significant challenges to achieve sustainable development.
  • Public policies and the mobilization of domestic resources are central to sustainable development.
  • Private business activity drives inclusive economic growth and job creation.
  • All businesses are called upon to apply creativity and innovation to solving sustainable development challenges.
  • A universal rules-based multilateral trading system is promoted under the World Trade Organization.
  • Trade-related capacity building is provided for developing countries.
  • The need to assist developing countries in attaining long-term debt sustainability is recognized.
  • Lenders have a responsibility not to undermine a country's debt sustainability.
  • A technology facilitation mechanism is launched to support the Sustainable Development Goals.

Science, Technology, Innovation, and Global Partnership

1:30:23 - 1:38:10

  • The United Nations Interagency Task Team on Science, Technology, and Innovation for the sustainable development goals will promote coordination, coherence, and cooperation within the United Nations system.
  • The task team will work with representatives from civil society, the private sector, and the scientific community.
  • The task team will prepare meetings of the multi-stakeholder forum on science technology and innovation for sustainable development goals.
  • The online platform will establish a comprehensive mapping of existing science technology and innovation initiatives within and beyond the United Nations.
  • The online platform will facilitate access to information, knowledge, experience, best practices, and lessons learned on science technology and innovation facilitation.
  • The multi-stakeholder forum on science technology and innovation for the sustainable development goals will be convened once a year to discuss cooperation around thematic areas.

Combating Climate Change and Global Partnerships

1:37:40 - 1:44:51

  • The United Nations aims to combat climate change and its impacts by taking urgent action.
  • Goal 14 is to conserve and sustainably use oceans, seas, and marine resources for sustainable development.
  • Goal 15 focuses on protecting land, restoring ecosystems, combating desertification, and halting biodiversity loss.
  • Goal 16 aims to promote peaceful and inclusive societies with access to justice and effective institutions.
  • Goal 17 seeks to strengthen means of implementation and revitalize global partnerships for sustainable development.
  • The Great Reset initiative parallels Mao's program in China, leading to disastrous consequences.
  • The objective is to replace shareholder capitalism with stakeholder capitalism controlled by the government.
  • This new economic system called a circular economy will lead to suffering, poverty, destruction, and death for most people while benefiting the technocratic elite.
  • Social credit systems like those in China will be used as tools of control in this new system.
  • A major target is social-emotional learning in schools that facilitates brainwashing of children.
  • Another target is the ESG economy facilitated through corporations, municipalities, institutions, hospitals, non-profits, and startups.
  • Resistance against the implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals is crucial to prevent global tyranny.
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