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Attacking Agenda 21

Continuing its 50-year assault on globalism, the John Birch Society attacks a UN plan it claims will gut property rights.

A few days before the John Birch Society鈥檚 December birthday luncheon in Sacramento, Calif., the influence and obsessions of the arch-conservative group were on display thousands of miles away in Washington, D.C., not far from the Smithsonian Institution, where other relics of America鈥檚 past are housed.

On Dec. 4, Republican senators voted down a United Nations treaty that would ban discrimination against people with disabilities. They did so even though Bob Dole, the ailing elder statesman, former presidential standard-bearer, former Republican majority leader and war hero, supported the measure. Dole watched the vote on the Senate floor from his wheelchair, having recently been released from the hospital. According to聽The New York Times, 鈥渁 majority of the Republicans who voted against the treaty, which was modeled on the Americans with Disabilities Act, said they feared it would infringe on American sovereignty.鈥欌


Tom Deweese

Two years ago, the John Birch Society, which hails itself as an educational army, began another aggressive assault on its old enemy. It started a nationwide campaign, this time with a blitz of E-mails, lectures and DVDs, to stop the non-binding Agenda 21, which was passed and signed at the Rio Earth Summit in 1992 by more than 170 world leaders, including President George H.W. Bush. To John Birch Society leaders and others on the right, such as Tom DeWeese 鈥 a close ally and founder of the American Policy Center, which advocates limited growth 鈥 Agenda 21 is a sneak attack by the U.N. on American sovereignty and property rights.

DeWeese had been conducting an almost one-man crusade against Agenda 21 for years before the John Birch Society stepped in with foot soldiers and E-mail lists and gave 鈥渁 skeleton of organization to the movement,鈥 said Arthur R. Thompson, the society鈥檚 CEO. 鈥淲e鈥檙e in a fight to save our country,鈥 he told the California banquet. 鈥淲e鈥檙e in a fight to save the people who are unwilling to bend their knee to a totalitarian state.鈥欌


Hal Shurtleff

Meanwhile, Birch Society chapter leaders have been doing the same thing in public libraries, rec center basements and hotel conference rooms from California to Maine. 鈥淚 think our efforts have played a key role in creating effective opposition to Agenda 21 across the country,鈥 Shurtleff said. The GOP included anti-Agenda 21 language in its party platform. Last May, the Republican-controlled Alabama Legislature became the first to pass a state bill barring the enactment of any policy recommendations traceable to Agenda 21.

鈥淥rganization is so important,鈥 John McManus, the Birch Society president, told the banquet. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 stress that enough. You鈥檝e got to be organized. If we put out a memo from headquarters, it鈥檚 time to get involved in this, all of a sudden all across the country people say, 鈥極kay, give me some tools, give me a DVD, give me a pamphlet, have a speaker come to my community.鈥 And it works. The state of Alabama has come out and said we will not have Agenda 21 in any community in the state of Alabama. Why not have that happen in other places?鈥


John McManus

鈥淲e have established a good network of freedom activists who know how to identify Agenda 21 initiatives,鈥 the Boston-based Shurtleff said. 鈥淲e use Facebook, social media, and emails. There are dozens of Facebook pages dedicated to Agenda 21 as well as hundreds of Tea Party type groups.

鈥淥ur biggest success,鈥 he continued, 鈥渋s raising visibility and making it controversial.鈥