The plan to concentrate cities and hand the power over mega-regions to mega-bankers has been a long time in the making.
How  old, exactly, is this global plan for domination we now know by the  quaint shorthand "Agenda 21"? The plan to concentrate cities and hand  the power over mega-regions to mega-bankers has been a long time in the  making, for sure.
Old enough to be known as Agenda 20 or even Agenda 19, anyway.
The  term itself derives from the 1992 United Nation's Rio Earth Summit, in a  plan that was adopted in a non-binding fashion by participants. In a  practical sense, it gave a blueprint to governments on how to implement  social engineering policy using the environment as a pretext. Most of  the action was slated to take place at the local level, using  regionalism to encircle the jurisdictional boundaries of cities,  municipalities, counties and even states.
The idea goes back to  the Club of Rome, whose 1972 publication The Limits to Growth outlines  the rationale and implementation of lifestyle to meet with limited  resources and bounding population growth. This idea goes back further to  Eugenics, which aims to curb the reproduction of undesired population  groups, while encouraging the well bred.
This idea rides on the  back of the industrial revolution, which brought power to the working  man; power which was seized back from those elites who once ruled with  titles and crowns and who know rule through industrial monopolies and  control of the power of cities.
This 1963 newsreel "Changing  City" incorporates this mentality, selling the viewer on the problems of  urban sprawl and metropolis development, while laying blame at the  difficulty posed by diffused and decentralized power.
'We need  cities,' the film urges, but these cities need to be guiding by  "planners," who need the authority to go outside of these petty  boundaries and consider "land use" and development for the entire area.
The  real pressures of city life, driven by the growth of small towns and  modern life, give way to the authoritarian "solutions" of forcing a move  towards austerity in the name of saving earth's resources while further  compacting people into mega-cities in the name of "sustainability."
Just  check out America2050.org for one of the leading plans on the  connectivity between the United States' burgeoning mega-districts and  their role in the corporate-driven global world of the 21st Century and  beyond.
Allowance for the use of short news clips used reasonably  falls under the "fair use" doctrine. Under Copyright Disclaimer Under  Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use"  for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, and research.
 
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