Friday, August 9, 2024

The UN's 'Summit Of The Future': Plans For A 'Global Transformation'


UN Pact for the Future: All our lives will be dictated to by a selected UN envoy



In September the United Nations is holding its ‘Summit of the Future’. At this meeting, the UN aims to forge a new international consensus on delivering a better present and safeguarding the future by addressing current challenges and those emerging or yet to come.

At the Summit it is hoped that the ‘Pact for the Future’ will be adopted. In addressing future challenges, the Pact is not referring to future challenges during our lifetime; it is referring to generations not yet born. In other words, Jacob Nordangård writes, our lives are in need of global dictates so as not to endanger the generations yet to be born.

Who will represent and make decisions for the generations not yet born?

According to the Pact, the voice of future generations will be represented by an “envoy for future generations.” Who will sit on such a body and which envoy will represent people who have not yet been born is yet to be decided.

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The ultimate goal of the Pact for the Future: A planetary technocracy to manage global crises on behalf of the global corporatocracy

By Jacob Nordangård


There are barely two months left until the big UN meeting ‘Summit of the Future’ (22-23 September) where the ‘Pact for the Future’ is to be signed by world leaders (heads of government and state). 

The Pact, which essentially constitutes a blueprint for a global technocracy to manage global risks on behalf of the global corporatocracy, is now being finalised for completion by early August.

The preparatory work began in 2015 with the report ‘Confronting the Crisis of Global Governance’ by The Commission on Global Security, Justice & Governance.


The commission, which was chaired by former US Secretary of State Madeleine Albright and Nigerian UN diplomat Ibrahim Gambari, recommended that a World Conference on Global Institutions be held when the UN celebrated its 75th anniversary in 2020. The aim was to reform the UN system to make it better equipped to respond effectively to “new threats and opportunities.” At the same time, work began on developing “global governance innovations.”

The commission was supported by the Dutch institute The Hague Institute for Global Justice and the Washington-based think tank Stimson Centre.

Stimson, who has been extremely central in the preparatory work, represents the global corporatocracy (World Economic Forum, Council on Foreign Relations) and international philanthropy (Carnegie, Rockefeller, Ford, Gates, etc.). The Pact is part of their ongoing world conquest.

Madeleine Albright, a protégé of Columbia professor Zbigniew Brzezinski (co-founder of the Trilateral Commission, “TriCom,” with David Rockefeller), was an ideal choice. As a member of TriCom as well as the Council on Foreign Relations, there was no doubt what interests she served.


Five years later, in the middle of a pandemic that was designed to act as a “triggering event,” the UN organisation’s future priorities were discussed at the UN meeting ‘Building the Future We Want, The UN We Need’.


During the meeting, which was arranged in collaboration with the Stimson Centre, a number of proposals and projects were also presented on how the future governance would work.

This included the Climate Governance Commission, whose purpose (in partnership with, among others, the Stimson Centre, the Swedish Global Challenges Foundation, and the ever-present Rockefeller Foundation) is to “developing, proposing and building partnerships that promote feasible, high impact global governance solutions for urgent and effective climate action …”

One year later, UN Secretary-General António Guterres, on behalf of UN member states, presented the report ‘Our Common Agenda’ with twelve commitments to reform the UN system in order to quickly implement the sustainability goals.

Subsequently, eleven policy overviews and a report from the UN panel HLAB on Effective Multilateralism have been published as a basis for the process. This panel was also supported by the Stimson Centre and the Global Challenges Foundation.


The Pact for the Future

In January, the first draft of the Pact was published, followed by negotiations with member states and other stakeholders. The latest revision was published on 17 July.

The Pact’s message is that we are in a “global transformation” where a growing number of global catastrophic risks threaten to completely break the world apart (breakdown).


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