UN's "Pact for the Future" Calls for Global Population Reduction Treaty

As the United Nations prepares to approve its "Pact for the Future" at the Summit of the Future on September 22, a significant focus is placed on the issue of overpopulation, which is labeled as the most pressing risk facing the planet. This ambitious initiative seeks to establish a new global treaty requiring countries to set and pursue population reduction targets every five years. Central to the pact is the contentious "planetary commons" approach, advocating for a global governance model that would oversee critical resources such as air and water, echoing the controversial ideas of earlier globalist frameworks like the Eco-92 Earth Charter. As proponents cite urgent environmental needs, the implications of such a treaty raise profound questions about individual rights, sovereignty, and the future of global governance.

TPV: The United Nation’s “Pact for the Future,” set to be approved at the Summit of the Future in New York on September 22, cites “overpopulation” as the most serious risk in the world today and issues a call for urgent depopulation of the globe.

Globalist leaders are now pushing for a new global treaty where countries set population reduction targets every five years and work towards them in an effort to reduce the global population.

The Pact for the Future also proposes big changes to how the world is governed, in response to what the globalist organization is claiming are “serious global risks.”

A key idea in the Pact is the “planetary commons” approach, which means creating a global government with the power to control Earth’s vital systems, like air, water, and natural resources.

This concept comes from a policy paper by the Global Challenges Foundation, the United Nations University Center for Policy Research, and the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research.

The Summit of the Future is happening on the 33rd anniversary of a controversial document called “The Initiative for Eco-92 Earth Charter.”

This document, distributed at a UN conference in Des Moines before the 1992 Rio environmental summit, suggested strict population control and managing the world’s resources by a select few powerful countries.

As Jacob Nordangård pointed out, both the Eco-92 Earth Charter and the current planetary commons approach share disturbing globalist similarities. Both suggest moving towards global management of Earth’s key resources, including the atmosphere, oceans, land, and ice.

The Global Challenges Foundation, led by billionaire financier László Szombatfalvy, has also focused on these issues.

UN's "Pact for the Future" Calls for Global Population Reduction Treaty
Globalist billionaire László Szombatfalvy has funded the Overpopulation Project

Szombatfalvy has written about overpopulation and its environmental impacts, even funding The Overpopulation Project, which looks at how to reduce the global population in a “humane” way.

The Overpopulation Project has a motto: “Too Many People Consuming Too Much.” One of their ideas is for a new global treaty where countries set population targets every five years and work towards them.

Szombatfalvy believes the world needs a strong global government to deal with these problems, one that doesn’t require all nations to be democratic in the traditional sense.

His views reflect a Malthusian perspective, similar to the authors of the Eco-92 Earth Charter, who called for a “New World Order” where major nations would make global decisions.

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