The UN “Summit of the Future” begins later this week in New York City, with the “Action Days” starting on September 20-21, and the “Pact for the Future” scheduled for September 22-23.
With more than 1,000 delegates from 193 countries participating in the summit, the UN pact will create an “inter-governmentally negotiated, action-oriented Pact for the Future” focused on controlling “key elements” that include global governance, finance, security, and technology — simply put, the UN’s next step in its goal to gain power over sovereign governments around the world.
The UN’s “Summit of the Future” is the international organization’s latest advancement in establishing the framework for a global government. Previous summits include the 1992 “Earth Summit” in Rio de Janeiro that created the notorious “Agenda 21” action plan, and “The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development” adopted in 2015. While the UN’s mission to gain power over self-governing nations around the world isn’t new, the “Summit of the Future” is the start of its next leap toward a one-world government.
UN Secretary-General António Guterres spoke about the upcoming summit, asking member states to “push hard for the deepest reforms and most meaningful actions possible”:
Thank you for bringing us together today for this Global Call on the Summit of the Future. The Summit is just days away, but getting to this point has taken years of effort. I want to thank you and your governments for your commitment, every step of the way. Member States are now in the final stages of negotiating the three agreements to be adopted at the Summit of the Future: the Pact for the Future, the Global Digital Compact and the Declaration on Future Generations. My appeal is for you to push hard for the deepest reforms and most meaningful actions possible. We need maximum ambition during these final days of negotiation. Because the challenges we face are moving much faster than our ability to solve them. Ferocious conflicts are inflicting terrible suffering. Deep geopolitical divides are creating dangerous tensions, multiplied by nuclear threats. Inequality and injustice corrode trust and fuel populism and extremism. Discrimination, misogyny and racism are taking on new forms. Poverty and hunger are at crisis levels as the Sustainable Development Goals are slipping out of reach. And we have no effective global response to new and even existential threats.
TNA Senior Editor Alex Newman and writer Andrew Muller will be at the Summit of the Future September 22-23, providing exclusive coverage of the “Pact for the Future” for The New American.
Despite the UN’s grandiose goals to reshape global governance, mainstream-media organizations have provided very little coverage in the lead up to the summit. While the media blackout plays a major role in preventing citizens who would presumably oppose the UN from being aware of the global governance transformation taking place, informed citizens can work to prevent their government from surrendering to the UN’s global governance and maintain their national sovereignty.