World Government Advocates Want to M.U.C.K. Up Our World
Nov 13, 2018 17:21:34 GMT -5
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Post by Daniel on Nov 13, 2018 17:21:34 GMT -5
World Government Advocates Want to M.U.C.K. Up Our World
By E. Jeffrey Ludwig
November 11, 2018
One world government is an agenda to supersede the nation-state concept that is perceived by its backers as fundamentally selfish, and as having misguided assumptions about life, liberty, property, and the pursuit of happiness. The United Nations made it very clear that it intends to supervise a program that will change every aspect of life on our planet by 2030 by issuing its statement “Transforming Our World: the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.”
In this writer’s view, one world government is built around four basic assumptions about human nature and the purpose of government. These basic assumptions comprise the acronym MUCK. The first is Magnanimity (M) as needed towards the masses of humans on the planet. The idea of a world divided into Developed Countries, Developing Countries (DC’s), and Less Developed Developing countries (LDDC’s) – standard since the end of WWII -- is perceived by many of the neo-Marxist, secular humanist, needs-oriented, dogmatic globalists as itself a form of stratification.
The above tripartite distinction was embraced by the left in the 1960’s. The idea was to lend a helping hand up to our poorer brothers. Walt Rostow, a Harvard economics professor, had such a model in mind for development. The better off developed countries would pour assistance into the poorer and poorest countries through the IMF and World Bank – along with the UN, these financial institutions were created at the end of WWII -- until those countries reached an economic place Rostow called the “takeoff stage.” At that point they would be generating enough surplus capital to invest in their own growth. However, the takeoff stages Prof. Rostow envisioned never took place on a grand scale.
The above tripartite distinction was embraced by the left in the 1960’s. The idea was to lend a helping hand up to our poorer brothers. Walt Rostow, a Harvard economics professor, had such a model in mind for development. The better off developed countries would pour assistance into the poorer and poorest countries through the IMF and World Bank – along with the UN, these financial institutions were created at the end of WWII -- until those countries reached an economic place Rostow called the “takeoff stage.” At that point they would be generating enough surplus capital to invest in their own growth. However, the takeoff stages Prof. Rostow envisioned never took place on a grand scale.
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