
C40 Cities
By Karen Schumacher
The United Nations (UN) and World Economic Forum (WEF) have several agendas to transform cities for humanity and achieve Sustainable Development Goal #11, Sustainable Cities and Communities. Among the many targets there are goals for safe and affordable housing and transportation systems (which means no cars), regional planning that deprives citizens from local representation, changing dietary habits, all of which obliterate the foundation of our Republic.
Then there are the notorious 15 minute cities, 20 minute neighborhoods, Nature-Positive Cities, Net Zero Carbon Cities, Smart Cities, Agile Cities, the Global Smart Cities Alliance, and the New Urban Agenda to name just a few other schemes.
But there is another one, C40 Cities, a global network of mayors united to confront the climate crisis and build equitable and thriving communities. These “thriving” cities require a new system of governance that meet the Paris Agreement to reduce warming. In order to accomplish this feat, it will require a transition to renewable energy sources, eating more plant food and wasting less food, eliminating cars, managing waste more efficiently, and better urban planning to cram as many people as possible into small areas.
A map is available that identifies which cities are participants. Or, to get an idea of how C40 cities are being transformed in America, any listed city on the map can be searched to see what changes are being made. As an example, Seattle has a list of case studies that describe what the city is doing to achieve C40 goals. A general sense of what damage these concepts create in cities can be seen in C40 members New York City, Washington DC, San Francisco, and Seattle as they are a few examples of the worst managed cities in America.
Governed by foreigners with former, and current, U.S. mayors, and a Board of Directors that decides how funding is spent, C40 has a broad range of funders and partners from across the world, surely only for the purposes of financial gain, power and control, and to reinvent cities.
Regardless of which poison you pick, the underlying concept is the same, eradicated freedom, forcing everyone into a lifestyle that is dictated and controlled, and being placed under constant surveillance with every activity tracked. It goes far beyond just a 15 minute city concept, it is full blown technocracy with social engineering, and is currently being implemented right here in America.