The document details a litany of programs which empower a global government under the control of the unelected United Nations.
“We are at a time of profound global transformation. We are confronted by rising catastrophic and existential risks, many caused by the choices we make,” the Pact for the Future said on page 1. “Yet this is also a moment of hope and opportunity. Global transformation is a chance for renewal and progress grounded in our common humanity.”
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The United Nations (U.N.) published ‘The Pact for the Future, Global Digital Compact & Declaration on Future Generations‘ in September. It seeks global government control in all areas of human existence – referred to as a ‘global transformation’.
The document was adopted at the U.N.’s Summit of the Future, held between September 22 and 23 at the U.N. headquarters in New York City, New York. It covered a wide range of topics in five chapters over its 60 pages.
Note this document should not be confused with another U.N. document, ‘Governing AI for Humanity‘, also published in September.
The fields covered in this document include climate change austerity, diversity, equity & inclusion (DEI), gender politics, international tax cooperation, international funding programs, universal healthcare, global vaccination programs, global abortion programs, illegal alien importation, globalism in response to nuclear war, ‘misinformation’ & ‘disinformation’ censorship, hate speech laws, letting children decide global government policy, global policing, among others.
“We are at a time of profound global transformation. We are confronted by rising catastrophic and existential risks, many caused by the choices we make,” the Pact for the Future said on page 1. “Yet this is also a moment of hope and opportunity. Global transformation is a chance for renewal and progress grounded in our common humanity.”
Chapter I covers the U.N.’s ‘sustainable development and financing for development’ agenda.
Action 1 on page 4 of the document regards the global climate austerity of Agenda 2030 under the sustainable development goals (SDG).
“We will take bold, ambitious, accelerated, just and transformative actions to implement the 2030 Agenda, achieve the Sustainable Development Goals and leave no one behind,” the Pact for the Future said on page 4. “We will strengthen our actions to address climate change.”
This action item includes the full implementation of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, the Addis Ababa Action Agenda and the Paris Agreement.
Action 2 on page 4 includes ‘ending poverty’ which includes innovations in the social sector, especially education and health. It should be noted that some may consider mRNA vaccines to be a health ‘innovation’.
Part (i) of Action 4 on page 6 discusses ‘international tax cooperation’ as a way of achieving the SDG’s.
Part (b) of Action 6 on page 7 includes universal healthcare on a global scale. Universal healthcare is also known as socialized healthcare. Part (e) of Action 6 promotes the illegal alien invasion under the U.N. term ‘migration’. This is the same U.N. that published the document ‘Replacement Migration‘ in the year 2000. It should be noted that universal healthcare would include funding the healthcare of the illegal aliens.
“Maximize the positive contribution of migrants to the sustainable development of origin, transit, destination and host countries and strengthen international partnerships and global cooperation for safe, orderly and regular migration to comprehensively address the drivers of irregular migration and ensure the safety, dignity and human rights of all migrants, regardless of their migration status,” the Pact for the Future said on page 7.
Action 8 on page 8 emphasizes gender politics as it relates to the SDG’s.
“We will achieve gender equality and the empowerment of all women and girls as a crucial contribution to progress across all the Sustainable Development Goals and targets,” the Pact for the Future said on page 8.
Part (d) of Action 8 discusses removing the ‘gender gap’. This term is often used in the context of the ‘gender wage gap’, a phenomenon where women earn less, often due to their own nature of being less career-based and more family-based.
“Significantly increase investments to close the gender gap, including in the care and support economy, acknowledging the linkage between poverty and gender inequality and the need to strengthen support for institutions in relation to gender equality and the empowerment of women,” the Pact for the Future said on page 8.
Part (f) covers universal abortion coverage under the liberal term ‘sexual and reproductive health’.
“Ensure universal access to sexual and reproductive health and reproductive rights as agreed in accordance with the Programme of Action,” the Pact for the Future said on page 8.
Action 9 on pages 8-9 encompasses a strengthening of climate change policies which include a ‘net-zero’ emission policy and CO2 capture technology that sucks the life-giving gas that plants breathe out of the atmosphere.
Action 10 on pages 10-11 discusses environmental conservation. One part of that includes ‘zero-waste initiatives’ in part (c) on page 11. It may be noted that one zero-waste initiative is dead human composting and another is biosludge.
Action 11 on page 11 includes promoting culture and sports as a means of propagandizing the public.
Action 12 on page 12 relates to the post-industrial world 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, an agenda that hinders real development in the name of climate change.
Chapter II on page 12 gets into ‘international peace and security’. The document lists nuclear war threats as a justification for global governance – a problem, reaction, solution strategy.
“The global security landscape is undergoing profound transformation. We are concerned about the increasing and diverse threats to international peace and security, particularly violations of the purposes and principles of the Charter, and the growing risks of a nuclear war which could pose an existential threat to humanity,” the Pact for the Future said on page 12. “Amid this changing context, we remain committed to establish a just and lasting peace. We reaffirm our commitment to act in accordance with international law, including the Charter and its purposes and principles, and to fulfil our obligations in good faith. We reaffirm the imperative of upholding and promoting the rule of law at the international level in accordance with the principles of the Charter of the United Nations, and in this regard recall the importance of the Declaration on Principles of International Law concerning Friendly Relations and Cooperation among States in accordance with the Charter of the United Nations.”
Action 14 on page 13 promotes the U.N. as the saviors in cases of global conflict while Action 15 on page 14 promotes the U.N. as the global giver of food. Action 16 on page 14 makes the U.N. the arbiter between nations instead of nations dealing directly with one-another. A global, unelected referee.
Action 17 on page 15 involves an international global court and Action 18 involves global peace, which includes DEI principles and a melding of religions in section (c).
“Combat racism and eliminate racial discrimination, xenophobia and religious intolerance and all other forms of intolerance and discrimination from our societies and promote interreligious and intercultural dialogue,” the Pact for the Future said on page 16.
Part (f) of Action 18 involves a carefully worded form of gun control crackdown under the guise of legislative weapons bans that make weapons illegal.
“Address the risks associated with illicit trade in small arms and light weapons, their parts and ammunition, or associated ammunition, including through national prevention strategies and approaches,” the Pact for the Future said on page 16.
Action 19 on page 16 discusses the U.N. commitment to women, relating females to peace and forcing women to be part of conflict resolution, just because they’re women.
Action 20 on page 17 seeks a similar goal, but with children. It also seeks to allow children to have global government decision making in global conflict resolution in part (a), despite them not having the wisdom of adulthood.
“Take concrete voluntary measures to increase the inclusive representation of youth in decision-making at all levels in prevention and the resolution of conflict, including by increasing opportunities for them to participate in relevant intergovernmental deliberations at the United Nations,” the Pact for the Future said on page 17.
Action 37 on page 27 further elaborates on letting children have a seat at the global government table.
Action 21 drones on with empowering the U.N. with global conflict arbitration and Action 22 does similar but for international waters. Action 23 encompasses counterterrorism operations but stresses terrorism is not related to any specific group of people.
“We reaffirm that terrorism and violent extremism conducive to terrorism cannot and should not be associated with any religion, civilization or ethnic group. We will redouble our efforts to address the conditions conducive to the spread of terrorism,” the Pact for the Future said on page 18.
Action 24 covers the global policing policies promoted by the U.N. while Action 25 on page 19 promotes a global government as a method of nuclear disarmament, a problem, reaction, solution construct. Action 26 does similar but with chemical and biological weapons.
Action 27 includes the U.N. seizing upon new technological opportunities and regulating their use.
Chapter III on page 21 covers ‘science, technology innovation and digital cooperation’. It discusses new and emerging technologies such as A.I. and how the technologies should be transferred to developing countries while focusing on women, children, Afrodescendent populations, indigenous peoples and people with disabilities.
Chapter IV discusses ‘youth and future generations’ and a global vaccination agenda under socialized medicine in Action 34 on page 25.
“Accelerate efforts to achieve universal health coverage to ensure that all young people enjoy the highest attainable standard of physical and mental health, including immunizations and vaccinations and sexual and reproductive health, and address all the challenges faced by developing countries in achieving these goals,” the Pact for the Future said on page 25.
Page 49 covers the global government battle against what it regards as ‘misinformation and disinformation‘.
Chapter V is titled ‘transforming global governance’. It consists of plans for what some may refer to as ‘the New World Order’ and a U.N. goal of renewing trust in globalist institutions.
“Today, our multilateral system, constructed in the aftermath of the Second World War, is under unprecedented strain. It has had remarkable achievements in the past 80 years. But we are not complacent about the future of our international order, and we know that it cannot stand still,” the Pact for the Future said on page 28. “We will take action to strengthen and reinvigorate multilateralism and deepen international cooperation. We reaffirm unwavering commitment to international law, including the Charter, to address global challenges, some of which could overwhelm and threaten all of humanity. A transformation in global governance is essential to ensure that the positive progress we have seen across all three pillars of the work of the United Nations in recent decades does not unravel. We will not allow this to happen.”