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Showing posts from May, 2018

Memorial Day, 2018--Fighting A Different Kind of War

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I have often wondered whether the greatest time to have lived as an American might have been during the 1940’s.  It was during that time that my parents and others of their day earned the title, “Greatest Generation.”  They were the generation, who as fate determined, found themselves tasked with the purpose of defeating powerful Nazi and Imperialist aggressors, in the end preventing, or at least postponing, enslavement of the world.  The state of the world then was far from ideal, which is largely my point.   Relative to their time in history and the conditions of life they entered, that generation advanced the ball.  They defeated their day’s enemies overseas and returned home to build a life, work on social problems, raise the next generation, my generation, and now they are practically gone. And I still wonder whether the ‘40’s might have been the greatest of times to live as an American. But over the last several years, it has been my pleasure to get to know so many people w

Agenda 21 In Forsyth's Comprehensive Plan

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In recent weeks, my articles have addressed certain outside influences at work guiding Forsyth County planning purposes .  I began citing three “residential design standards” meetings I attended, run by private consultants rather than county planners.  In each, I witnessed those consultants leading a smattering of attendees, ostensibly representing the entire population Forsyth County, through a process designed to appear democratic, but instead is one in which the results are predetermined.  I referred to these meetings as “ Delphi sessions .” So how do I know that the procedures I witnessed were designed to fool the attendees toward predetermined outcomes?  I simply observed and asked.  In the first meeting, the consultant leading the program told the attendees that the input they offered in the form of “yellow stickies” placed upon various residential design elements “they liked,” would lead to tabulated results to be used later in process.  Yet in the culminating meeting the p

Will County Government Overreach Never End?

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Over the past several weeks, I have shared with you knowledge of an outside agenda actively working to guide Forsyth County planning purposes.  Last week, I documented the progression of that agenda, one which emerged several decades ago under the auspices of the United Nations and which reshaped an entire body of US Federal regulations during the administration of President Bill Clinton.  Since then, those regulations have been continually expanded and enforced on the states.  That agenda has a name: “Agenda 21-Sustainable Development.” What led me to bring this up is that a few weeks back I discovered a movement afoot in the workings of the Forsyth County Planning Department, an initiative to empower county government to control and standardize what new privately-built homes in Forsyth County must look like.  As a builder in my 4th decade, that prospect is so peculiar, so foreign and shocking, I had to know more.  So I attended three associated events, three “Delphi Sessions

Outside Agenda Guides Forsyth Planning

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Last week, in my article entitled, “County Government Represents You, No one Else,” I wrote that the enemies against whom President Trump has been battling since taking office have a presence right here in Forsyth County.  I cited an agenda pushed here, and for that matter in every county in Georgia and every state in America.  I revealed that the agenda to which I referred is one laced among a host of federal and state regulations.   I left you with a reminder that, regardless of any agendas foisted upon those holding elected office in our county government, our Constitution requires Forsyth officials to prioritize the interests of the citizens who elect them first, before considering lesser interests of private developers, or agendas imposed by regional commissions or the State of Georgia. This week I promised to reveal the agenda to which I referred last week, and who is behind it.   To do that I need to take you back to June of 1976, when convened the United Nations Conf