Susanne Posel
Prisonplanet.com
Aug 12, 2012
By 2030 it is expected that an estimated 4 billion people will live in eco-cities, which are controlled environments where sustainability mandates how much water, energy, food and production is allowed in urbanized areas.
Targets and restrictions will replace traditional living to keep the
land used for habitat from becoming a wasteland and protect the
surrounding wildlife.
Global research on renewable energy and clean technology in an
international hub will collaborate to overcome human challenges as
population becomes denser.
In eco-cities, private cars will be banned, forcing people to use
high-speed mass transit, bicycles or simply walk to their destination.
Narrower streets and huge walls to separate the eco-city from the
surrounding wildlife preserves will aid in controlling the temperature
of the city.
Several cities in America are transforming their existing urban
cities into these eco-cities that are marketed as “laboratories of
innovation and progress”.
In Osceola County, Central Florida, Anthony
Pugliese, president and CEO of Pugliese Development Co (PDC) is building
an eco-sustainable city called Destiny
where the entire landscape will reduce on-site carbon emissions to
zero. PDC has partnered with technology companies to mandate LED
lighting, solar panels. The city will sustain a population of an
estimated 250,000; with 10,000 residential units and 7 million sq. ft.
of commercial space.
Use of gray water for irrigation, electric community cars for
every-person use, and a biomass plant that will facilitate the purchase
of energy credits will be the controlling factors that create a
sustainable urban development.
PDC has been given recognition by the Clinton Climate Initiative (CCI),
former president Bill Clinton’s program to advance solutions for
climate change. CCI collaborates with businesses, environmental groups
to bring coercive influence on local, national and over-reaching social
levels to demonstrate the necessity of reforming policy, decision-making
and infrastructure that have Agenda 21 policies at their forefront.
In Cleveland, Ohio, the incorporated Cleveland EcoVillage project
redevelops existing areas through partnerships with the city, regional
transit authority and private developers. Local residents are subject to
Delphi techniques to ensure they cooperate with the changes to their
neighborhood.
The EcoVillage is a national project dedicated to displaying green
building and transit-orientated development by rearranging urban life to
adhere to Agenda 21.
Virginia Tech’s Department of Urban Affairs and Planning located in Alexandria has created an Eco-City Charter and Environmental Action Plan of 2030 that is moving the city toward sustainable development.
They plan on turning Alexandria into an eco-city
that is naturally built with environmental sustainability so that the
city and surrounding areas function as one ecological system. The
social, economic and sense of community will be focused on
sustainability foremost; to prevent “problems in the future”.
All across America, sustainable development “cities” managed and constructed under the policies of Agenda 21 are popping up with the assistance of globalist groups masquerading as grassroots efforts.
One example are the Ecocity Builders,
a non-profit organization which is a collaboration of international
networks of associates that influence and actively participate in local
city planning projects all across the United States. Through training
courses, they advocate the eco-city approach as the only way to continue
in civilized society.
Living in densely populated areas where transportation is limited,
the buldings regulate use of water, energy, and waste; while food
production is strictly managed by the city planners. This is where the
global Elite want to place every man, woman and child.
In the next few decades, we will see the transition of our hometowns
into sustainable prisons. The alterations are happening right now in
most cities where urbanized living is most congested.
Ultimately, the lies of the eco-city concept are that it provides “a
practical vision for a sustainable and restorative human presence on
this planet and suggests a path towards its achievement through the
rebuilding of cities, towns and villages in balance with living
systems.”
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