UNITED NATIONS AND EUROPE DRIVE NEO-COMMUNISM
Among the factors that have contributed to the proliferation of
international organizations are economic globalization, the rise of
Western wealth and, above all, the emergence of the macro-State.
In turn, international organizations, such as the United Nations,
the Council of Europe and the European Union, drive the growth of
macro-states, as well as the diversion of public money to them and
their international bodies.
International organizations are power structures and as such tend to
attract people who believe that societies should be managed in a
centralized manner, limiting individual freedoms for the benefit of
the majority, i.e., with ideas close to communism.
The United Nations has 37,000 employees and the European Union has
32,000 employees. These gigantic human structures have to justify
their existence, so they are continually creating projects and
standards.
The worst thing about this dynamic is that much of what is useful is
censored or modified by neo-communist interests and, to a lesser
extent, by bribes to technicians and politicians, so most of the
work is wasted.
The United Nations Agenda 2030, published in 2015, sets a milestone
in the push for totalitarianism and the macro-State by the UN, the
European Union and the Council of Europe, which are the three main
transnational organizations of the West.
The most noteworthy aspect of the 2030 Agenda is the Sustainable
Development Goals (SDGs) to be achieved by 2030. There are 17 goals
and only the last one refers to the business sector and civil
society, so it can be said that the 2030 Agenda seeks to increase
institutional power directly in the first 16 goals and indirectly in
the last goal. Moreover, given that it aims to mobilize
unprecedented economic resources, it can also be said that it seeks
greater interventionism in the business sector and in societies as a
whole, causing massive impoverishment in the West, which is the
major financier of UN projects.
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