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United Nations Sect'y General Calls For Green Jobs
sfgate.com ^ | 11/26/08 | sfgate.com

Posted on 11/26/2008 4:02:53 PM PST by thetru

I would be remiss if I didn't point you to Secretary General Ban Ki Moon's op-ed in today's Chronicle, making an economic case for U.S. investment in green jobs.

Here it is, in full: Amid the pressures of the global financial crisis, some ask how we can afford to tackle climate change. The better question is: Can we afford not to? Put aside the familiar arguments - that the science is clear, that climate change represents an indisputable existential threat to the planet, and that every day we do not act the problem grows worse. Instead,

let us make the case purely on bread-and-butter economics. At a time when the global economy is sputtering, we need growth. At a time when unemployment in many nations is rising, we need new jobs. At a time when poverty threatens to overtake hundreds of millions of people, especially in the least developed world, we need the promise of prosperity.

This possibility is at our fingertips. Economists at the United Nations call for a Green New Deal - a deliberate echo of the energizing vision of President Franklin Roosevelt during the Great Depression of the 1930s.

(Excerpt) Read more at sfgate.com ...


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Foreign Affairs; Government
KEYWORDS: emissions; nations; united; wto

1 posted on 11/26/2008 4:02:53 PM PST by thetru
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To: thetru

What a man of vision....the economies of the world are smoldering and this guy wants to plant some flowers.

Who says the UN is out of touch?


2 posted on 11/26/2008 4:04:05 PM PST by relictele
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To: relictele

I know; how about a return of the family farm?


3 posted on 11/26/2008 4:05:57 PM PST by SoldierDad (Proud Dad of a U.S. Army Infantry Soldier presently instructing at Ft. Benning.)
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To: relictele

Global Investors Urge 9000 CEOs to Join UN Global Compact (New York, 27 October 2008) — In a powerful endorsement of the UN Global Compact, a group of global investors today announced a collaborative effort urging the Chief Executive Officers of approximately 9000 companies to commit to the UN Global Compact and its ten principles.
The 52 investors manage approximately US$4.4 trillion in assets and are this week collectively writing to companies in the MSCI World, FTSE All-World and IFC Emerging Markets Indices to ask them to sign the UN Global Compact, or explain any decision not to join the Compact.

The investors are all signatories to the Principles for Responsible Investment (PRI). They include investors based in the US, Europe, Australia and emerging markets.

“This is an unprecedented move by institutional investors”, said Georg Kell, Executive Director of the UN Global Compact. “Amid the current financial crisis, this underscores the importance of universal principles and the long-term management of environmental, social and governance issues. We applaud this effort, which represents the largest recruitment drive ever undertaken with respect to the UN Global Compact”.

For more information contact Elliot Frankal, PRI communications manager on + 44 (0)7989 524780 or elliot.frankal@unpri.org.

The Principles for Responsible Investment (PRI) The Principles for Responsible Investment, convened by UNEP FI and the UN Global Compact, was established as a framework to help investors achieve better long-term investment returns and sustainable markets through better analysis of environmental, social and governance issues in investment process and the exercise of responsible ownership practices. The Principles themselves, a full list of signatories and more information can be found at www.unpri.org.

http://www.unglobalcompact.org/NewsAndEvents/news_archives/2008_10_27.html

# ### # Media Contacts: Matthias Stausberg Spokesperson UN Global Compact stausberg@un.org +1-917-367-3423

Gavin Power Deputy Director UN Global Compact powerg@un.org

Over 2000 American companies have signed on to this agreement

It’s putting the United Nations first and not the United States Constitution


4 posted on 11/26/2008 4:07:15 PM PST by thetru
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To: thetru
some ask how we can afford to tackle climate change.

Alas, read my tag line and meet the boss.

5 posted on 11/26/2008 4:10:09 PM PST by EGPWS (Trust in God, question everyone else)
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To: relictele
Genius The Crininton Plan reborn .
6 posted on 11/26/2008 4:10:54 PM PST by Cheetahcat (Osamabama the Wright kind of Racist!)
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To: relictele
the economies of the world are smoldering and this guy wants to plant some flowers.

Doesn't that make you feel good friend?

Flowers are pretty after all and are an icon of nature....

7 posted on 11/26/2008 4:12:45 PM PST by EGPWS (Trust in God, question everyone else)
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To: Cheetahcat

Its the Saul Alinsky/Rahm Emmanual plan too: amid crisis and chaos, rush in your leftest agendas.


8 posted on 11/26/2008 4:12:50 PM PST by C210N (The television has mounted the most serious assault on Republicanism since Das Kapital.)
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To: C210N

It is how brown shirts are born.=Center for Environmental and Regulatory


9 posted on 11/26/2008 4:14:03 PM PST by thetru
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To: thetru
You want to know how the world's economies are doing? Ask a scrap man, yep that's the guy, he collects up all those soda pop cans, you see them along the roads, most everywhere. Back in the summer he could get $.40 a pound for aluminum. Today is 2 to 3 cents a pound. Worldwide the market for scrap metal has dried up. Steel is currently worth zero to a scrap company, I just asked.

No scrap metal, and aluminum is considered the most valuable because it uses so much energy to originally produce, no worldwide product production. Copper was at 2 cents a pound locally today. So the back end is telling the front end, the world's economies are at near dead stop.

Not good.

10 posted on 11/26/2008 4:25:22 PM PST by Tarpon (America's first principles, freedom, liberty, market economy and self-reliance will never fail.)
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To: All

Why don’t the leaders of the UN shut the F up and go away already . Stupip ass political hacks, spoiled sons of the idle rich and communist bums. OUT I SAY!


11 posted on 11/26/2008 4:27:41 PM PST by sonic109
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To: sonic109

Obama’s $845 billion U.N. plan forwarded to U.S. Senate floor
‘Global Poverty Act’ to cost each citizen $2,500 or more

The U.S. Senate soon could debate whether you, your spouse and each of your children – as well as your in-laws, parents, grandparents, neighbors and everyone else in America – each will spend $2,500 or more to reduce poverty around the world.

The plan sponsored by Sen. Barack Obama, the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee, is estimated to cost the U.S. some $845 billion over the coming few years in an effort to raise the standard of living around the globe.

Barack Obama

S.2433 already has been approved in one form by the U.S. House of Representatives and now has been placed on the Senate Legislative Calendar for pending debate.

WND previously reported the proposal demands the president develop “and implement” a policy to “cut extreme global poverty in half by 2015 through aid, trade, debt relief” and other programs.

Cliff Kincaid at Accuracy in Media has published a critique asserting that while the Global Poverty Act sounds nice, the adoption could “result in the imposition of a global tax on the United States” and would make levels of U.S. foreign aid spending “subservient to the dictates of the United Nations.”

(Story continues below)

He said the legislation, if approved, dedicates 0.7 percent of the U.S. gross national product to foreign aid, which over 13 years, he said, would amount to $845 billion “over and above what the U.S. already spends.”

The plan passed the House in 2007 “because most members didn’t realize what was in it,” Kincaid reported. “Congressional sponsors have been careful not to calculate the amount of foreign aid spending that it would require.”

A recent statement from Obama’s office noted the support offered by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

“With billions of people living on just dollars a day around the world, global poverty remains one of the greatest challenges and tragedies the international community faces,” Obama said. “It must be a priority of American foreign policy to commit to eliminating extreme poverty and ensuring every child has food, shelter, and clean drinking water. As we strive to rebuild America’s standing in the world, this important bill will demonstrate our promise and commitment to those in the developing world.

“Our commitment to the global economy must extend beyond trade agreements that are more about increasing profits than about helping workers and small farmers everywhere,” he continued.

Another critic, however, has been commentator Glenn Beck, whose YouTube video critique can be seen here:

“Not one dime would go to fixing America,” the commentary said.

Obama has continued to lobby for such massive expenditures on his campaign stops. During an address as recently as last week, he said, “I’ll double our foreign assistance to $50 billion by 2012, and use it to support a stable future in failing states, and sustainable growth in Africa; to halve global poverty and to roll back disease.”

Beck and Kincaid pointed out that the plan not only commits the U.S. to the anti-poverty spending proposal, it also adopts for the U.S. the United Nations Millennium Development Goal, which includes a variety of treaties and protocols advocated by the U.N.

Objections have remained strong. Duane Lester, writing at the All American blogger, warned that the U.S. has yet to be able to win its own war on poverty.

“On January 8, 1964, President Lyndon Johnson declared “all-out war on human poverty and unemployment in these United States.” This “all-out war” would last through the presidencies of Nixon, Ford, Carter, Reagan, H.W. Bush, Clinton, and George W. Bush. We have spent billions of dollars fighting this war, and what have we achieved?”

He continued, “Very little. In 1964, there were 36 million Americans living in poverty, or about 19 percent of the population. In the 40 years between 1964 and 2004: ... poverty never measured less than 11 percent of the population. In 1983, under President Reagan, poverty registered 15.2 percent; in 1993, at the beginning of Bill Clinton’s presidency, poverty was measured at 13.7 percent of the population. In 2004, under George W. Bush, a president often accused by the political Left as not caring about the poor, the poverty rate declined to 12.7 percent. Still, some 37 million Americans remain poor.”

Despite that performance, “Obama is ready to take the fight global,” said Lester.

“In addition to seeking to eradicate poverty, that declaration commits nations to banning ‘small arms and light weapons’ and ratifying a series of treaties, including the International Criminal Court Treaty, the Kyoto Protocol (global warming treaty), the Convention on Biological Diversity, the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women, and the Convention on the Rights of the Child,” he wrote.

Tom DeWeese at NewsWithViews said the plan “is very telling” about what Obama would do as president.

DeWeese, president of the American Policy Center, warned the over-arching plan includes the ideals of consolidating all international agencies under the U.N., regulation by the U.N. of all corporate environmental issues, license fees charged by the U.N. to use air, water and natural resources, a restructuring that would give hand-picked non-governmental organizations huge influence, authorize a standing U.N. army and require registration of all arms


12 posted on 11/26/2008 5:06:48 PM PST by thetru
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