Article Image

IPFS News Link • Globalism

Global Government Is No Conspiracy Theory

• https://www.activistpost.com,by Dr. David McGrogan

What is crystallising is not exactly a single world Government, but rather a complicated mixture of aligned institutions, organisations, networks, systems and fora which has sometimes been given the fancy name of a 'bricolage' by international relations theorists. There is no centre, but rather a vast and nebulous conglomeration.

This does not mean, though, that global government (or 'global governance', as it is more commonly known) is emerging organically. It is being purposively directed. Again, this is no conspiracy theory; it is something that the people involved openly discuss – they hide their plans in perfectly plain sight. And this has been going on for a long time. In the early 1990s, when the Cold War had drawn to a close, the UN convened something called the Commission on Global Governance, which released a final report – called 'Our Global Neighbourhood' – in 1995. It makes for fascinating reading as a kind of 'playbook' for what has followed in the field in the 30 years since – establishing as it does a clear rhetorical and argumentative pattern in favour of the global governance project that is repeated to this day.

The basic idea is as follows. In the olden days, when "faith in the ability of Governments to protect citizens and improve their lives was strong", it was fine for the nation-state to be 'dominant'. But now the world economy is integrated, the global capital market has vastly expanded, there has been extraordinary industrial and agricultural growth and there has been a huge population explosion. Ours is therefore a "more crowded, interdependent world with finite resources". And this means we need "a new vision for humanity" which will "galvanise people everywhere to achieve higher levels of cooperation in areas of common concern and shared destiny" (these "areas of common concern" being "human rights, equity, democracy, meeting basic material needs, environmental protection, and demilitarisation"). We need, in short, "an agreed global framework for actions and policies to be carried out at appropriate levels" and a "multifaceted strategy for global governance".


Free Talk Live