Monday, October 31, 2011
Are Occupy Wall Street Protesters Educated by the International Baccalaureate?
Here in Ozark, Missouri, we are watching the school board place school children on the fast track for United Nations indoctrination through UNESCO's International Baccalaureate. If you have a complaint, the school board doesn't want to hear it. If you want to know what the IB stands for, perhaps you should listen to the Occupy Wall Street movement, because their words parallel the IB's agenda in many ways.
The anti-capitalist movement known as Occupy Wall Street says things like corporations who spend their own money to explore, find, and drill for oil has no right to it. It belongs to the world.
The anti-capitalist movement Occupy Wall Street says things like we should ration the food and the things we have. That corporations shouldn't be allowed produce it in the methods in which a capitalist state brings to market these products.
Now let's have no doubt here. Occupy Wall Street represents a statist view in which the redistribution of wealth is robbed from corporations and its investors and handed over to a strong central government. This is what Karl Marx wrote of in the Communist Manifesto, and this same redistribution of wealth theme is exactly what the IB pushes.
All of this suddenly reminded me of a conference in Texas the IB held, which they featured a speaker and proudly displayed their anti-capitalist guilt trip for Americans everywhere on their Web site.
“The mindset of scarcity is so pervasive“
BY LAURA JOYCE | PUBLISHED: JULY 22, 2011
Aruna Kharod reports back after attending Khaled Hosseini’s plenary session on the second day of the conference.
“In America, we are so used to abundance in everyday life—everything, from food to daily necessities is there at our fingertips. So why do we constantly feel as if something in our lives is lacking? Perhaps it is because “the mindset of scarcity is so pervasive”, as Khaled Hosseini suggests.
We are raised in a society that constantly strives for superlatives—the most expensive clothes, the biggest house, the highest income. This kind of focus, in my opinion, is shallow because we can easily forget that there are others in the world who have so much less than we do, and yet are satisfied with their lives.
The Khaled Hosseini Foundation aims to enlighten and empower students to act on their sentiment and reach out. Through a UN partnership, the foundation provides Afghani refugees with materials and knowledge to build a small shelter. Students can help, too—a $1500 donation can buy the necessary materials.
Hosseini’s observations were eye-opening for me and I am anxious to spread the message and act on the sentiment of goodwill by doing what I can; I want to spread the knowledge through my school this coming year.”
Why would an organization that is supposedly a product for better education, like the Ozark School Board suggest, trying to make Americans, specifically American school children, feel guilty about their abundance and rewards of hard work?
Simple, the more guilt you feel, the more likely you are to accept the idea the current free market practices in America are evil, which will lead you down the slippery slope of the real IB agenda which is:
Earth worship (pantheism).
Socialized medicine.
World federalism.
Income redistribution among nations and within nations.
Contraception and “reproductive health” rights (inc., legal abortion).
World-wide “education for sustainability” which means planned communities and citizens told where they must live.
Debt forgiveness and different standards for third-world nations.
Adoption of gay rights and the right of children to all sexual materials and literature.
Elimination of any right to bear arms.
Environmental extremist positions, including global warming, bans on pesticides and genetically enhanced vegetables.
Setting aside biosphere reserves where no human presence is allowed, which means the government may come in and take your land for its own higher purposes — something that is now being debated in a case before the U.S. Supreme Court.
Don't take my word for it. Do some research and you will see how the IB aligned itself with radical agendas like Earth Charter and Agenda 21. Know the IB is a product and is endorsed by the United Nations. This stuff isn't hard to find, but for some reason, most parents in Ozark remain lazy and only hear the words better education.
The anti-capitalist movement known as Occupy Wall Street says things like corporations who spend their own money to explore, find, and drill for oil has no right to it. It belongs to the world.
The anti-capitalist movement Occupy Wall Street says things like we should ration the food and the things we have. That corporations shouldn't be allowed produce it in the methods in which a capitalist state brings to market these products.
Now let's have no doubt here. Occupy Wall Street represents a statist view in which the redistribution of wealth is robbed from corporations and its investors and handed over to a strong central government. This is what Karl Marx wrote of in the Communist Manifesto, and this same redistribution of wealth theme is exactly what the IB pushes.
All of this suddenly reminded me of a conference in Texas the IB held, which they featured a speaker and proudly displayed their anti-capitalist guilt trip for Americans everywhere on their Web site.
“The mindset of scarcity is so pervasive“
BY LAURA JOYCE | PUBLISHED: JULY 22, 2011
Aruna Kharod reports back after attending Khaled Hosseini’s plenary session on the second day of the conference.
“In America, we are so used to abundance in everyday life—everything, from food to daily necessities is there at our fingertips. So why do we constantly feel as if something in our lives is lacking? Perhaps it is because “the mindset of scarcity is so pervasive”, as Khaled Hosseini suggests.
We are raised in a society that constantly strives for superlatives—the most expensive clothes, the biggest house, the highest income. This kind of focus, in my opinion, is shallow because we can easily forget that there are others in the world who have so much less than we do, and yet are satisfied with their lives.
The Khaled Hosseini Foundation aims to enlighten and empower students to act on their sentiment and reach out. Through a UN partnership, the foundation provides Afghani refugees with materials and knowledge to build a small shelter. Students can help, too—a $1500 donation can buy the necessary materials.
Hosseini’s observations were eye-opening for me and I am anxious to spread the message and act on the sentiment of goodwill by doing what I can; I want to spread the knowledge through my school this coming year.”
Why would an organization that is supposedly a product for better education, like the Ozark School Board suggest, trying to make Americans, specifically American school children, feel guilty about their abundance and rewards of hard work?
Simple, the more guilt you feel, the more likely you are to accept the idea the current free market practices in America are evil, which will lead you down the slippery slope of the real IB agenda which is:
Earth worship (pantheism).
Socialized medicine.
World federalism.
Income redistribution among nations and within nations.
Contraception and “reproductive health” rights (inc., legal abortion).
World-wide “education for sustainability” which means planned communities and citizens told where they must live.
Debt forgiveness and different standards for third-world nations.
Adoption of gay rights and the right of children to all sexual materials and literature.
Elimination of any right to bear arms.
Environmental extremist positions, including global warming, bans on pesticides and genetically enhanced vegetables.
Setting aside biosphere reserves where no human presence is allowed, which means the government may come in and take your land for its own higher purposes — something that is now being debated in a case before the U.S. Supreme Court.
Don't take my word for it. Do some research and you will see how the IB aligned itself with radical agendas like Earth Charter and Agenda 21. Know the IB is a product and is endorsed by the United Nations. This stuff isn't hard to find, but for some reason, most parents in Ozark remain lazy and only hear the words better education.
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Bungalow Bill
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Would be interesting to poll the protestors as to their educational backgrounds.
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