In May the World Economic Forum (WEF) and UN jointly announced that this year’s summit would be extra important, as the globalist groups earnestly warn that the world is behind on their goals reaching their set benchmarks for 2030, and that this summit will greatly focus on getting back on track and making up for lost time.
Last week the World Health Organization (WHO) also weighed-in in advance, stating that this year’s SDG conference will also place key emphasis on pandemic preparedness and prevention.
The Summit began today and will extend into tomorrow, September 19th. The UN wrote in an overview statement about the summit:
The United Nations will convene the SDG Summit on 18-19 September 2023 at its Headquarters in New York, during the General Assembly high-level week. With the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development at midpoint, world leaders will carry out a comprehensive review of the state of the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), respond to the impact of multiple and interlocking crises facing the world, and provide high-level political guidance on transformative and accelerated actions towards the target year of 2030.
But the Agenda is a promise, not a guarantee. At the halftime mark, the promise is in deep peril. For the first time in decades, development progress is reversing under the combined impacts of climate disasters, conflict, economic downturn and lingering COVID-19 effects. The SDG Summit serves as a rallying cry to recharge momentum, for world leaders to come together, to reflect on where we stand and resolve to do more. It is a moment to recommit to a vision of the future that ensures no one is left behind. Fundamental shifts in commitment, solidarity, financing and action must put us back on track to end poverty, realize just societies and reset a balanced relationship with the natural world.
The UN provides the full itinerary on their website as well.
On the 16th, in the prelude to the forum, UN Secretary-General António Guterres called to “help rescue the SDGs and fight for the better future every person deserves. In his speech he stated:
Today, only 15 percent of the targets are on track, with many going into reverse. Monday’s SDG Summit will be the moment for governments to come to the table with concrete plans and proposals to accelerate progress.
They are about the hopes, dreams, rights and expectations of people and the health of our natural environment. They are about righting historic wrongs, healing global divisions and putting our world on a path to lasting peace.
I salute [the] young people among us, I salute your courage and conviction as you fight for the SDGs. And as you fight for the SDGs I know that it comes at a cost […] at the risk of your safety, your health, your liberty, even your life.
He said
President of the 78th session of the General Assembly, Dennis Francis, proceeded Guterres that day and said:
Today, for the next week – and for the next seven years – is to mobilize; to harness the collective strength and resourcefulness of all governments and stakeholders.
The buzz word of the day is “Mobilization,” which suggests a sense of urgency that we cannot ignore. It is crunch time; time to roll up our sleeves and turn our aspirations, and our promises, into reality, for the benefit of all.
This calls for more than words; it calls for an unwavering commitment not only to mobilizing resources and investments but more importantly political will.
However, despite the passionate pleas for resolve, a number of political leaders are notable absent in attendance, which was addressed by Guterres. He still tried to save face and say that it only matters if the message is carried through.
This is not a Vanity Fair. This is a political body in which governments are represented.
What matters is that [countries] are represented by someone that can [rise to] the present moment.
So I’m not so worried about who’s coming. What I’m worried [about] is making sure the countries that are here … are ready to assume the commitments necessary to make the Sustainable Development Goals that unfortunately are not moving in the right direction a reality.
Guterres added
For more specific topics that were discussed on day one the WEF provided a handful of articles and videos encapsulating the main points of discussion, including the future outlook on the world economies, climate change, the AI revolution, inequality, and more. Of that also included also the number of risks and problems the UN and WEF attribute to the world for missing their goals. Other participants say, for the most part, that general economic conditions globally will only worsen.
Check out more of the opening speeches and panel discussions from today below:
AUTHOR COMMENTARY
But shun profane and vain babblings: for they will increase unto more ungodliness.
2 Timothy 2:16
Truthfully this is more of the same old alarmism we’ve come to know and loathe; though, however, there is no doubt in my mind that “things,” shall we say, will start to ramp-up dramatically going into this winter and especially throughout 2024. This summit really just represents in so few of words that real crackdown on freedom and liberty is coming. The Covid War was just a dry run.
I mean, examine Guterres’ own words: “And as you fight for the SDGs I know that it comes at a cost […] at the risk of your safety, your health, your liberty, even your life” – that while he in context was speaking of the activists, I think there is a lot more to the statement and he really is speaking in veiled language, referencing the whole of the people worldwide…
A prudent man foreseeth the evil, and hideth himself: but the simple pass on, and are punished.
Proverbs 22:3
[7] Who goeth a warfare any time at his own charges? who planteth a vineyard, and eateth not of the fruit thereof? or who feedeth a flock, and eateth not of the milk of the flock? [8] Say I these things as a man? or saith not the law the same also? [9] For it is written in the law of Moses, Thou shalt not muzzle the mouth of the ox that treadeth out the corn. Doth God take care for oxen? [10] Or saith he it altogether for our sakes? For our sakes, no doubt, this is written: that he that ploweth should plow in hope; and that he that thresheth in hope should be partaker of his hope. (1 Corinthians 9:7-10).
The WinePress needs your support! If God has laid it on your heart to want to contribute, please prayerfully consider donating to this ministry. If you cannot gift a monetary donation, then please donate your fervent prayers to keep this ministry going! Thank you and may God bless you.
My partner and I absolutely love your blog and find nearly all of your post’s to be exactly what I’m looking for.
can you offer guest writers to write content for you?
I wouldn’t mind publishing a post or elaborating on a number of
the subjects you write concerning here. Again, awesome web log!
Here is my take on this crap:….1Th_5:3 For when they shall say, Peace and safety; then sudden destruction cometh upon them, as travail upon a woman with child; and they shall not escape.
Nuff said!
The world is being run by lunatics. They call us the carbon footprint and will go at extreme lengths to get rid of a high percentage of humanity. This is evil BUT God will intervene. He has to.
I saw a “walk and talk” video from the person who first blew the whistle on all the empty hospitals in NYC when the scamdemic was supposedly “raging”. It was a very gloomy and rainy day in NYC for the start of this summit, and he had enough chutzpah to tell all these UN people, who were gathered at a hotel with signs all over that said “Clinton Global Initiative” that the Clintons were being unlawful and are limited in having a presidential museum in the state of Arkansas with public funding. He might as well have been talking to zombies who just adore the top grifter couple in the USA. I wonder if this is the same venue where the Governor of Hawaii said the cause of the Maui fires was climate change. It baffles me why people who lived and worked in NYC all their lives would stay in that horrible place when they most likely could live like kings anywhere else.
Way back in 2008, when these damnable SDG’s were first brought to my attention, I was led by the Holy Spirit to analyze them. I apologize for the length, and that many of the facts will overlap Jacob’s article. There’s too much here to go over to cull out the repetitions, so I’ll include my whole analysis. It isn’t pretty!
United Nations Sustainable Development Global Goals (SDG’s)
These goals can be found on the United Nations’ website in more detail. I took out the important points and analyzed them, where I could and when warranted.
Emphasis added by myself (Thomas), 2008 (Tom Note = “TN”)
1. End global poverty. (TN: How? Exterminate the poor, the elderly, the sick, handicapped…and the entire Middle Class!)
2. End hunger: Improve nutrition; promote sustainable agriculture. (TN: That’s doublespeak for: starve people to death with engineered GLOBAL food shortages; hyperinflation, destroy food security. We won’t be in control of our food sources; no gardens allowed; no healthy foods, all GMO’d.; eat what’s allowed…when allowed, etc.).
3. Ensure healthy lives and promote well-being for all at all ages. (TN: How can one do this with genetically modified foods filled with human genes, Round-up, other chemicals, and human bodies being used for fertilizer on field crops (hydrogeology / Alkaline Hydrolysis – Cremation Association of North America (CANA) etc.)?
4. Ensure inclusive and quality education for all and promote lifelong learning. (TN: indoctri-nation classes)
5. Achieve gender equality and empower all women and girls. (TN: how does one do this with over 100 genders?)
6. Clean water and sanitation: (TN: impossible to do with all the chemicals they’re spraying on us, and the chemicals they’re treating sewer water with to make it “potable”!)
7. Affordable and clean energy (TN: why haven’t they allowed this in the past 40 years?)
8. Decent work and economic growth (TN: The only way to do this is to exterminate the poor/ middle class and to start over with their brainwashed zombies.)
9. Industry, Innovation, and Infrastructure TN: 2023: Artificial intelligence, sex slave trade, more drugs, smart cities (for dummies), 15 minute cities, electric vehicles that require unavailable or limited power; no cars or roads in rural areas as towns and communities will be allowed to go back to their original wild state.
10. Reduced inequalities (TN: those in their way will HAVE TO GO! That includes military vets, patriots, Christians, Pro-Lifers, protesters, all government dissidents, etc.)
11. Sustainable cities and communities (TN: smart cities, 15 minute cities, forced labor camps, and detention centers; only strong and healthy breeders allowed.)
12. Responsible consumption and production (TN: they control how much we eat, what we eat, and what we produce!)
13. Climate action (TN: manipulation by H.A.A.R. P., 2G, 5G et al, and plenty of propaganda)
14. Life below water (TN: Revival of Atlantis anyone?)
15. Life on land (TN: if you want to call it that! No rights and freedoms is not “life”; it’s merely existing!)
16. Peace, justice, and strong institutions (TN: no free will or choices; strong enforcement to do as commanded. Justice = lawlessness / anarchy. Two-tiered justice system: one for elite and another for underlings.)
17. Partnerships for the goals (TN: Currently, most major corporations are pushing for these goals. They’re supporting BLM and ANTIFA—the paid ruffians who are creating chaos so they can impose their “new normal”—absolute INSANITY! Can’t have a NWO without first destroying the original.)
Every area of our life is going to be monitored and controlled! Abide by their rules or DIE!
How are they going to reach these goals?
Consensus Reached on New Sustainable Development Agenda to be adopted by World Leaders in September 2020.
Ambitious new agenda would end poverty by 2030 and universally promote shared economic prosperity, social development and environmental protection (TN: Since when do the elite want to share their wealth?!)
The 193 Member States of the United Nations reached agreement today (2008) on the outcome document that will constitute the new sustainable development agenda that will be adopted this September by world leaders at the Sustainable Development Summit in New York.
Concluding a negotiating process that has spanned more than two years and has featured the unprecedented participation of civil society, countries agreed to an ambitious agenda that features 17 new sustainable development goals that aim to end poverty, promote prosperity and people’s well-being while protecting the environment by 2030. (TN: Were you asked to “participate”? I wasn’t asked.)
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon welcomed the agreement, saying it “encompasses a universal, transformative and integrated agenda that heralds an historic turning point for our world.” (TN: the Rapture, the Great Tribulation, and the Second Coming will do the same!)
“This is the People’s Agenda, a plan of action for ending poverty in all its dimensions, irreversibly, everywhere, and leaving no one behind. It seeks to ensure peace and prosperity, and forge partnerships with people and planet at the core. The integrated, interlinked and indivisible 17 Sustainable Development Goals are the people’s goals and demonstrate the scale, universality and ambition of this new Agenda.” (TN: who are the “People’s”? Not you or I! The Peoples’ Party of China! None of their opponents will be “left behind”; they’ll get them all!)
Mr. Ban said the September Summit, where the new agenda will be adopted, “will chart a new era of Sustainable Development in which poverty will be eradicated, prosperity shared and the core drivers of climate change tackled.”
He added that the UN System stands ready to support the implementation of the new agenda, which builds on the successful outcome of the Third International Conference on Financing for Development in Addis Ababa, and which, he said, will also contribute to achieve a meaningful agreement in the COP21 in Paris in December. (TN: what is that? Nothing on the news about it!)
More than 150 world leaders are expected to attend the Sustainable Development Summit at the UN headquarters in New York between 25 to 27 September to formally adopt the outcome document of the new sustainable agenda.
The new sustainable development agenda builds on the success of the Millennium Development Goals, which helped more than 700 million people escape poverty. (TN: sure did! Killed them with machetes, bombs, various cancers and vaccines!) The eight Millennium Development Goals, adopted in 2000, aimed at an array of issues that included slashing poverty, hunger, disease, gender inequality, and access to water and sanitation by 2015.
The new sustainable development goals, and the broader sustainability agenda, go much further, addressing the root causes of poverty and the universal need for development that works for all people. (TN: Suppose it has anything to do with the opulent palaces and huge treasuries of the elite in the poorest countries? This wealth and financial aid is NOT being shared with the poor?! Over taxation? No! That’s just a figment of my imagination! Go back to sleep!)
The preamble of the 29-page text, “Transforming Our World: The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development,” states, “We are resolved to free the human race from the tyranny of poverty and want and to heal and secure our planet.” It continues, “We are determined to take the bold and transformative steps which are urgently needed to shift the world onto a sustainable and resilient path. As we embark on this collective journey, we pledge that no one will be left behind.” (TN: of course not! ALL the survivors will have to comply: take the Mark of the Beast or die!)
Rio+20 and the intergovernmental process
At the Rio+20 Conference of 2012, Member States agreed to launch a process to develop a set of sustainable development goals, which will build upon the Millennium Development Goals. The Millennium Development Goals have proven that goal-setting can lift millions out of poverty, improve well-being and provide vast new opportunities for better lives. (TN: Yep! Had their rebel groups kill them, i.e.: Antifa, BLM, ISIS, Al Qaeda, Hezbollah, IS, etc.!) It was agreed that the new goals would be global in nature and universally applicable to all countries (TN: the Islamatization of the world), while taking into account different cultures, capacities and levels of development and respecting national policies and priorities. (TN: We see where that’s brought us!)
The negotiations were co-facilitated by the UN Permanent Representative of Ireland, Ambassador David Donohue, and the UN Permanent Representative of Kenya, Ambassador Macharia Kamau, over two years. The inclusive and transparent consultations by Member States, with the strong engagement of civil society and other stakeholders, have served as a basis for the conclusion of the intergovernmental negotiations on the emerging universal and people-centered agenda.
Core elements of the agreed outcome document
The outcome document highlights poverty eradication as the overarching goal of the new development agenda and has at its core the integration of the economic, social and environmental dimensions of sustainable development. The emerging development agenda is unique in that it calls for action by all countries, poor, rich and middle-income. Member States pledge that as they embark on this collective journey, no one will be left behind. The ‘five Ps’—people, planet, prosperity, peace, and partnership—capture the broad scope of the agenda. (TN: Where have we heard that before? It’s the biblical reference to the message of the Antichrist!)
The 17 sustainable goals and 169 targets aim at tackling key systemic barriers to sustainable development such as inequality, unsustainable consumption (TN: the governmental propaganda of overpopulation kicks in, thereby augmenting the alleged need for eugenics: euthanasia, abortion programs and death panels to kick in) and production patterns, inadequate infrastructure and lack of decent jobs. The environmental dimension of sustainable development is covered in the goals on oceans and marine resources and on ecosystems and biodiversity, bringing core issues into the goal and target framework.
The means of implementation outlined in the outcome document match its ambitious goals and focus on finance, technology and capacity development. In addition to a stand-alone goal on the means of implementation for the new agenda, specific means are tailored to each of the sustainable development goals.
Member States stressed that the desired transformations will require a departure from “business as usual” and that intensified international cooperation on many fronts will be required. (TN: the witch hunt begins! All undesirables will be culled.) The agenda calls for a revitalized, global partnership for sustainable development, including for multi-stakeholder partnerships. The agenda also calls for increased capacity-building and better data and statistics to measure sustainable development.
An effective follow-up and review architecture – a core element of the outcome document – will be critical to support the implementation of the new agenda. (TN: a laughing session around the coffee pot as they review how many souls they sent into eternity!) The High Level Political Forum on sustainable development, set up after the Rio+20 Conference, will serve as the apex forum for follow up and review and will thus play a central role. The General Assembly, the Economic and Social Council and specialized agencies will also be engaged in reviewing progress in specific areas. (TN: Every “base” will be covered in the culling process! ALL undesirables will be reported and removed. Remember the movie, “The Purge” and its sequels???? It’s coming!)
Based on the outcome document, the agenda will include a Technology Facilitation Mechanism to support the new goals, based on multi-stakeholder collaboration between Member States, civil society, business, the scientific community, and the UN system of agencies. The Mechanism, which was agreed at the Addis Conference in July, will have an inter-agency task team, a forum on science, technology and innovation, and an on-line platform for collaboration.
The successful outcome of the Addis Conference gave important positive momentum to the last stretch of negotiations on the post-2015 development agenda. It is expected that the consensus reached on the outcome document will provide momentum for the negotiations on a new binding climate change treaty to culminate at the Climate Change Conference in Paris from 30 November to 11 December 2015.
Conclusion: They’ve gone to great lengths to speed up God’s eschatological program! “Even so, come Lord Jesus”!
This is good news, it means we’ll be caught up in the clouds soon! It’s a great time to be awake and saved by the blood of Christ. God bless and Maranatha!
These people & lord they serve are the perfect example of HYPOCRITES, as they never include themselves as mere sinners & creatures of the truth & true Lord even to exist, & as they lie and lie and lie finding ways to herd & exploit others to their supposed (and very short term) ‘gain’. Their end is near & assured, praise the Lord in whom all the fulness of the Godhead dwelleth bodily, the very source of all truth & life.