LTNs and 15 minute cities

All info related to the new biggest hoax of our time.
User avatar
rachel
Posts: 3769
Joined: Thu Oct 11, 2018 9:04 pm
Location: Liverpool, England
Has thanked: 1312 times
Been thanked: 1611 times

Re: LTNs and 15 minute cities

Unread post by rachel »

'Utterly undemocratic' 15-minute city proposal: Oxford City Council plans to restrict public traffic


Unsurprisingly, London Mayor Sadiq Khan - another man with a pretend history, his dad an immigrant London bus driver apparently - is the current chair of International C40s, mayors internationally.

SmartCitiesWorld partners with C40 Cities to tackle the climate crisis
https://www.c40.org/news/smartcitieswor ... te-crisis/
  • SmartCitiesWorld and C40 will collaborate on bringing city officials together to advance climate action planning and implementation
  • A partnership agreement was signed on the fringes of the inaugural Cities Climate Action Summit, hosted by SmartCitiesWorld 18–20 April in London and online
  • The partners will focus on urban climate finance and delivering special reports, case studies and additional resources to urban leaders
SmartCitiesWorld today signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with C40 Cities to support global cities in their efforts to confront the climate crisis.

These people need to be prosecuted for misfeasance in public office and the whole "mayoral" class got rid of, because it is full of useful tools who are only rehearsed in what they can and can't say, not actually making decisions that help people. No. let's ignore reality and concentrate on this flow diagram we've been given to implement - that is Sadiq Khan and his ilk, because it's clear know where this blueprint comes from.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Misfeasan ... lic_office
Misfeasance in public office is a cause of action in the civil courts of England and Wales and certain Commonwealth countries. It is an action against the holder of a public office, alleging in essence that the office-holder has misused or abused their power. The tort can be traced back to 1703 when Chief Justice Sir John Holt decided that a landowner could sue a police constable who deprived him of his right to vote (Ashby v White). The tort was revived in 1985 when it was used so that French turkey producers could sue the Ministry of Agriculture over a dispute that harmed their sales.

Generally, a civil defendant will be liable for misfeasance if the defendant owed a duty of care toward the plaintiff, the defendant breached that duty of care by improperly performing a legal act, and the improper performance resulted in harm to the plaintiff.

In theory, misfeasance is distinct from nonfeasance. Nonfeasance is a failure to act that results in harm to another party. Misfeasance, by contrast, is some affirmative act that, though legal, causes harm. In practice, the distinction is confusing and uninstructive. Courts often have difficulty determining whether harm resulted from a failure to act or from an act that was improperly performed.

The pandemic was of course the shoo-in for 15 Minute Cities so the story goes, except their planning stages can be traced back before the 'good fortune' of the pandemic made them a viable concept to push.

As stated, C40 Cities Climate Leaders group is the organisation pushing 15 Minute Cities. It was originally founded by London City Mayor Ken Livingston as the C20; he was the first ever London Mayor of that type by-the-way, the post created on 4 May 2000. The following year ofter its creation the C20 group merged with Clintons Climate Initiative to become the C40; - are we seeing how the 2020 United States presidential election was rigged, and the UK PM and ex-London City Mayor Boris Johnson was the first to congratulate Joe Biden on his win? All nice and cosy at the top. (And in that BBC report I've just linked to, a nice little call-out to Bill Clinton, fancy that.)


The WEF's New Plan For The Future: 15 Minute Cities!!
- TIMESTAMPS -
0:00 Intro
0:44 What Are 15 Minute Cities?
4:42 Who Is Behind This?
7:51 Oxfordshire Pilot
11:19 15 Minute City Criticisms
15:01 Will They Succeed?
User avatar
rachel
Posts: 3769
Joined: Thu Oct 11, 2018 9:04 pm
Location: Liverpool, England
Has thanked: 1312 times
Been thanked: 1611 times

Re: LTNs and 15 minute cities

Unread post by rachel »

I earlier linked to a Forcing Change article which was originally posted in 1997, and updated and reposted in 2008. In reading it, it is easy to pick out where the C40, 97 Global City Mayors, idea began. Here's an audio version of the article.


Interestingly enough, it is apparently a brainchild of a now deceased Lucile W. Green. Is that like the Georgia guidestones being commissioned by R.C. Christian. Oh, I see now they've destroyed it, they've given R.C. the name Robert, just so you don't go. Hmm... R.C. - Roman Catholic... Anyway, looking likely from the same bullshit name generator they like to use, I did a little search. I don't find too much on 'Lucile W. Green' other than links to her infamous book:

Journey to a governed world : thru 50 years in the peace movement

And a reference to papers published through her publishing house where we find out what the W stands for; - Lucile Wolfe Green papers - which is even more a tell.

Lucile - which is clearly a twin of Lucis > which was formally Lucifer Publishing.
Green - the green agenda > the green man > Pan > pantheism > pandemic > panic > pantomime > panacea.
W. - we find out stands for > Wolfe > and we know there is only one WOLF worth mentioning.

rachel wrote: Sat Feb 26, 2022 9:04 am Image
Novelist H. G. Wells, and former Labour PM Tony Blair, members of the Fabian Society, with Wolf in Sheep's Clothing logo centre

Image
The Fabian Window, founding members of the society with logo depicted above the world being hammered into shape

Wiki:
The Fabian Window is a stained-glass window depicting the founders of the Fabian Society, designed by George Bernard Shaw. The window was stolen from Beatrice Webb House in Dorking in 1978 and reappeared at Sotheby's in 2005. It was restored to display in the Shaw Library at the London School of Economics in 2006 at a ceremony presided over by then-Prime-Minister Tony Blair, emphasising New Labour's intellectual debt to the Fabians.

The stained glass window was designed by George Bernard Shaw in 1910 as a commemoration of the Fabian Society, and shows fellow Society members Sidney Webb and Edward R. Pease, among others, helping to build 'the new world'. Four Fabians, Beatrice and Sidney Webb, Graham Wallas, and George Bernard Shaw founded the London School of Economics with the money left to the Fabian Society by Henry Hutchinson. Supposedly the decision was made at a breakfast party on 4 August 1894. Artist Caroline Townshend (cousin of Shaw's wife Charlotte Payne-Townshend and daughter of Fabian and Suffragette Emily Townshend) created the Fabian window, according to Shaw's design in 1910. Also included in the window besides Shaw and Townshend themselves, were other prominent Fabians such as H. G. Wells, Annie Besant, Graham Wallas, Hubert Bland, Edith Nesbit, Sydney Olivier, Oliver Lodge, Leonard Woolf, and Emmeline Pankhurst.

Looking at the back cover of 'Journey to a governed world : thru 50 years in the peace movement', we get a bio and a picture. Remember the term "pantomime" above...

Lucile W Green.jpg

Lucile Green...born in China; bringing the East to the West.
rachel wrote: Tue Apr 04, 2023 5:55 pm Image
Spokesperson for Women for Peace. Not a 'spokesman' or a 'spokeswoman', you see the problem these people have defining a woman. It never bothered me when I was called a draftsman. And finally...if she got the Gandhi Medal, Gandhi is probably another 'person' we can demolish.

And just a reminder, this Walter Veith Mark of Cain video ties this stuff to the Babylonians if you want to check it out.
User avatar
rachel
Posts: 3769
Joined: Thu Oct 11, 2018 9:04 pm
Location: Liverpool, England
Has thanked: 1312 times
Been thanked: 1611 times

Re: LTNs and 15 minute cities

Unread post by rachel »

City aims for Edmontonians to ‘live more locally’ with 15-minute districts
https://edmonton.taproot.news/stories/2 ... -districts
Sept. 16, 2021
As Edmonton inches towards two million residents, it’s looking to a concept that would see the city create 15-minute districts as a way to improve quality of life, help achieve its plan to become carbon neutral by 2050, and control urban sprawl.

The 15-minute city is an urban design strategy that the current city council adopted as part of the City Plan at the end of 2020. The next city council, and its successors, will make the decisions that either help bring this plan to life or leave it to languish. As the municipal election approaches, this is a good time to examine what this concept means for Edmonton.

So what is a 15-minute district?
The City Plan defines it as “small towns in our big city, where people can meet many of their daily needs locally.”

The goal is to create “a place where you can get all of the immediate needs and amenities within a 15-minute … distance of your home,” architect Shafraaz Kaba told Green Energy Futures. That could potentially include groceries, recreation, green space, housing, health care, small businesses and more — the district plans expected in early 2022 will define what will be included.

The city says it wants to make it possible — not mandatory, but possible — to get to those places without a car, by walking, biking, or taking transit.

If all goes as planned, Edmontonians will be able to access their daily needs (without having to drive) from where they live in their respective districts — the City Plan identifies 15 of them across the city — by the time the city grows to two million people. It’s a target that attendees of Taproot’s People’s Agenda listening sessions said they are keen for the city to implement, expressing that they want to see an overall increase in density and walkability.

But no city is built exactly the same, and Edmonton is particularly sprawled out, meaning how it approaches shifting towards this concept will look different from other cities around the world.

c529e4c8-be8c-4317-9b22-cd7ba5b1a3ef.png
A little later, a bit on C40 Cities, created by a London Mayor and the Clinton alarmists...it's worth noting, Bill has openly talked about Hillary taking advice from the dead (check out the Mark of Cain link at the bottom of the last post, video at 1 hour 56).
What other cities are doing something similar?
Paris wasn’t the first place to get on board, but it has likely done the most to put it into practice by promoting cycling and walking, restricting vehicles, and putting an emphasis on people-first infrastructure and parks.

C40 Cities, a coalition of 97 cities around the world that are focused on fighting climate change, has put an emphasis on the concept as a means to post-pandemic economic recovery.

Other examples of cities working on similar strategies include Melbourne, which has built a long-term plan to move towards 20-minute neighbourhoods; Ottawa, whose 15-minute city plan aims to “have residents take half their trips by foot, bicycle, public transit or by carpooling”; and Portland, which plans for 90% of the city to have access to daily needs through its Complete Neighbourhood project...
Marfer
Posts: 78
Joined: Mon Oct 31, 2022 2:09 pm
Has thanked: 49 times
Been thanked: 92 times

Re: LTNs and 15 minute cities

Unread post by Marfer »

User avatar
rachel
Posts: 3769
Joined: Thu Oct 11, 2018 9:04 pm
Location: Liverpool, England
Has thanked: 1312 times
Been thanked: 1611 times

Re: LTNs and 15 minute cities

Unread post by rachel »

I was watching UK Column today, and they had a section on C40 Cities and the G7 Urban7, another UK creation to circumvent democracy and give us actors instead, report starting at 33:50 minutes. I love the way they've changed their language so when people like me say, "they are all actors"; they totally agree.

UK Column News - 24th April 2023

Since its launch in 2021 by Core Cities UK, the G7 Urban7 (U7) advocates for a continuous dialogue between the G7 nations and municipal actors represented by national associations and supported by international city networks.

The U7 Group invites the G7 countries and G7 Engagement Groups to recognise the U7 as a new G7 Engagement Group and thereby acknowledge the importance of these objectives.

This includes the engagement in G7 ministerial meetings, focusing on the topic of city diplomacy and multilevel cooperation, and overall cooperation by effectively engaging local and regional governments in G7 meetings. The ultimate aim of the U7 Engagement Group will be to represent the interests of cities, municipalities and regional governments. Its core will consist of national associations of cities supported by international city networks. Thus, the U7 Engagement Group will form a bridge between local and national governments, offering local actors an opportunity to join forces and better position themselves in international political processes.

As the first step towards establishing the official U7 Engagement Group, the Urban7 Group Alliance hosted the U7 Mayors Summit, with the theme “Embracing the Urban World: Cities as Drivers of Change for Peace, Democracy and Sustainability”. The event took place on 3 May 2022.

Mike reminded the audience there are quite a few related articles on the main UK Column website going back years - https://www.ukcolumn.org - so I thought I'd pull one from June 2016.

The Resilient Cities Programme: Another Threat to Individual Liberties?
5th June 2016, by Martin Edwards
https://www.ukcolumn.org/article/resili ... -liberties
In the new political and economic system of the 21st century an ever increasing number of non-governmental organisations, often working collaboratively in networks, who now claim to better represent individuals, or as we are now called, "Civil Society".

This range of largely unknown groups exerting influence on the world stage include the G20, G7, the Bilderberg Group, the Council on Foreign Relations, the Trilateral Commission (USA), The Ditchley Foundation, the Royal Institution of International Affairs (Chatham House), the Club of Madrid and the Club of Rome which was founded in 1968 at David Rockefeller‘s estate in Bellagio, Italy.

The Club of Rome describes itself as "a group of world citizens, sharing a common concern for the future of humanity". It includes within its existing and past membership familiar names such as:

Bill Clinton - former President of the United States, founder of the Clinton Global Initiative; Al Gore - former VP of the United States and leading climate change campaigner; Maurice Strong - former Head of the UN Environment Programme, Secretary General of the Rio Earth Summit and co-author (with Gorbachev) of the Earth Charter; Kofi Annan – former Secretary General of the United Nations; Gro Harlem Bruntland – United Nations Special Envoy for Climate Change, Director-General of the World Health Organization from 1998 to 2003, member of the Club of Madrid and member of the Bilderberg Group; Robert Muller – former Assistant Secretary General of the United Nations and creator of the World Core Curriculum; George Soros – multi-billionaire and major donor to the UN; Bill Gates – founder of Microsoft, "philanthropist" and member of the Bilderberger Group and finally David Rockefeller – Club of Rome executive member, former Chairman of Chase Manhattan Bank, founder of the Trilateral Commission, executive member of the World Economic Forum, Honorary Chairman of the Council on Foreign Relations and member of the Bilderberg Group.

club-of-rome-network.jpg

A flavour of the intentions of this Marxist dominated globalist cabal emerged in the 1974 Club of Rome report Mankind at the Turning Point:
  • Now is the time to draw up a master plan for sustainable growth and world development based on global allocation of all resources and a new global economic system. Ten or twenty years from today it will probably be too late.
Twenty years later they had already formulated their plan for the undermining of national governments and the sovereignty of the nation. They identified that "global challenges" such as International crime, terrorism and climate change provided the key to global societal change...

Looking at some of the names. Bill Clinton and his Clinton Climate Initiative, a co-founder of C40 Cities with the City of London.

Building on President Clinton’s longstanding commitment to the environment, the Clinton Climate Initiative was formed in 2006 to confront climate change and support communities as they adapt to its effects.
Building on President Clinton’s longstanding commitment to the environment, the Clinton Climate Initiative was formed in 2006 to confront climate change and support communities as they adapt to its effects.

And let's not forget Bill's hockey-stick-graph mate, Al Gore. That's a bullshit name, isn't it, particularly when all we hear from him is, "THIS TIME NEXT YEAR WE'RE ALL GOING TO BE DEAD!!" ...Where's he born do we think? I figured it wouldn't be New York, so it must be the District of Columbia. Guess what:

Snapshot_2023-04-24_164241_www.bing.com.png

An interesting connection regarding Al's famous hockey stick graph produced by Michael Mann of the University of East Anglia, that shows warming of half a degree Centigrade over the last 1000 years. That's 1 degree Fahrenheit. PANIC EVERYONE!

hokey-stick.jpg

Michael Mann And The ClimateGate Whitewash: Part One & Two
https://www.forbes.com/sites/larrybell/ ... -part-one/
https://www.forbes.com/sites/larrybell/ ... h-part-ii/
Cognitive Dissident
Posts: 570
Joined: Fri Apr 08, 2022 4:37 am
Has thanked: 111 times
Been thanked: 134 times

Re: LTNs and 15 minute cities

Unread post by Cognitive Dissident »

TfL is associated with ULI:

Alexandra Jezeph
Transport For London

https://uli.org/about-uli/global-governing-trustees/

I used to work at TfL. I remember a poster in the breakout kitchen hailing Permanent Revolution:

https://www.encyclopedia.com/history/en ... revolution
Cognitive Dissident
Posts: 570
Joined: Fri Apr 08, 2022 4:37 am
Has thanked: 111 times
Been thanked: 134 times

Re: LTNs and 15 minute cities

Unread post by Cognitive Dissident »

She's been on a podcast:

https://www.macdonaldandcompany.com/pod ... episode-32

Liberal conservatism. That's a new one.
Not to be confused with Conservative liberalism or Libertarian conservatism.
This article is about the political philosophy. For the Canadian political party, see Liberal-Conservative Party.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liberal_conservatism
Why or how anyone could confuse Liberal Conservatism with Conservative Liberalism or Libertarian Conservatism is beyond me.

I'm reminded of this:



The more I dig... :D
Cognitive Dissident
Posts: 570
Joined: Fri Apr 08, 2022 4:37 am
Has thanked: 111 times
Been thanked: 134 times

Re: LTNs and 15 minute cities

Unread post by Cognitive Dissident »

Around the twentieth-minute she explicitly mentions White Men, seemingly as a pejorative.

White Men, implying: the issue to overcome.

When life introduces you to these people, you'd best listen. One of the functions, if not the function, of alternative media is to make you ignore these voices. When Alex Jones or Tucker Carlson say it you are persuaded and allowed to dismiss them and by default you ignore or are misdirected away from what your enemy are actually saying and doing.

And calmly they progress.

When you hear them, or meet them, with their defences down: this is how to know them.

This is why accepting the job was no problem for me. Look at what I am finding out.

In a fight, who ever gets closest first to their opponent, usually wins.

Position and intent are more lethal than size.
User avatar
rachel
Posts: 3769
Joined: Thu Oct 11, 2018 9:04 pm
Location: Liverpool, England
Has thanked: 1312 times
Been thanked: 1611 times

Re: LTNs and 15 minute cities

Unread post by rachel »


German MEP, Christine Anderson, on 15 minute cities:
"Make no mistake, it's not about your convenience, and it's not about saving the planet. It will be a complete impoverishment and enslavement of all the people."

NEOM | What is THE LINE?


Comments are quite good.
User avatar
rachel
Posts: 3769
Joined: Thu Oct 11, 2018 9:04 pm
Location: Liverpool, England
Has thanked: 1312 times
Been thanked: 1611 times

Re: LTNs and 15 minute cities

Unread post by rachel »



line1.gif
line1.gif (6.84 MiB) Viewed 1689 times
line2.png
line3.png

In 1996, global governance expert, Henry Lamb, warned us about what UN Agenda 21 had in store for us. We're now witnessing this plan—decades in the making—play out before our eyes.

Henry Lamb was the author of many books on the subject, most notably 'The Rise of Global Governance, and Agenda 21'.

Full video:

SDG indicators: The last missing piece of the 2030 Agenda

  • Ahead of the 47th Session of the UN Statistical Commission on 8-11 March, Assistant Secretary-General for Economic Development Lenni Montiel, Director of UN DESA’s Statistics Division Stefan Schweinfest, and Chief of the Statistical Service Branch in UN DESA’s Statistics Division Francesca Perucci discuss the development of indicators for the implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals.

    For more information on the 47th Session of the United Nations Statistical Commission, visit: http://unstats.un.org/unsd/statcom/
Comments on video are quite good.
Post Reply