UN Adopts “Education” Plan to Indoctrinate Children in Globalism

Friday, 03 June 2016

Written by       www.thenewamerican.com

A United Nations summit in Korea this week adopted a global “action plan” demanding a planetary “education” regime to transform children around the world into social-justice warriors and sustainability-minded “global citizens.”

Among other elements, that means the UN-directed global education must promote “integrated development” of the “whole person,” including the formation of their ethics, values, and spirituality, the final document declared.

The global-citizenship programs, with definitions to be incorporated in curricula worldwide, should also indoctrinate children so that they understand their responsibilities to “protect the planet,” and promote what the UN and its member governments consider to be the “common good.”

The controversial action plan, approved by the UN’s propaganda department and a group of largely government-funded “non-governmental organizations” (NGOs) on June 1 in Gyeongju, Republic of Korea, is aimed at helping the UN impose its Agenda 2030 scheme to “transform the world.”

In fact, the title of the summit gave away the agenda: “Education for Global Citizenship: Achieving the Sustainable Development Goals Together.”

As The New American has documented extensively, the UN Agenda 2030 plan, also known as the “Sustainable Development Goals” (SDGs), was approved by governments and dictators last year as a road map toward global control (tyranny). From national and international wealth redistribution to government healthcare and legal abortion for all, the controversial Agenda 2030 vows repeatedly to leave “no-one behind.”

However, globalists and the UN know that to achieve their vision of global totalitarianism, the minds of the young must be captured via “education.” Agenda 2030 actually has an entire goal dedicated to UN-guided “education.” And so the latest summit in Korea, organized for NGOs by the UN Department of Public Information, or UN DPI, was aimed at defining what that “education” regime will look like — and how NGOs can help.

“Education is a human right, essential to well-being and dignity, and is key to achieving Agenda 2030,” reads the action plan adopted this week. “Further, an ethos of global citizenship is required in order to fulfil [sic] this bold, people-centered, universal, and planet-sensitive development framework.”

In the “spirit of global citizenship,” the document declares that “our primary identity is that of human beings.” But the agenda is much broader than attacking nationalism and patriotism. The UN DPI and the Astro-Turf “NGOs” that surround it, styling themselves “Civil Society,” explained that what they call “education” must also be about more than what people normally think of as education — literacy, numeracy, and so on.

In the UN’s view, according to the “Gyeongju Action Plan” adopted in Korea, “education must advance the cause of global citizenship.”

That means a lot more than one might think, too.

Among other points, this education for global citizenship must promote “integrated development of the whole person emotionally, ethically, intellectually, physically, socially, and spiritually,” the action plan declares. (Emphasis added.)

Of course, parents, families, communities, tribes, churches, and more have traditionally been responsible for much of that. When or under what authority government-run, UN-approved schools became responsible for children’s physical, ethical, spiritual, emotional, and social development was not made clear.

The implications, though, should trouble anyone who values liberty, diversity, national sovereignty, and parental rights.

The “education” pushed by the UN must also be “imbued with an understanding of our roles, rights and responsibilities for the common good in service to humanity and the advancement of a culture of peace, non-violence, freedom, justice, and equality,” the action plan continued, using rhetoric about the “common good” that has been the rallying cry of countless tyrants.

The globo-education must inculcate “a sense of care for the earth, reverence for the interdependent kinship of all life, and stewardship of all ecological systems for future generations.”

It should also strengthen “the societal relationships among individuals, institutions, communities, states, humanity, and the planet.”

And finally, it should nurture “a sense of solidarity and empathy in order to end poverty, protect the planet, ensure human rights, and foster prosperous and fulfilling lives for all.”

To those not well-versed in globalist-speak, that all might sound fine and dandy.

However, when the UN’s agenda is examined more closely, the real agenda becomes more clear.

Consider, as just one point among many, what the UN means when it speaks of “human rights.” In Article 29 of the UN’s “Universal Declaration of Human Rights,” the government signatories claim “rights” can be limited “by law” under the guise of everything from “public order” to “the general welfare.”

In other words, you have no rights, only privileges. Separately, the same article claims that everyone has “duties to the community” and that “rights and freedoms” may “in no case be exercised contrary to the purposes and principles of the United Nations.”

Compare that to the U.S. Constitution and the Declaration of Independence, which outline and protect God-given, inalienable rights.

Further down, the global action plan explains that the “education” agenda intends to shape every aspect of human life and civilization.

“Education for global citizenship is an essential strategy to address global challenges as well as to promote gender equality, facilitate the eradication of poverty and hunger, build skills, eliminate corruption, and prevent violence, including violent extremism,” the document says.

“It promotes truly sustainable production and consumption, mitigating climate change and its effects, protecting our waters and biodiversity, and preserving indigenous knowledge.”

If “tradition” and individual cultures get in the way of that agenda for UN-defined “human rights” and “global citizenship,” then “educational understandings” of those things will have to be “enhanced,” the action plan declares.

The document also makes clear that this must be a worldwide effort, saying the global-citizenship scheming must be incorporated in school curricula worldwide and that “equitable quality education,” as defined by the UN, must be provided to “all people.” (Emphasis in original).

The signatories vowed to work at the local level, too, to “incorporate education for global citizenship in educational systems.”

The signatories of the action plan, developed at the “66th United Nations Department of Public Information (DPI)/Non-Governmental Organization (NGO) Conference,” also committed to pushing global education that promotes a number of controversial concepts.

“We commit to an education that teaches conflict resolution, a deep appreciation for diversity, ethical reasoning, gender equality, human rights and responsibilities, interdependence, multilingual and multicultural competence, social justice, sustainable development, and values,” it said.

Those values, of course, are very unlikely to reflect the values of most parents around the world, whether they be Christian, Jewish, Muslim, Hindu, or any other major religious tradition. Instead, the values will be the values guiding the UN: globalism, pseudo-environmentalism, socialism, and more.

The UN Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization, or UNESCO, is at the center of the UN’s global “education” machinations.

In addition to a partnership signed with Common Core-financier Bill Gates, UNESCO has been hard at work in its efforts to standardize and dumb-down education around the world. Among other schemes, it runs global programs on “Education for Sustainable Development,” “Educational for Global Citizenship,” and much more. It also has a “World Core Curriculum,”dedicated to and inspired by influential occultist Alice Bailey, that it hopes will guide schooling around the world in the years to come.

At a previous UN education summit, held last year in Korea, UNESCO boss Irina Bokova, a Bulgarian Communist Party operative who PR agents claim is among the “frontrunners” to lead the broader UN, also declared the UN’s intentions.

“We have the collective duty to empower every child and youth with the right foundations — knowledge, values and skills — to shape the future as responsible global citizens, building on the successes of the past 15 years,” she said, adding that education would “transform lives” and contribute to “breakthroughs on all the proposed sustainable development goals.”

In other words, the UN — not parents, families, or communities — believes that it has not just the right, but the “collective duty,” to shape your children’s values.

The latest conference on pushing Agenda 2030 through globalist indoctrination of children masquerading as “education” is a crucial follow-up to the adoption of the agenda itself.

“Children and young women and men are critical agents of change and will find in the new Goals a platform to channel their infinite capacities for activism into the creation of a better world,” the official Agenda 2030 agreement explains.

The sort of activists that the UN hopes to make your children into is also explicitly defined in the agreement.

“By 2030, ensure that all learners acquire the knowledge and skills needed to promote sustainable development, including, among others, through education for sustainable development and sustainable lifestyles, human rights, gender equality, promotion of a culture of peace and non-violence, global citizenship and appreciation of cultural diversity and of culture’s contribution to sustainable development,” the global plan for 2030 states.

Considering what the UN means by “sustainable development” — population control, central planning, global governance, and more — the agenda for your children takes on an even more sinister tone.

“Sustainable” children for global citizenship in the new order will be accomplished via what the UN, the Obama administration, and others misleadingly refers to as “education.”

In the UN document the word “education” alone is mentioned more than 20 times. And throughout the agreement, the UN openly advocates the use of schools to indoctrinate all of humanity into a new set of values, attitudes, and beliefs in preparation for the new “green” and “sustainable” world order.

The UN’s education agenda also puts sex “education” front and center.

“By 2030, ensure universal access to sexual and reproductive health-care services [abortion and contraception], including for family planning, information and education,” the document also explains.

For now, Americans, Europeans, and people around the world still have many options to protect their children from the global brainwashing campaign being pushed by the UN — home education, private schools, Christian schools, and more.

However, the UN realizes that, too. And so, in recent years, under the phony guise of “human rights,” the UN has started agitating for government control and regulation of private and alternative forms of education in addition to its grip on “public” schools.

The UN also continues to push international education agreements and schemes on everything from sex education and reading pedagogy to values and beliefs.

There is a good reason the UN is ridiculed by critics as the “dictators club.” Most of its member governments cannot be considered “free,” even under the most generous definition of the term.

Allowing the UN to make and shape education policy is not just dangerous, then, it is crazy. Instead, education should be a job for families, communities, churches, charities, schools, and more — but primarily parents.

The future of liberty literally depends on it.

Alex Newman, a foreign correspondent for The New American, is normally based in Europe. Follow him on Twitter@ALEXNEWMAN_JOU. He can be reached at anewman@thenewamerican.com

Source: UN Adopts “Education” Plan to Indoctrinate Children in Globalism

Islanders make splash, acquire defenceman Guillaume Brisebois 

Jason Malloy     Published on June 04, 2016

The Charlottetown Islanders have acquired defencemen Guillaume Brisebois and Jake Barter.In return the Acadie-Bathurst Titan is getting 19-year-old defenceman Luc Deschenes, a second-round pick in 2017 and a first-round pick in 2018. Barter is 19-years-old and Brisebois turns 19 in July.

General manager Jim Hulton said it was no secret they wanted to improve the defence.

“We think we’ve just acquired arguably one of the top-five defencemen in the league,” general manager Jim Hulton said of Brisebois.

In 56 games last season, Brisebois had 10 goals and 16 assists for the Titan. The six-foot-two, 175-pound blue-liner was a third-round pick of the Vancouver Canucks in 2015.

“We think with (Filip) Chalpik, with (Daniel) Sprong with all the other offensive names that we have, we’re in a position to be an elite team next team,” Hulton said. “We needed to have an elite defenceman and we got one.”

Brisebois is a big left-shot defenceman who is mobile and defends. The Islanders see even more offensive upside.

“We think he’s probably going to have the best year of his career.”

Barter right-shot defenceman, who had two goals and nine assists in 64 games between the Titan and Victoriaville.

“He’s a veteran presence, who is a defender first and foremost,” Hulton said. “He was a difficult player to play against.”

It was a big price to pay, but one helped by former GM Grant Sonier acquiring picks.

“You have to give to get and we certainly didn’t want to have to give up Luc Deschenes,” Hulton said.

The picks are the Islanders, but the team has Baie-Comeau’s second in 2017 and Val-d’Or’s first in 2018 from the David Henley trade.

The Islanders also traded Bradley Kennedy to Halifax for three picks. They received a sixth and a ninth this year and a fourth in 2017.

Kennedy, an Antigonish, N.S., native, played three seasons with Charlottetown. He had 25 goals and 31 assists in 64 games last season.

Source: UPDATE: Islanders make splash, acquire defenceman Guillaume Brisebois – Hockey – The Guardian

Dubai Sports World beats summer heat 

Masked fighter Blue Lighting and Caleb Hall, coach and founder of DXB Pro Wrestling Academy, shape up at the launch of Dubai Sports World 2016, the largest indoor sporting event in the Middle East, which runs until the end of August. Victor Besa for The National

Source: Dubai Sports World beats summer heat | The National

Effectiveness of early sport specialization limited in most sports, sport diversification may be better approach at young ages

American Medical Society for Sports Medicine
Apr 18, 2013


Effectiveness of early sport specialization limited in most sports, sport diversification may be better approach at young ages

San Diego, CA – Ever-increasing requirements for success in competitive sports has created added pressure for young athletes to train with greater intensity at earlier ages. The goal to become the next Olympian or more commonly, to obtain a college scholarship, motivates many parents to encourage their children to specialize in one sport at a young age. This has resulted in an increased demand for year-round sport training programs, facilities and products. But is this approach really an effective way to generate long-term success in competitive athletics?

John P. DiFiori, MD, President of the American Medical Society for Sports Medicine, Chief of the Division of Sports Medicine and Non-Operative Orthopaedics at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA and Team Physician for the UCLA Department of Intercollegiate Athletics, says that few who specialize in one sport at a very young age make it to elite levels. “With the exception of select sports such as gymnastics in which the elite competitors are very young, the best data we have would suggest that the odds of achieving elite levels with this method are exceedingly poor. In fact, some studies indicate that early specialization is less likely to result in success than participating in several sports as a youth, and then specializing at older ages.”

Dr. DiFiori encourages youth attempt to a variety of sports and activities. He says this allows children to discover sports that they enjoy participating in, and offers them the opportunity to develop a broader array of motor skills. In addition, this may have the added benefit of limiting overuse injury and burnout.

A UCLA sports specialization study surveying 296 NCAA Division I male and female athletes, average age 19, found that 88 percent participated in an average of two to three sports as a children, and 70 percent did not specialize in one sport until after the age of 12. In a similar study of Olympians in Germany, results found that on average, the Olympians had participated in two other sports during childhood before or parallel to their main sport. Both studies support the concept of sports diversification in adolescence – not specialization.

In his nearly 20 years serving as a team physician for the UCLA Department of Intercollegiate Athletics, Dr. DiFiori appreciates the benefits of sports participation in general – increased self-esteem, self-discipline, development of leadership qualities and social skills, and overall health and well-being. But he warns external pressure on a child to train and compete in one sport at an early age may cause more harm than good. Social isolation, lack of independence, preferential treatment, abusive relationship, burnout and injury are some of the potential negative effects.

“Physical activity contributes to a happy and healthy childhood,” says Dr. DiFiori, “however, parents, coaches and children should monitor and measure their involvement level in a singular sport against the overall well-being and future success of the participant.”

Dr. DiFiori presented, “Early Sports Participation: A Prescription for Success?” on Thursday, April 18, 2013, at the annual meeting of the American Medical Society for Sports Medicine in San Diego, Calif.

About the 2013 AMSSM Annual Meeting: The conference featured lectures and research addressing the most challenging topics in sports medicine today including prevention of sudden cardiac death, concussion, biologic therapies and other issues facing the field of sports medicine. More than 1,500 sports medicine physicians from across the United States and 10 countries around the world attended the meeting.

About the AMSSM: The AMSSM is a multi-disciplinary organization of sports medicine physicians whose members are dedicated to education, research, advocacy, and the care of athletes of all ages. Founded in 1991, the AMSSM now comprises more than 2,300 sports medicine physicians whose goal is to provide a link between the rapidly expanding core of knowledge related to sports medicine and its application to patients in a clinical setting. www.amssm.org

Source: Effectiveness of early sport specialization limited in most sports, sport diversification may be better approach at young ages

Teens at breaking point

Sporting success is coming at the price of young, vulnerable bodies.

Teenage athletes are suffering permanent injuries as intense sports programmes push vulnerable bodies to breaking point.

A prominent sports doctor said he had treated teenagers with injuries to the spine, pelvis and feet, often due to a sudden increase in activity.

Dr Graham Paterson, at AXIS Sports Medicine said people who looked to the likes of Tiger Woods and tennis player Andre Agassi for inspiration believed constant practice in one sport produced success.

But repetitive movements could put children’s growing skeletons at risk of injury.

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“There are many kids who suffer injuries which means they can’t continue to pursue their – or their parent’s – dream of being a star,” he said.

Paterson, a former All Blacks sports doctor, said high pressure placed on children at secondary school level meant sports practice can suddenly triple or quadruple just as teens are experiencing their adolescent growth-spurt.

“There is an awareness that you don’t train horses when they are growing fast, you don’t make dogs run when they are growing fast, but we don’t have understanding in the community we have to look after our adolescents and take the load off a little bit.”

Many parents of injured children ask why they weren’t told of the risks, he said.

He wanted to tell parents exercise is a positive thing, but a teenagers have a better chance of succeeding and being injury-free by competing in a variety of sporting activities.

A study of gold medallists found there were more Olympic champions who specialised later rather than earlier in their teenage years.

“By doing a multiple number of different sports you’re spreading the load. You’re still building strength, diligence and coordination but you are not focused on one activity.”

AUT Millenium in Auckland is the training ground for the country’s elite athletes, but children are encouraged to specialise later in sports.

“We’re seeing more injuries coming about from kids not getting variety in their programme,” athlete development programme director Dr Craig Harrison said.

Teenagers were also under greater pressure to succeed in their chosen sport at even younger ages – the BMX World Championships accepted children from the age of six.

“Its ridiculous. We see parents pushing for their kids to go to these events,” he said.

“There’s a lot of age group competitions and parents looking to get their kids into the teams. It’s all driven from the top and commercial side where sport has gone.”

The number of programmes and expectations from individual sports had also increased, he said.

“The biggest issue we see is the lack of communication between the programmes. There is no one overseeing their weekly and long term schedules.”

AUT Millenium don’t encourage any specialisation in a sport until age 14 – an approach backed up by the research, Harrison said.

Older children who had been in structured sports from a young age missed out on creative play and lacked fundamental athleticism, he said.

“They haven’t done their time in the backyard climbing trees or biking around their streets.”

The warnings come as school sports academies become a common feature across the country.

AUT professor of public health Grant Schofield said children were in some cases being taken out of class to do extra training at sports academies.

“The whole secondary school sport thing is a little perverse.”

 – Sunday Star Times

Source: Teens at breaking point