THE
AMERICAN PLANNING ASSOCIATION AND IT'S "FAULTY" HANDBOOK
by
Tom DeWeese
August 28, 2012
NewsWithViews.com
With
great fanfare, the American Planning Association (APA) reported results
of a recent survey the group conducted, (“Planning America:
Perceptions and Priorities”) showing that the anti- Agenda
21 “crowd is slim.” Said the report, only 6% of those surveyed
expressed opposition to Agenda 21, while 9% expressed support for Agenda
21 and 85%, “the vast majority of respondents, don’t
know about Agenda 21.”
Typically,
APA is using the survey to formulate the image that opponents to Agenda
21/ Sustainable Development are just a lunatic fringe with no standing
and of no consequence in the “real” world. They continue
to portray Agenda 21 as simply a 20 year old idea, and just a suggestion
that planners and local governments might consider.
However,
a closer look at the full survey, plus some additional APA reports reveal
some interesting, and in some cases, astounding facts.
First
the survey:
It
was designed to show support for “Planning.” This has become
an obsession with the “planning community” because
Agenda 21 and Sustainable Development have become the center of protests
by property owners and those who feel government has grown too big and
powerful. So the APA has launched a series of efforts to fight back.
These include conducting a “boot camp” to train their legions
of planners across the nation on how to deal with anti-Agenda 21 protestors.
According
to the APA, the findings of the Survey reveal that: Only one-third believe
their communities are doing enough to address economic situations; Very
few Americans believe that market forces alone (the free market) improve
the economy or encourage job growth; 84 % feel that their community
is getting worse or staying the same; Community planning is seen as
needed by a wide majority of all demographics; and of course, that 85%
of Americans just don’t know enough to hold an opinion about Agenda
21.
Those
are pretty astounding findings. Looks like these “honest”
planners have their fingers on the pulse of the nation. And as the APA
constantly reminds us in their materials, “there is no hidden
agenda,”(as in Agenda 21).
Astounding
perhaps, until you look at the actual questions asked in the survey.
For example, Finding #4: Community planning is seen as needed by a wide
majority of all demographics (79% agree; 9% disagree; and 12% don’t
know). Wow!
But
here is the actual question that was asked: “Generally, do
you agree or disagree that your community could benefit from a community
plan as defined above?” The definition provided
in order to answer the question was this: “Community planning
is a process that seeks to engage all members of a community to create
more prosperous, convenient, equitable, healthy and attractive places
for present and future generations.”
Asking
the question in that manner is akin to holding up a picture of Marilyn
Monroe along with one of Rosy O’Donnell and asking which one would
they want to date. Give me the pretty one please – says 79%. In
fact, in some actual planning meetings they do just that – hold
up a picture of downtown depicting decaying, dreary buildings verses
one of a shining, beautiful utopia, and they literally say, “which
one do you want?” If the answer is (of course) the pretty
one, then, YES, the community supports planning! Talk about a “dumbed
down” process.
Moreover,
as the American Planning Association adamantly denies any connection
to the United Nations’ policy of Agenda 21 and its planning programs,
how strange it is then, that the APA definition of planning is almost
identical to the definition used by the UN to define Sustainable Development.
Compare: “Development that meets the needs of today without compromising
the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.” The
UN further defines Agenda 21: “Effective execution of Agenda 21
will require a profound reorientation of all human society, unlike anything
the world has ever experienced.” Such a forced policy would certainly
“engage all members of a community” whether they want to
be or not. The UN calls it a “redeployment of human resources.”
Other than semantics, there is no difference in the APA’s and
the UN’s definitions of planning.” The planners’ definition
uses an interesting term, “equitable.” The UN also uses
such a term in describing Agenda 21 – “Social Equity.”
And that is translated into another term: “Social Justice.”
It means “redistribution of wealth.” Is that what the “local”
planners have in mind for their community development?
It’s
obvious that the APA is playing word games with its surveys and definitions
of planning. No wonder such an overwhelming majority answer in the affirmative
to such questions.
And,
yes, maybe a lot of Americans don’t know what Agenda 21 really
is. However, if the APA asked real questions that gave a solid clue
as to the planning they actually have in mind, I’m quite sure
they would get a much different response – whether the person
answering had ever heard of Agenda 21 or not. For example, here are
some sample questions that could help the APA take the real pulse of
the community – if they wanted to be honest:
•
How do the citizens feel about planning policy that dictates the size
of their yard and forces high density developments where one practically
sits on top of their neighbors? Do they still support such “Planning?” •
How do the citizens feel about planning that enforces the creation of
public transportation with a limited number of riders – yet could
cost taxpayers so much money that it would be literally cheaper to buy
each potential rider a brand new Rolls Royce, even when the chauffeur
is thrown in for good measure? Do they still support such “Planning? •
How do they feel about planning that enforces limits on energy use and
forces up energy costs? What if that included forcing residents to replace
their appliances with more energy efficient ones to meet “Planning
Standards?” Do they still support such “Planning?” •
How do the citizens feel about Planning that forces cars to “share
the road” with bicycles and foot traffic, even as Planners narrow
the streets, deliberately making it harder to drive? Do they still support
such “Planning?” •
How do the citizens feel about Planning that forces tax payers to pay
for plug-in stations for electric cars that hardly anyone wants or uses,
for the specific purpose of forcing people to buy them? Do they still
support such “Planning?” •
How do the citizens feel about Planning that creates non-elected boards,
councils and regional governments to enforce their policies, which actually
diminish the power of the officials they elected, severely reducing
citizen input into policy? Do they still support such “Planning?”
Ask
the questions in this manner instead of trying to whitewash them into
sounding like innocent, non-intrusive local ideas for community development.
Ask the questions so that they reflect the consequences of the plans,
and then see if the 85% now are so eager to ignore the effects of Agenda
21.
The
reality is that Americans across the nation are now openly protesting
such policies as they are being enforced in communities everywhere.
They are directly tied to the stated goals of Sustainable Development,
the official policy of Agenda 21. And that is why a twenty year old
“suggestion” has become the focal point of attacks on “local”
planning.
Planners
are shocked that people are opposed to such attacks on their private
property and their pocketbooks, and they are doing everything possible
to label such Americans as “fringe conspiracy theorists.”
The survey is part of that effort.
In
fact, the APA survey follows a barrage of news articles, obviously contrived
by the public relations firm hired by APA, to again, paint its image
as just a group of honest planners trying to do their jobs while being
unjustly attacked by fringe radicals. Such convenient reports have suddenly
appeared on the front page of the New York Times, Washington Post, Wisconsin
Watch, Mother Jones and the Southern Poverty Law Center, to name a few.
It’s interesting to note that most of these stories name me as
the perpetrator.
As
mentioned, the APA has organized a boot camp to train their planners
how to combat us nasty protestors. Through its new training, the APA
downplays revealing details of the plan, instead, suggesting ways to
make their presentations merely “conversations with the community,”
using empathy, and terms that are non-technical.” Obviously APA
believes the protestors are just simpleminded and unable to see their
wisdom. One shouldn’t be so upset over losing control of their
property, their business or their farm. There’s a higher good
at stake here, after all.
And
so, to accomplish that task of dumbed- down “planning,”
(and in fact, hiding its real purpose) the APA is going to great lengths
to change the words. For example, the APA has issued to its members
a “Glossary for the Public” that suggests what words should
no longer be used in public meetings when discussing planning, because
they make the opposition see “red.” So the planners should
not use words like collaboration and consensus, or public visioning,
or even “Smart Growth.”
The
Glossary provides specific language and tactics to be used to defuse
protests. “Stay on message,” it says. “The following
phrases may be useful to help you frame your message in a way that is
positive and inclusive, when transitioning to a local example, or to
stay on message during public meetings where critics may attempt to
distract from the agenda or topic at hand.” And here is the language
they suggest: “Plans and planning are time-tested ways for
communities and neighborhoods to create more options and choices for
their residents...” In other words, we’ve always had
planning, so what’s the problem?”
Such
“public” meetings that the APA is so worried about being
disrupted are not public at all. They are “consensus” meetings,
run by professional facilitators, trained in psychology to use stealth
to direct the audience into a pre-determined direction for a pre- determined
outcome. Anyone asking questions outside the well-controlled box is
labeled a protestor. And we are protesting that! It is not how things
are to be done in a free society, especially when your own property
is at stake.
Yes,
there has been planning throughout the history of America. Many communities
have come up with efficient ways to deal with water use and waste disposal,
and to assure that factories weren’t built next door to private
homes, and so forth. And no one is protesting that!
Our
fight is with “planning” that is specifically designed to
curtail energy use, drive up costs, control private property and development
and building - literally dictating a change in our lives and even changing
the very structure of our system of government.
One
of the tools the APA uses to enforce planning is through the International
Code Council (ICC), an international set of standards based on a one
size fits all set of regulations. The ICC also develops the International
Energy Conservation Code, a model for energy efficiency code. And it
develops a standard for Accessible And Usable Building Facilities. Each
of these codes is aimed at cutting back energy use, controlling private
property use, and, in short, enforcing sustainable development. Where
was the concept of sustainable development first introduced and perfected
as an agenda for development? Oh yes, in Agenda 21. There is no room
for discussion, reason or consideration for exceptional local situations.
The APA brings these codes and others into the community planning as
a pre- packaged deal inflicting the community with (yes) foreign regulations.
And yes, dedicated Americans protest that this is not local government
or planning, but the enforcement of an international (UN) agenda.
We
further find similar pre-packaged regulations coming from federal agencies,
including the EPA (which openly admits that some of its grant programs
are designed to impose Agenda 21) the Forest Service (which admits that
its policies on forest conservation are coming from the UN’s Brundtland
Commission on Global Governance), as well as polices from the Department
of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), and the Department of Transportation,
to name a few.
And
so it goes. Government in the U.S., at all levels, is happily moving
forward with such plans, using the ground troops supplied by the American
Planning Association in every community. It’s happening fast,
and is all-pervasive. And as people are being run over by such plans,
some are trying to slow down the runaway freight train by standing in
the tracks and yelling stop! They of course are the ones labeled as
fringe nuts.
However,
as the APA does everything it can to so label our movement, a shocking
new report provides new evidence that the sustainable polices advocated
by APA in the cities – the policy known as Smart Growth –
is wrong headed and really pretty dumb. And where does such a report
appear? Here’s the real shocker. It was published in the Journal
of the American Planning Association in an article entitled “Does
Urban Form Really Matter.” It is an analysis of Smart Growth polices
in the United Kingdom which shows that the “compact city”
controls don’t work.
Says
the report, “The current planning policy strategies for land use
and transportation have virtually no impact on the major long-term increases
in resource and energy consumption. They will generally tend to increase
costs and reduce costs and reduce economic competitiveness.” Continues
the report, “Claims of compaction will make cities more sustainable
have been debated for some time, but they lack conclusive supporting
evidence as to the environmental and, particularly, economic and social
effects.”
There
you have it. Right out of the pages of the APA’s own Journal,
the very policies that they are forcing on communities across the nation,
are wrong. Forcing mass migration into cities where people are to live
in high density buildings, or homes on lots so close together that the
dog can’t squeeze between houses, have no effect on the environment.
But as I have stated in articles and speeches across the nation, such
“planning” creates an artificial shortage of land, causing
housing costs to go up. It doesn’t cut down on energy use or protect
the environment. It’s a useless intrusion in the lives of honest
Americas.
And
that is exactly why we are protesting Agenda 21. It is wrong. The premise
is wrong. The facts as presented by the APA and other planners, are
wrong. It is wrong for our nation. Wrong for property owners. Wrong
for future generations.
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In
the 1970s, author Richard Bach, who wrote the classic book, Jonathan
Livingston Seagull, also wrote a second book entitled, Illusions: The
Adventures of a Reluctant Messiah. In the book, a Messiah, as he was
forced to come up with answers to the problems of life, consulted the
“Messiah’s Handbook.” All he had to do was open the
book and it would miraculously turn open to the very page containing
the answer he sought. He stumbled through his adventures, following
the handbook. But finally, in the end, as he consulted it a final time,
the page read simply, “Everything in this book may be wrong.
There
is only one right approach for a community to come together to discuss
and solve common problem: open discussion, honest debates and votes,
and above all, a full concentration on the protection of private property
rights as the ultimate decider. The American Planning Association needs
a new handbook!
Tom
DeWeese is one of the nation’s leading advocates of individual liberty,
free enterprise, private property rights, personal privacy, back-to-basics
education and American sovereignty and independence.
A
native of Ohio, he’s been a candidate for the Ohio Legislature,
served as editor of two newspapers, and has owned several businesses since
the age of 23. In 1989 Tom led the only privately-funded election-observation
team to the Panamanian elections. In 2006 Tom was invited to Cambridge
University to debate the issue of the United Nations before the Cambridge
Union, a 200 year old debating society. Today he serves as Founder and
President of the American Policy Center and editor of The DeWeese Report
For
40 years Tom DeWeese has been a businessman, grassroots activist, writer
and publisher. As such, he has always advocated a firm belief in man’s
need to keep moving forward while protecting our Constitutionally-guaranteed
rights.
The DeWeese
Report , 70 Main Street, Suite 23, Warrenton Virginia. (540) 341-8911
And
that is exactly why we are protesting Agenda 21. It is wrong. The premise
is wrong. The facts as presented by the APA and other planners, are wrong.
It is wrong for our nation. Wrong for property owners. Wrong for future
generations.