Little Red Book, Mao’s? No, About UN On Climate Change
On the right, Mao’s Little Red Book. On the left, a Guide to UN’s Negotiations on Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation.
The Newt Gingrich Letter 12/16/2009 -Tomorrow morning, the delegates at the UN climate change conference in Copenhagen will awaken to a very simple but powerful message: “In America, We Have a Constitution. It Begins: We the People…”
These are the opening lines of a message to the American delegates in Copenhagen and the rest of the world sent on behalf of the American people by American Solutions. They are meant as a reminder to both Obama Administration officials and international climate activists that under our constitutional system, the American people, not government bureaucrats, are sovereign.
Ronald Reagan was right when he said that America is a nation that has a government – not the other way around.
And if you have any doubt that the delegates at Copenhagen need to hear this message, take a look at this: Do you think the Climate Change is about redistribution of wealth?
This is a reference guide being handed out by one of the non-governmental organizations at Copenhagen to keep track of all the proposals to reduce emissions from deforestation and degradation. It’s purposefully modeled after the Chinese mass murderer Mao Tse-Tung’s “Little Red Book of Communism.”
And about the UN’s Little Red Book:
Global Canopy.org -Launched at the UNFCCC climate summit in December 2008 The Little REDD Book is a guide to the UN negotiations on Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation (REDD). REDD aims to help halt deforestation, which causes around 20% of the world’s carbon emissions – more than the entire global transport sector. In addition, the mechanism could help fight poverty while conserving biodiversity and sustaining vital ecosystem services.
REDD has evolved rapidly since it was introduced to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) in 2005. With 6 months to go until the landmark meeting in Copenhagen where agreement must be reached, over 30 governmental and non-governmental proposals are on the table. The Little REDD Book aims to bring clarity to this complex and rapidly-evolving area by providing insights and information on the process in non-technical language.







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