Politics & Government

Local Group Discusses Alleged Global Socialism Plan

Temecula and Murrieta are part of a world-wide plan that will erode property rights, members say.

Local governments are moving toward socialism, and they must be stopped, according to local TEA Party members.

About 17 members of Temecula Murrieta TEA Party met at a Mexican food restaurant in Murrieta Monday to discuss plans Temecula and Murrieta created that members believe are tied to a UN-led plan called Agenda 21.

The plan leads toward robbing citizens of property rights, some members said.

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"When I read the first page, it sounded pretty good. I'm pretty sure our politicians that signed it only read the first page," said Susan Marsh, a founding leader of the TEA party.

Agenda 21 morphed into the International Council for Local Environmental Initiatives, or ICLEI, over the years, Marsh said.

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Temecula became a member of ICLEI in 2009. It is unclear when Murrieta became a member. The city's General Plan Update reiterates its commitment to ICLEI's California Local Government Climate Task Force's goal of sustainable development.

Marsh, a property owner in an unincorporated area near Murrieta, said she traced the initiative's beginnings to 1976 in Europe.

It was then taken before the UN in the 1980s, and adopted in 1990 at the World Congress of Local Governments for a Sustainable Future "as a call to action for governments around the world, dedicated to climate protection and sustainability."

Marsh said the initiative threatens to take away property owners' rights, using Murrieta's Los Alamos Hills residents and Temecula Wine Country residents as examples.

She said Los Alamos Hills residents are being forced to give up 20 to 80 percent of their property when applying for building permits, and that Wine Country residents are facing the same danger.

"Property owners (in Wine Country) are being told they can only have one horse, one goat," Marsh said to club members. "Bottom line, they are telling them they can't have any animals, or one animal per acre. We all moved here for the rural areas to have our animals."

Marsh's property is "off the grid," but she worries the sustainable develop effort could also creep its way into affecting her property. That is when she said she decided to learn more about Agenda 21.

"I've heard of conspiracy theories...I wanted to see how this was going to affect me," she said. "Agenda 21 wants to get you off your land, and move you to the city and stack you up."

She said the reason ICLEI targeted communities is because it couldn't get its agenda passed through Congress.

George Rombach, a Temecula resident, said ICLEI's goal is to infiltrate the cities one by one.

"We have to be involved in our city governments," Rombach said. "It was obvious Temecula was not aware in the slightest what they had signed on for."

Keith Broaders, a Murrieta resident, said the group should lobby enough people together to petition the District Attorney for a grand jury investigation into the matter, to "investigate whether the local cities are violating the Constitution by signing a treaty with the U.N."

Several Murrieta residents spoke at a recent Murrieta City Council meeting, asking the Council to look into the reason for its involvement with ICLEI.


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