After reading the Santa Barbara County Association of Governments article Friday, June 14 (āWhat will SB County look line in 2040?,ā Santa Maria Times), it made me wonder, why is it we have an unelected ānone profitā branch of government setting development standards for the future of Santa Barbara County?
SBCAG is another liberal-leaning agency progressively implementing Agenda 21 with bills passed by the federal government. Agenda 21 is something many folks are not aware of. Remember the New World Order? Agenda 21 was implemented by George H.W. Bush in 1992; it is basically a global agreement with the United Nations, and was rejected by Congress during Bush seniorās term. Bill Clinton was elected, and wrote an executive order to implement Agenda 21. This agenda calls for sustainable development, aka urban development, no rural living, gun control, open borders, population control, canāt grow your own food, and many more regulations including environmental issues, just to name a few items on the list. This agenda is scary and un-American.Ā
Waking up America starts at local levels; Northern California has already experienced some of these negative changes. Many county sheriffs throughout the country and Northern California have gathered on a few occasions in different locations as a result of these changes to inform folks about the dangers of Agenda 21 to this country and its negative impacts on our lives. I am told county sheriffs are the only ones who can stop Agenda 21. I hope ours is participating?
My hat is off to Marilyn DeYoung of Californians for Population Stabilization for speaking out against āwhat the county will look like in 2040.ā Clearly, building homes on some of our best farm land in the world benefits government as well some developers. Maybe the county needs to eliminate a long-range planning department that canāt see this. One-size federal development plans do not fit all. Iām sure SBCAG would have more of the same recommendations for free. Development is a good thing, fills a need, and creates jobs. But not like this!
This article appears in Jun 27 – Jul 4, 2013.

