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Al Gore And The Cult of GAIA by Cliff Kincaid Director, American Sovereignty
Action Project

"To achieve world government, it is necessary to
remove from the minds of men, their individualism, loyalty to family
traditions, national patriotism and religious dogmas." Brock Chisolm, former Director of the World Health
Organization.
Executive
Summary
U.S. taxpayers are being forced to subsidize a new form of state
religion which holds that natural resources have to be protected for the
sake of Gaia, a so-called Earth spirit. This religious movement, which has
cult-like qualities, is being promoted by leading figures and
organizations such as Vice President Albert Gore, broadcaster Ted Turner,
and the United Nations.
Gore, who as a member of the U.S. Senate
participated in the 1992 U.N.-sponsored Earth Summit, is the most
prominent member of what appears to be an environmental cult built around
the concept of reverence for the Earth. Gore has written openly about the
Earth having sacred qualities and he has praised primitive pagan religions
and goddess worship.
Another key player is Ted Turner, who has
turned his broadcasting empire into a virtual arm of the United Nations. A
noted critic of Christianity and ambassador on behalf of the U.N.
Population Fund, he promotes the concept of Gaia in his television
programs, such as the "Captain Planet" cartoon show, in which characters
get magic powers from an Earth spirit or goddess.
At the United
Nations, the U.N. Environmental Program, founded by Maurice
Strong, promotes the idea of an "Environmental Sabbath," a variation
of the Gaia concept. Strong, now the Executive Coordinator for United
Nations Reform under Secretary-General Kofi Annan, has described the
global environmental movement in terms suggesting a religious crusade. One
of Strong's organizations, the Earth Council, has produced an "Earth
Charter" for the world that refers to respect for "Mother Earth" and
animal rights.
As Turner's involvement suggests, this Cult of Gaia
has a definite anti-Christian orientation. Traditional Christianity is
regarded by this movement as anti-environmental because God is viewed as being
apart from the Earth itself.
Those promoting the Gaia concept have
no qualms about using the full force of government, even the international
resources of the United Nations, to impose their beliefs on the rest of
us. If they are successful in their drive for "sustainable development" to
protect Gaia, they could stifle economic growth and promote a drastic
decline in the American standard of living.
Congressional hearings
are urgently needed to explore whether forced U.S. taxpayer underwriting
of this bizarre religious movement constitutes a violation of the First
Amendment prohibition on the establishment of a state church.
Planetary Brain
The nation was shocked when 39 members
of the Heaven's Gate cult killed themselves. It was the largest mass
suicide in U.S. history. But are there other cults active
behind-the-scenes of world events? And might they be occupying positions
of power at the national and international levels? The answers, upon
analysis and reflection, are very disturbing. There appears to be a
high-level movement with very strange spiritual beliefs operating in the
upper echelons of the U.S. Government, the United Nations and the global
media.
These people believe in Gaia — an "Earth spirit," goddess
or planetary brain — and they think that human beings can have mystical
experiences or a spiritual relationship with this entity. In order to
protect Gaia, in their view, the U.S. and other industrial countries have
to be prohibited from certain uses of the world's natural resources. This
is called "sustainable development."
In general and secular terms,
this cult, which combines aspects of the animal rights and radical
environmentalist movements, holds that human beings are exploiting the
Earth and other living creatures for selfish purposes. Congressional
Concern
But the religious overtones of this movement are too
obvious to ignore. Rep. Helen Chenoweth (R-Idaho) has described this
phenomenon as "environmental religion" and says that it has "profound
constitutional implications" because of the First Amendment prohibition on
government establishment of religion. Columnist Alston Chase, a reformed
environmentalist, agrees, warning that "It may be only a matter of time
before America becomes a complete theocracy — a place where, in the name
of environmentalism, science and religion fuse with civil authority to
rule the populace."1
Dr. Michael S. Coffman, president of
Environmental Perspectives, says, "They are instituting a new state
religion." But it is a religion at sharp variance with the Judeo-Christian
foundations of the American constitutional republic. A document mandated
by the U.N.-sponsored Convention on Biological Diversity, the Global
Biodiversity Assessment, explicitly refers to Christianity as a faith that
has set humans "apart from nature," a process in which nature has "lost
its sacred qualities." The document states:
Conversion to
Christianity has therefore meant an abandonment of an affinity with the
natural world for many forest dwellers, peasants, fishers all over the
world...The northeastern hilly states of India bordering China and Myanmar
supported small scale, largely autonomous shifting cultivator societies
[until the] 1950's. These people followed their own religious traditions
that included setting part between 10% and 30% of the landscape as sacred
groves and ponds.2
On the other hand, this U.N. document asserts
that the eastern religious traditions such as Buddhism and Hinduism "did
not depart as drastically from the perspective of humans as members of a
community of beings including other living and non-living elements." Thus,
the U.N. favors non-Christian religions as faithful stewards of the Earth.
In fact, the key difference between Christianity and these Eastern
religions is the role played by Jesus Christ. Christianity holds that
there is a gulf between God and man that is breached by Christ.
Christianity teaches that man is distant from and radically different than
God, and that atonement or mediation is achieved through Christ, who rose
from the dead.
By contrast, the philosophy of Gaia holds that
nature is God, and that by experiencing or even worshipping nature, humans
can attain oneness with God. Some followers of Gaia believe that humans,
after death, are reincarnated into non-human forms. Secret Agenda
This decidedly unscientific, even bizarre, view of the environment
appears to be driving U.S. and U.N. environmental policies, including
locking up or restricting development on huge areas of U.S. lands, and
making it more expensive to produce or use our natural resources. Science,
technology and industrial development are regarded as anathema to the
followers of the Gaia philosophy.
Under President Clinton and Vice
President Gore, who is recognized as the driving force behind the
administration's environmental agenda, the American people have witnessed
rather extraordinary actions designed to stop economic development. First,
Clinton complied with U.N. demands to cancel a mining project outside
Yellowstone Park. The mining complex, which would have produced gold and
copper, was planned to operate for 12 years and would have employed
approximately 175 individuals on a year-round basis.
Clinton then
designated 1.7 million acres of land in southwest Utah as a national
monument, placing it off limits to development. This area reportedly
contains billions of barrels of oil, minerals and tens of billions of tons
of low sulfur clean-burning coal. It could have produced thousands of jobs
and billions of dollars in revenue for the state and federal governments.
American "energy independence," once a realistic policy option,
looks increasingly like a pipe dream. U.S. Department of Energy figures
show U.S. dependence on foreign oil rising from 50 to 80 percent by the
year 2010. This makes the U.S. vulnerable to the actions of foreign
countries, some of them openly hostile, laying the groundwork for another
Persian Gulf-type war.
International trade has been another factor
driving up U.S. dependence on foreign oil. It is also a source of the
pollution that the environmentalists claim to be concerned about.
In this context, the World Trade Organization (WTO) has been
established to assist in the expansion of international trade while James
Gustave Speth, administrator of the U.N. Development Program, has endorsed
the concept of a World Environmental Organization (WEO) under U.N.
auspices to regulate such trade. Speth sees the WTO as a stepping stone to
his WEO. Thus, "free trade," conducted under the management of the WTO,
will lay the groundwork for the WEO to regulate it for environmental
purposes. This is the U.N. plan as Speth sees it. Top U.N. official
Maurice Strong reportedly agrees with this scenario.
Climate
Change Treaty
With international trade and energy use rising,
another U.N. initiative, a global climate change treaty, takes on more
urgency. A major U.N. campaign is underway to impose further restrictions
on the use of fossil fuels in some industrial countries to fight the
"global warming" that is said to result. The U.N. is sponsoring a December
meeting in Kyoto, Japan, where a new treaty is expected to be hammered
out.
Here, too, a preoccupation with Gaia seems to be driving some
of the concern. Dr. Stephen H. Schneider, a climatologist with the
National Center for Atmospheric Research, cites the Gaia theory several
times in his own book on global warming, asking "...is there a Goddess of
the Earth?" He adds, "This is not a fanciful question, but one that has
spurred a major debate over what has been called the Gaia hypothesis."
Schneider, whose book included endorsements from then-Senator Al
Gore and then-Senator Tim Wirth (now Undersecretary of State for Global
Affairs), didn't come to any firm conclusions. However, he argued that
even if the planet is a self-regulating organism, as the Gaia concept
suggests, this force alone will not be sufficient to immediately negate
the impact of humans on the environment and that human activity will,
therefore, have to be restrained in some way.3
In other words, the
industrial and economic activities of human beings will still have to be
controlled for the benefit of Gaia. By whom? The United Nations, working
in tandem with federal agencies and commissions.
However, a key
problem with the proposed climate change treaty is the decision which has
already been made by the Clinton administration to allow so-called
developing countries such as Communist China to escape limits on the
discharge of the so-called "greenhouse gasses" which are blamed for global
warming. Will the U.S. Senate approve such a treaty?
Spiritual
Awareness
Membership in what can be termed the Cult of Gaia should
be understood in a loose sense because there is no evidence that Gore,
Strong and others belong to a formal organization. Moreover, this movement
is not a cult in the sense that there is one strong central human figure
or leader. But a cult can also suggest the experience of a form of
"awakening" which drives a person to have a fanatical devotion to a cause.
William D. Dinges, associate professor of religion and religious
education at The Catholic University of America, points out that, in the
case of the Heavens Gate group, it was "composed of people who assume they
have some knowledge of something not available to others." They thought
they had inside information about the nature of life on Earth and the end
of the world.
Those involved in the Cult of Gaia have a similar
mentality. They believe in a form of spiritual planetary consciousness. In
their minds, it is no less spiritual than the "born-again" experience of
some Christians. However, some Christians believe that what followers of
Gaia are experiencing is actually a "demonic" spirit.4
On the
liberal-left side of the political spectrum, devotion or even worship of
Gaia is becoming more popular. In their book, Spiritual Politics, Corrine
McLaughlin and Gordon Davidson write:
God Imminent, the Divinity
within all life, is today becoming more widely recognized in the new
spiritual, ecological, and feminist movements that are working to empower
the individual, support human rights, and honor the sacredness of the
Earth as Gaia, the ancient Mother Goddess.5
In the book, which is
endorsed by Noel Brown of the U.N. Environmental Program, McLaughlin and
Davidson write about the Meditation Room in U.N. headquarters, describing
it as "the focus for the energies of a unified planet and humanity, and
for right relations among all kingdoms of life." Critics describe this
room as a "pagan temple." However, it is not known for sure if Gaia
worship takes place there.
The ties between feminism and ecology
have been noted by Russell Chandler, former religion writer for The Los
Angeles Times, who explains:
Nature-based religion, particularly
that of the Goddess of Wicca (or "witchcraft") is strong within the New
Age strand often referred to as "eco-feminism."6
An example of
this trend is Miriam Starhawk, who calls herself "a goddess-worshipping
pagan witch"7 and has written several popular books which are "credited
with influencing thousands of persons to discover their inner power and
spirituality and join the Craft [i.e. witchcraft]."8 Starhawk has written:
In the United States, the Goddess has been a central image
inspiring action both toward women's issues and toward protecting and
restoring the Earth...People have hungered for a spirituality that can
express their understanding of this Earth as sacred. And, moved by that
understanding, spiritual people have hungered to act to prevent the
destruction of the Earth. Thus, in the United States, the Pagan
resurgence has strong ties to feminism as well as to the ecology and peace
movements, and some ties also with the broad spectrum of human growth and
potential movements termed "New Age."9
A book published by the
respected "Facts on File" organization describes the history of these
beliefs:
In Greek mythology, the Mother Earth Goddess, Gaia, or
the "Deep-Breasted One," is the oldest of deities. Born from the dark
abyss of Chaos, she married her son, Uranus (Ouranos), Father Heaven, and
produced the first creatures, the Titans and Cyclops. At the height of her
cult, she was served by the pythoness priestess at the Oracle at Delphi.
Gradually, she was absorbed by the deities Rhea, probably of Cretan
origin, whose name derives from a term for Earth, and Cybele, goddess of
caverns.10
In addition to Greek mythology, Russell Chandler points
out that the Gaia concept is grounded in Eastern religions, in which
everything is held to be the product of the Great Goddess, "the one whose
body is all manifestation."11 Pseudo-Science
As noted by
climatologist Stephen Schneider, a so-called scientific theory about Gaia
has been offered. Dr. James Lovelock, a British biologist who worked as a
consultant to the National Aeronautics and Space Administration,
articulated a vision of the Earth as an organism regulating itself to
produce and sustain life. In a 1970 book, he wrote that, "The climate and
the chemical properties of the Earth now and throughout its history seem
always to have been optimal for life." Gaia came to represent the entire
"biosphere" — all living and nonliving things on the Earth.
Lovelock believed that humans were a key part of this organism.
However, he also believed that humans were abusing the planet
environmentally, jeopardizing the organism as a whole, "as though the
human race is a cancer."12 However, one observer notes:
Lovelock
says that Gaia, through human technology, has awakened and is aware of
herself, and has seen herself through the eyes of space cameras. He
suggests that that collective intelligence of humans constitutes a Gaian
brain and nervous system that can anticipate environmental changes. The
result may be that in the future, nationalism will disappear in the face
of the need "to belong to the commonwealth of all creatures which
constitute Gaia."13
British physicist Peter Russell proposes the
emergence of a "new level of evolution, the Gaiafield." Russell, who
studied meditation and eastern philosophy in India, authored the book The
Global Brain Awakens, in which he uses Eastern religious terminology in
describing how the universe could evolve "through matter, life
consciousness, Gaias, and galaxies to a final reunion in Brahman." In
Eastern thought, Brahman is the one reality.
Eventually, Russell
says, humanity might evolve "beyond recognition, or perhaps new life-forms
would have arisen, taking over humanity's role."14 The book includes a
front cover endorsement from Ted Turner, who calls it a "much-needed,
optimistic perspective on humanity's future."
"GaiaMind" is the
name of a project associated with the Light Party, based in California,
which maintains that through "global meditation and prayer," people can
"align with and expand the powerful initiating energies of The Aquarian
Age..." Their literature says:
Imagine people all over the world
sharing a moment of meditation and prayer, a moment of unified global
consciousness when people from the world's many diverse spiritual
traditions simultaneously focus attention on our interconnected
relationship with Gaia — the living Earth.
Flunking the Test
Lovelock's Gaia hypothesis has been debated by elements of the
scientific community. A major Gaia conference was sponsored by the
American Geophysical Union and attended by prominent researchers in 1988.
However, it has not been accepted because it implies the existence of a
mind, brain or even spiritual force which is nourishing and sustaining
life. Lovelock himself has said that the existence of life proves the
existence of this mind. "For this to have happened by chance is as
unlikely as to survive unscathed a drive blindfold through rush-hour
traffic," he says.15
However, the notion that man can
scientifically understand and somehow safeguard Gaia through
environmentally sustainable policies suffered a major setback when the
two-year experiment known as the Biosphere 2 Project in Arizona was
exposed as a total failure. The failure was apparent by 1993 but the
details about what had happened were only disclosed publicly in 1996.
"It was a bold test of the Gaia hypothesis," noted New York Times
reporter William J. Broad. The idea was to create a self-regulating system
like the Earth. (Earth is supposed to be Biosphere 1). The $200 million
project was an eight-story, glass-and-steel terrarium designed by man.
"The would-be Eden became a nightmare, its atmosphere gone sour, its sea
acidic, its crops failing, and many of its species dying off. Among the
survivors are crazy ants, millions of them," Broad reported.16
The Other Gaia
Though Lovelock's pseudo-scientific
Gaia hypothesis has gotten most of the attention, the truth is that
another controversial figure was developing a similar concept about the
same time. Tim Zell, leader of the pagan Church of All Worlds, formulated
a theology of "deep ecology" that was called Theagenesis. It had to do
with "the interconnection of all living things to each other and to Mother
Earth, a sentient being in her own right." Zell, who now goes by the name
Oberon Zell, describes the "Mother Goddess" as "a living, sentient being
with a soul-essence that can be perceived by humans." This idea reportedly
came to him when he had a "profound vision" in which "he saw Earth as a
single biological organism that has evolved from a single original cell,
making all life forms on the planet a "single vast creature."" He views
natural disasters and plagues as the means by which the planet heals
itself.
It is Zell who is credited by at least one expert as the
original developer of the Gaia hypothesis. He first called Gaia by the
name Terrebia. "Zell's Gaea has been largely ignored by the media in favor
of Lovelock's Gaia," states writer Rosemary Ellen Guiley.17 Why? One
possible explanation is that the Gaia concept could never have been sold
to the public if it were known that its originator had obvious
non-Christian or anti-Christian roots. Cloaking it in scientific
terminology gives the notion a certain amount of credibility and makes it
acceptable to some.
Interestingly, however, Guiley reports that,
after hearing about Lovelock's hypothesis, Zell "corresponded briefly with
the scientist and shared some of his "Theagenesis" material with him. Zell
also changed Terrebia to Gaea."
The official "mission" of the
Church of All Worlds, the largest of the pagan movements in the U.S.,
involves mobilizing the force of Gaia or Gaea. The mission is "to evolve a
network of information, mythology and experience that provides a context
and stimulus for reawakening Gaea, and reuniting her children through
tribal community dedicated to responsible stewardship and evolving
consciousness."18 The church has what are called "nests" or "proto-nests"
of members in the U.S. and other countries.
Its magazine, Green
Egg, publishes articles such as "Altars & Ecology," in which readers
are advised how to "worship the Earth as the Mother God, Gaia, and profess
Her sacred nature..." One altar to Gaia, described in the article,
included a recycling bin.19 Another article, "Sacred Rodents," insists
that some of the dirtiest creatures known to man, rats, which are
notorious disease-carriers, somehow have sacred qualities. The article
states, "In light of their long and fascinating history, unknown even to
most Pagans, mice and rats certainly deserve more respect and recognition
for the magical and sacred creatures they are."20
Despite its
bizarre roots, the Gaia concept is being promoted in various academic
disciplines as a way to justify massive changes in the American economic
system and the American way of life. Anchor/Doubleday book publishers has
released "The Gaia Future Series," whose books include The Gaia Atlas of
Green Economics. The book, which includes a foreword written by Robert
Heilbroner, a former Vice President of the American Economic Association,
recommends international monetary reform, such as a global tax or world
currency, and says that the United Nations "is potentially the lynchpin
[sic] in the new world order that must evolve."
Targeting the
Children
The concept is also being promoted in some schools.
Education analyst Eric Buehrer, president of Gateways to Better Education,
says:
The Gaia theory is another New Age idea that springs up
every so often in science curriculum. This is the idea that the Earth is a
spiritual entity, that all life on the planet is part of that entity —
like cells in a global brain. For instance, I came across an outdoor
activity in which children were taught that trees had spirits we could
talk to. At the top of the student worksheet the activity was titled "We
are one with nature."21
Clearly, the Gaia concept is unscientific
and religious in nature. But although adherents of the Gaia philosophy
exhibit some of the characteristics of those who join cults, there are
certain striking differences.
In contrast to the Heaven's Gate
cult, for example, there is no evidence that the Cult of Gaia believes in
mass suicide. Instead, they believe there are too many other people in the
world. Vice President Gore, Undersecretary of State Timothy Wirth, Ted
Turner and Maurice Strong are all vigorous proponents of U.N. population
control programs. Indeed, Turner and his wife, Jane Fonda, have served as
Goodwill Ambassadors for the U.N. Population Fund.
Asked for
comment on the Heaven's Gate suicides, Turner commented, "It's a good way
to get rid of a few nuts. There's too many people anyway. We've got too
many nuts running around anyway, right?" Turner was widely criticized for
this comment, even though his sentiments probably reflected the views of
many of his associates.

Gore's Connections
Though presented to the public as a Southern Baptist, Vice
President Albert Gore wrote a book entitled Earth in the Balance, in which
he writes sympathetically about Lovelock's Gaia hypothesis. One chapter is
entitled, "Environmentalism of the Spirit." Sounding like a preacher, Gore
says the Gaia concept is able to "evoke a spiritual response in many of
those who hear it." In this context, he adds that "...the simple fact of
the living world and our place on it evokes awe, wonder, a sense of
mystery — a spiritual response — when one reflects on its deeper meaning."
The Vice President talks about "seeing God in the world" and
ourselves, asking, "Why does it feel faintly heretical to a Christian to
suppose that God is in us as human beings?" Perhaps this is because
Christians are taught that Jesus Christ mediates between God and man.
Although the Christian Bible refers to man being made in the image
of God, Gore says that by "experiencing nature in its fullest" we can use
our senses and our "spiritual imagination" to glimpse "an infinite image
of God" in the world.22 Gore seems to be talking about much more than
seeing beauty in nature.
Gore also displays an appreciation for
Native American religions, quoting from a speech supposedly delivered by
Indian Chief Seattle in which the Earth is called "our Mother."
Moreover, he goes even further back in history, writing
sympathetically about cultures that worshipped an Earth goddess and
attacking Christianity for eliminating those influences:
The
spiritual sense of our place in nature predates Native American cultures;
increasingly it can be traced to the origins of human civilization. A
growing number of anthropologists and archaeomythologists, such as Marija
Gimbutas and Riane Eisler, argued that the prevailing ideology of belief
in prehistoric Europe and much of the world was based on the worship of a
single Earth goddess, who was assumed to be the font of all life and who
radiated harmony among all living things. Much of the evidence for the
existence of this primitive religion comes from the many thousands of
artifacts uncovered in ceremonial sites. These sites are so widespread
that they seem to confirm the notion that a goddess religion was
ubiquitous throughout much of the world until the antecedents of today's
religions — most of which still have a distinctly masculine orientation —
swept out of India and the Near East, almost obliterating belief in the
goddess. The last vestige of organized goddess worship was eliminated by
Christianity as late as the fifteenth century in Lithuania.23
Both
Gore and Timothy Wirth were directly involved with a group called the
"Joint Appeal by Religion and Science for the Environment." They met with
various religious leaders and scientists in Washington in May of 1992 to
formulate a religious plan of action to save the environment. One of them,
The Very Reverend James Park Morton, serves as Dean of the Cathedral of
St. John the Divine, an Episcopal Center which houses an organization
called the Gaia Institute. He essentially declared that the purpose of the
Christian Church is to worship the creation, not the Creator:
The
challenge before the religious community in America is to make every
congregation — every church, synagogue and mosque — truly "green" — a
center of environmental study and action. That is their religious duty.
Other participants in the Washington event included climatologist
Stephen Schneider and U.N. official Maurice Strong.
The Earth
Summit
Gore was a participant in and Strong was the
secretary-general of the 1992 U.N. Conference on Environment and
Development, otherwise known as the "Earth Summit," which produced an
international document, Agenda 21, calling for "sustainable development."
The conference also resulted in creation of a U.N. Commission on
Sustainable Development and, in the U.S., a President's Commission on
Sustainable Development.
The United Nations Environment Program
(UNEP), established in 1972, commissioned a major collection of articles
entitled Ethics & Agenda 21, treating the issue of respect for the
environment as a moral and religious concern. One article, "A
Theological/Ethical Response to Agenda 21," was written by Sallie McFague,
who has lectured on "A Christian Ecological View of Human Beings." Her
article called for rejecting the Western model of the Earth in favor of
the "ancient organic model" which "can serve to incite the needed change
in perspective." She explained:
The organic model, which is found
in cultures and religions in Native American traditions, Goddess
religions, and even in Christianity's incarnationism, portrays Earth as a
body.24
The "organic model" is obviously the Gaia concept.
McFague's notion of the incarnation of Christ being ecological is truly
unique and sounds like a New Age formulation of Christianity that Vice
President Gore might embrace.
Like Gore, Maurice Strong shares
enthusiasm for the Gaia hypothesis. "Strong has integrated the [Gaia] idea
into the political institutions of the world through the UNEP and its
affiliated governmental and non-governmental organizations," writes Henry
Lamb, a long-time observer of Strong.25 Strong has reportedly said the
only thing that might save Earth is a "worldwide spiritual awakening."26
Lamb labels Strong a "mystic" and notes that he and his wife
opened a community in Colorado called Baca Grande, a "mecca for mystics,"
which they hoped would one day become the "Vatican City of the New World
Order." One group wanted to build a 46-story, pink granite pyramid on the
site in compliance with instructions from an "intergalactic leader named
Commander Kuthumi who was channeling from the planet Arturus."27
Channeling refers to an outside force or entity using a person's body to
communicate, a practice denounced by Christians as demonic.
Personally, Strong is reported to be an adherent of the Baha'i
World Faith which proclaims the unity of all religions.28 At the opening
of the Earth Summit, Strong declared:
..The change in behavior and
direction called for here must be rooted in our deepest spiritual, moral
and ethical values. We must reinstate in our lives the ethic of love and
respect for the Earth which must be accompanied by a revitalization of the
values central to all of our principal religious and philosophical
traditions...29
Reflecting Strong's influence, the UNEP
established a project to create an "Environmental Sabbath" and get
religions involved in a crusade to "save" the environment. One of its work
products was the aforementioned Ethics & Agenda 21 document. Formally
titled the "North American Environmental Sabbath Planning Committee," this
group was composed of the following individuals:
Dr. Noel J.
Brown, Director, U.N. Environmental Program. Dr. John J. Kirk (Sabbath
Coordinator), Director and Professor of Environmental Studies, Montclair
State College, Branchville, New Jersey. Pierre Quiblier, Outreach and
Liaison Coordinator, U.N. Environmental Program. Donald B. Clark,
Executive Secretary, Cornucopia Network of New Jersey, Inc., Nutley, New
Jersey. Donald Conroy, S.T.L., PhD., President, North American
Coalition on Religion and Ecology, Washington, D.C. Sister Dorothy
Farley, O.P. Richmond Hill, New York. Mrs. Joy Finlay (Canadian
Coordinator), Sherwood Park, Alta., Canada. Sister Eileen Fitz
Maurice, C.N.D., New York, New York. Sister Gloria Garcia, C.S.J.,
Jamaica, New York. Richard Jordan, Global Futures Network, New York,
New York. Dr. Peter Laurence, Executive Director, The Temple of
Understanding, The Cathedral of St. John the Divine, New York, New York.
Margo LaZaro, Peace Awareness Council, New York, New York. Norma
U. Levitt, World Union for Progressive Judaism, New York, New York.
Dr. Mary Evelyn Tucker, Department of Religion, Bucknell University,
Lewisburg, Pennsylvania, Dr. Ellen Vopicka, Federation of the Sisters
of Mercy of the Americas, Dobbs Ferry, New York. Targeting children,
the UNEP distributed "An Environmental Sabbath — Earth Rest Day Guide"
which carried the cover headline "Our Children Their Earth." In a section
of the publication recommending games and activities to "save the Earth,"
junior and high school students were told to:
Gather "round a
beautiful tree. Look, listen and meditate upon it as long as you can. When
your attention starts to wander from the tree, raise your hand. You may be
surprised to discover how restless your mind is. Discuss with the group
why you think this is. Then try again to experience the tree, for only by
contemplating with a quiet mind can we fully experience and reverence
nature [emphasis added].
Strong is currently directing the
U.N. "reform" effort and helping to implement an "Earth Charter," in
coordination with former Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev. The document
calls for the protection of "Mother Earth" and urges respect for "each
life form," language interpreted to mean recognition of animal rights.
Besides his work for the U.N., which earned him the title "Father Earth,"
Strong served as a member of the board and became president of the Better
World Society in 1988. This is an organization started by Ted Turner.
Turner's Record
An outspoken critic of Christianity,
Turner has ruled out going to heaven, saying, "Who wants to go to a place
that's perfect?" He said it would be "boring."30
He has been
quoted as saying that Christianity is a religion "for losers," that he
didn't need anyone to die for him, and that the Ten Commandments are
"obsolete." In place of the Ten Commandments, Turner unveiled his own ten
voluntary initiatives. The first involved loving and respecting the planet
Earth and all living things. Two involved support for the United Nations.
He told a U.N. radio program in 1986, "Down with nationalism. Up with
internationalism."
Maurice Strong became president of Turner's
Better World Society during a time when Turner had shed his image as a
conservative and was emerging as someone devoted to U.S.-Soviet
cooperation, disarmament and various causes embraced by the U.N. His
Better World Society produced and distributed a number of films on
international themes which aired on Turner's cable channels. One, "A Step
Away From War," was so biased that even the liberal Washington Post
labeled it as "baldly propagandistic." The one-sided nature of the films
prompted one pro-defense group to ask for equal time.
The Better
World Society had also presented a "Population Stabilization Medal" to the
United Nations Fund for Population Activities, which helped underwrite
Communist China's population control program of forced abortions,
involuntary sterilization and infanticide.
Other members of the
group's board included Dr. Julia J. Henderson, former secretary-general of
the International Planned Parenthood Federation, and Georgi Arbatov, a
Soviet Communist Party official.
On communism itself, Turner was
quoted in Fortune magazine in 1986 as saying, "Communism is fine with me.
It's part of the fabric of life on this planet." His wife, Jane Fonda, was
labeled a traitor for making common cause during the Vietnam War with the
Communist enemy killing Americans. But the controversy continued even
during the Persian Gulf War, when Turner's CNN was widely criticized for
serving as a propaganda vehicle for Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein.
Personally, Turner has been close to Cuban Communist dictator Fidel Castro
and it is no surprise that Turner's CNN was the first American news
organization to recently be allowed to open a news bureau in Havana.
Humanist of the Year
Another turning point in his
career came in 1990 when he received the "Humanist of the Year Award,"
given by the American Humanist Association, a so-called non-governmental
organization with official U.N. status. Humanism is a controversial
philosophy which seeks to eradicate God-centered ideas from human affairs.
Over the years, there have been two versions of a so-called "Humanist
Manifesto," the second deploring "the division of humankind on
nationalistic grounds" and urging the "development of a system of world
law and a world order based upon transnational federal government." By the
1990s, Turner confirmed that he had approved a network policy to highlight
U.N. conferences and U.N. themes with special programs. These included One
Child — One Voice, warning of environmental disasters; a series called
People Count, on population issues; and Our Planetary Police, touting U.N.
peacekeeping operations.
Captain Planet
Despite his
reference to the Heaven's Gate members as "nuts," Turner's promotion of
the Gaia philosophy is equally bizarre. Turner claims personal credit for
originating the concept of the Captain Planet and the Planeteers cartoon
program, which features a character "Gaia," described as "The spirit of
the planet Earth who appears to the Planeteers either in human form or as
a holographic image." The form or image is of a woman dressed in long
robes, like a Goddess. The voice of the character was provided by actress
Whoopi Goldberg.
According to a description of the show, "Gaia,
the spirit of Earth, awakens from a 100-year nap to discover the
devastating effects people have had on our planet's environment in the
20th century. Fearing for the future, she calls upon five special young
people from around the world...to lead the battle against further
destruction of the Earth. She gives these Planeteers magic rings that
enable each of them to control one element of nature..."
Dr. Devra
Lee Davis of the National Research Council commented: "Using cartoons to
captivate children about the environment is a terrific idea which will
enhance global awareness of this world."
The Planeteers are
children from different countries, including Russia, with special powers
who summon Captain Planet, a "hero for the Earth," and together battle
various "eco-villains." One ad for the show proclaimed Captain Planet as
"a role model for millions of kids" and "a hero to almost 250 stations"
which carry the program. A "Captain Planet" superhero even makes personal
appearances around the country.
In fact, according to Turner
Broadcasting publicity materials, the show has reached millions of
children with environmental messages on such subjects as "overpopulation,"
strip mining, the greenhouse effect, "inappropriate development," and
"military conversion." One program told children to "urge your parents and
friends to support laws like the U.S. Endangered Species Act that support
our natural treasures." Several of the villains on the show are
businessmen.31
Subversion
One of those involved in
creating the program was Barbara Y.E. Pyle, who served as environmental
editor at Turner's CNN and became Vice President of Environmental Policy
for Turner's TBS. Pyle, who was named a "United Nations Global Laureate,"
once described her mission in the media by saying, "I do have an axe to
grind...I want to be the little subversive person in television."32
Another Turner program, Voice of the Planet, also featured Gaia as a
character. In this program, actress Faye Dunaway provided the voice of
Gaia, speaking through a computer. The main setting of the program was a
Tibetan Buddhist monastery. One piece of promotional material for the
program featured "thoughts from Gaia," such as:
You think
Hiroshima was bad. I'm sometimes afraid it wasn't bad enough.
Overpopulation? No real problem. The more corpses, the more
bacteria. The more bacteria, the more blooming begonias. I love begonias.
Most of the technology that you think distinguishes you, I find
quite trivial. Though, I must confess a soft spot for spaceships.
The Black Plague was my way of housecleaning.
I love the
live-action adventures of volcanoes and Earthquakes.
Promotional material for the program said:
Voice of
the Planet also is an environmental project, seeking to raise the
consciousness of the inhabitants of this incredible planet. The Earth has
always loved and nurtured life, only to witness war, turmoil,
overpopulation and abuse. Gaia, with the wisdom of all the ages, is saying
that the time has come to change our ways.
How might we be forced
to "change our ways?" Philip Shabecoff, the former chief environmental
correspondent for the New York Times, has written a book, A New Name for
Peace, in which he calls on people in the "rich industrial countries" like
the U.S. to start leading a "more reasonable life" to free resources for
use by others. "Were we able to do that, we could be on the way to
achieving Pax Gaia, the Peace of the Earth," he writes.33
Commenting on the Shabecoff book, the New York Times Book Review
said it:
Advances the notion dangled before us, then seemingly
ignored, by Al Gore, who said that environmentalism must soon become "the
central organizing principle of civilization." Mr. Gore should read this
book.
Perhaps he has by now.
Footnotes:
1.
Alston Chase, "Prophets for the temple of green," The Washington Times,
January 26, 1996, A 16. 2. Global Biodiversity Assessment, Chapter 8.1
Introduction: Concepts of the Economic Value of Biodiversity, 68,69.
3. Stephen H. Schneider, Global Warming. Are We Entering the
Greenhouse Century? (San Francisco: Sierra Club Books, 1989), 76. 4.
see Samantha Smith, Goddess Earth (Lafayette, Louisiana: Huntington House
Publishers, 1994), 31. 5. Corinne McLaughlin and Gordon Davidson,
Spiritual Politics. Changing the World From the Inside Out (New York:
Ballantine Books, 1994), 162. 6. Russell Chandler, Understanding the
New Age (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan, 1991), 114. 7. Ibid.,
Smith, 80. 8. Rosemary Ellen Guiley, The Encyclopedia of Witches and
Witchcraft (New York: Facts on File, 1989), 326. 9. As quoted in the
forward to Rainbow Nation Without Borders. Toward an Ecotopian Millennium
(Santa Fe, New Mexico: Bear & Company Publishing, 1991), xvii. 10.
Ibid., Guiley, 131. 11. Ibid., Chandler, 114. 12. Rosemary Ellen
Guiley, Harper's Encyclopedia of Mystical & Paranormal Experience
(Edison, New Jersey: Castle Books, 1991), 449. 13. Ibid. 14. Peter
Russell, The Global Brain Awakens. Our Next Evolutionary Leap (Palo Alto,
California: Global Brain Inc., 1995), 321. 15. "No Longer Willful,
Gaia Becomes Respectable," Research News, April 22, 1988, 393. 16.
William J. Broad, "Paradise Lost: Biosphere Retooled as Atmospheric
Nightmare," The New York Times, November 19, 1996, B5. 17. Ibid.,
Guiley, The Encyclopedia of Witches and Witchcraft, 64. 18. From Green
Egg, the official Journal of the Church of All Worlds, Vol. 29, No. 119,
May/June 1997. 19. Francesca Dubie, "Altars & Ecology," Green Egg,
May/June 1996, 7. 20. Melissa Pinol, "Sacred Rodents," Green Egg, Vol.
29, No. 118, 1997, 37. 21. Interview with Eric Buehrer conducted by
Dr. D. James Kennedy, reprinted in AFA Journal, April 1997, 18. 22. Al
Gore, Earth in the Balance. Ecology and the Human Spirit (New York:
Houghton Mifflin Company, 1992), 265. 23. Ibid., 260. 24. Sallie
McFague, "A Theological/Ethical Response to Agenda 21," Ethics &
Agenda 21, United Nations Environmental Program, 1994), 109-112. 25.
Henry Lamb, "Meet Maurice Strong," eco-logic, (November/December 1995), 5.
26. Ibid. 27. Ibid. 28. see Michael S. Coffman, Saviors of the
Earth? (Chicago: Northfield Publishing, 1994), 197. 29. Quoted on back
cover of Ethics & Agenda 21. Moral Implications of a Global Consensus,
United Nations Environment Programme, 1994. 30. Cliff Kincaid, "Turner
Claims He'd Prefer Hell," Focus on the Media column, Human Events,
November 11, 1994, 16. 31. "Force-Feeding Greens to Children,"
MediaNomics, Free Enterprise & Media Institute, January 1994, 1.
32. As quoted in Notable Quotables, from MediaWatch, Media Research
Center, June 25, 1990. 33. Philip Shabecoff, A New Name for Peace.
Internationalism, Environmentalism, Sustainable Development and Democracy
(Hanover: University Press of New England, 1996), 220.
Wisdom And Freedom
produced by WORLD
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