“Welcome to The Anthropocene”: Group of Scientists Advocate Global Government Jurriaan Maessen Infowars.com April 4, 2012 “This is the story of how one species changed a planet..”- so begins this new promo put out by a team of UN-sponsored scientists. The website associated with the “short film” states it has been set up by “researchers and communicators from some of the leading scientific research institutions on global sustainability.” The film itself follows the same old tiresome script we’ve heard so often from the mouths of neo-eugenic propagandists: too many people, shrinking icecaps, rising sea levels and the rest. The solution to all this doom and gloom? Global government of course. The “leading scientific institutions” the website mentions are visible at the credits-page, namely: the Stockholm Environment Institute, the Geosphere-Biosphere Programme, Stockholm University and other organisations promoting global governance. The chief scientists involved with the “Planet under Pressure” confab- one of whom stated earlier that questioning “climate change” equals serious mental illness- are featuring the short film prominently on their website now calling for global government to stem the tide of “humaninduced climate change”. As part of the State of the Planet Declaration issued by the UN-backed organization, a collection of high-level scientists pushes the idea of global governance, calling it “Earth System Governance”. The declaration reads: “Governments must take action to support institutions and mechanisms that will improve coherence, as well as bring about integrated policy and action across the social, economic and environmental pillars. Current understanding supports the creation of a Sustainable Development Council within the UN system to integrate social, economic and environmental policy at the global level. There is also strong support for strengthening global governance by including civil society, business and industry in decision-making at all levels.” At all levels. Listed among the measures required to “strengthen” global governance is: “continued exploration of new areas of knowledge, such as theoretical and applied research in behavioural science (…)”. In a separate policy brief put out by the confab titled Transforming