Taking Liberty – Report on Private Property & the Federal Government
How private property in America is being abolished.
by Michael S. Coffman, Ph.D
One hour before the U.S. Senate was to adopt the United Nations Treaty on Biodiversity Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchinson (R-TX) went to the floor with a 300-plus-page draft copy of Chapter 10 of the United Nations Global Biodiversity Assessment and a 4′x6′ poster.
The poster showed the lower 48 states overlaid with hundreds of red islands representing wilderness areas interconnected by thousands of red ribbons called corridors, all surrounded by yellow buffer zones. Small green patches were ‘human occupation zones.” The agenda was so outrageous it would have been discounted, except that Sen. Hutchinson had the proof in her hands. The date was Sept. 29, 1994, and the agenda was called the Wildlands Project.
Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell (D-ME), along with several other senators, withdrew the scheduled closure vote on the treaty and a vote was never taken. That should have been the end of it, but in reality it was only the beginning.
(A full copy of the report is available by clicking the picture or link below)




