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published The Limits to Growth, followed by the First Global
Revolution in 1991, in which humanity was the root problem of all the
misery in the world.
Economist Robert Solow, recipient of a Nobel Memorial Prize in
Economic Sciences, criticized The Limits to Growth as having
‘simplistic’ scenarios. He was also a vocal critic of the Club of Rome,
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ostensibly for amateurism. In 1976, an analysis of the world model
used for The Limits to Growth, by mathematicians Vermeulen and De
Jongh, showed it to be “very sensitive to small parameter variations”
50
and having “dubious assumptions and approximations”.
An interdisciplinary team at Sussex University Science Policy
Research Unit reviewed the structure and assumptions of the models
used. The team published its findings in Models of Doom, showing that
the forecasts of the world future are very sensitive to a few unduly
pessimistic key assumptions. The Sussex scientists also claimed that the
methods, data and predictions of Dennis Meadows et al., are faulty
because their world models (and their Malthusian bias) do not
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accurately reflect reality.
Despite the ferocious critics, the UN was delighted by the Club of
Rome discoveries and founded the World Commission on Environment
and Development in 1983. From now on, sustainability becomes an
Illuminati mantra and in 1992 the first United Nations Conference on
Environment and Development, or Earth Summit, is held in Rio de
Janeiro. We are talking about the first Agenda for Environment and
Development, also known as Agenda 21. This was a reference to the
21st century when all of the set goals would have to be met. 178
governments signed the agreement.
The diabolic Agendas. At the UN Sustainable Development
Summit of 2015, 11 goals concerning the future of the Earth, the human
49 Clement Douglas (1 September 2002). Interview with Solow, Federal Reserve
Bank of Minneapolis, Retrieve, 29 November 2017.
50 Vermeulen P., De Jongh D. (29 Juin 1976). Parameters Sensitivity of the ‘Limits
to Grow’ World Model, Applied Mathematical Modelling, 1 (1): 29-32.
51 Cole H.S.D. (1973). Models of Doom: a critique of The Growth, USA, Universe
Book, p. 244.
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