Tuesday, January 17, 2023

Utah Elite Plan To Replace Utah State Prison With An Outdoor Prison Courtesy Global Planners - WEF 15 Minute Cities

 It's all the buzz, but it's the same old agenda sporting a new name...the 15 Minute City!

Another Un-elected Government Telling You "you don't need to leave the property at any part of the day for any reason". Let's face it, it's a PRISON!


I've tried to tell you for over a decade now, now here it is!  A Prison City, where you'll "own nothing and you'll be happy" in this little 600 acre parcel in Draper Utah.  While we were all on lockdown lining up for your Injection to qualify for your COVID PASSPORT storing it on your CELL phone bound and gagged,  (prison terms), "they" were breaking their own COVID rules and making a plan, here's the short of it.  Watch the video below.



I'll share an article that explains in short the agenda being implemented across the world in which Utah is racing to establish here before you get wind of it.

 

"The idea is that everything you regularly need will be within 15 minutes of where you live, and you will be fined for excessive travels beyond your patch. Pretty feudal, eh? What’s the bet the administrators of the system, and all the important bureaucrats, will be allowed free travel?
The 15 Minute City is a UN and WEF plan, because they want you to drive less.



 

In the WEF’s own words — this rearrangement of cities is absolutely about climate change.

It’s permanent climate lockdown.

The 15 minute city is not just Oxford, but turning up in Brisbane, Melbourne, Barcelona, Paris, Portland and Buenos Aires. It’s everywhere.

Oxford, England, is where the madness of the 15-minute system is first being implemented. James Woudhuysen:

The green agenda is taking inspiration from the illiberal days of lockdown.

To this end, Oxfordshire County Council, which is run by Labour, the Liberal Democrats and the Green Party, wants to divide the city of Oxford into six ‘15 minute’ districts. In these districts, it is said, most household essentials will be accessible by a quarter-of-an-hour walk or bike ride, and so residents will have no need for a car.

On the surface, these 15-minute neigbourhoods might sound pleasant and convenient. But there is a coercive edge. The council plans to cut car use and traffic congestion by placing strict rules on car journeys. …

Residents will have to register their cars with the council and they will be tracked to count their journeys through the key gateways.

Under the new proposals, if any of Oxford’s 150,000 residents drives outside of their designated district more than 100 days a year, he or she could be fined £70.

 Apparently, not enough people are catching buses or riding bikes. But instead of making that more appealing, the totalitarians will force it through tracking and fines.

Oxfordshire has just approved on November 29th, the “traffic filters” trial which will turn the city into a “fifteen minute city”. The Trial will start in Jan 2024. …
Who benefits?

In the end, these aggressively over-managed schemes mean more paperwork, more tracking, more jobs for bureaucrats and more free passes for “friends” of Big Government.

Oddly enough, something similar to this was tried from the 1960s in one Australian city, and it failed.

 

The original design of Canberra was as a series of separate satellite cities, separated by big belts of bush and linked by freeways. The original small cities of North and South Canberra were supplemented by Woden, Belconnen, Weston Creek, Tuggeranong, Gunghalin, and so on. Each of these was essentially a 15 minute city. The idea was that each satellite city had shops, jobs (mainly government offices), sporting facilities, entertainment, etc. sufficient for those in the city, so one would rarely need to leave the satellite city where you lived.

It was built, but experience shows that it fails. For instance:People get a new job or promotion — but it’s in a different city. Do they then move? Not when the job might only be for a couple of years. So inevitably the jobs are frequently in different satellite cities to where people live.
 People date or marry someone who lives in another city. More inter-city travel required.
The stamp duty on selling a house and buying another is prohibitive — a year’s savings or more for most. So it’s not really a reasonable option to move every time you get a new job or whatever.

The freeways linking the cities are often jammed at peak hour. Meanwhile, travel distances are huge, because Canberra is so very spread out — because it was expected that people wouldn’t travel out of their satellite city much. Lose-lose. Designed by bureaucrats, for bureaucrats."

 by Joanne Nova 


Read it and WEEP!
Everything below is a clickable link.

https://thepointutah.org/

PHASE ONE PLAN

FRAMEWORK PLAN



Rising from the Desert: A 15-Minute City is Coming to Utah








Click the Photo to Watch the Video.



Click the Photo to Watch the Video.


Click the Photo to Watch the Video.


Click the Photo the Watch the Video.


Click the Photo to Watch the Video.



Please take a few minutes to read:


Utah Politicians set Draper City Mayor right.  Now we know why.


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