What's UN's Real ‘Climate Change’ Agenda?

These Last Days News - February 21, 2017


"The octopus of evil, the international conspiracy of evil, has at its head a Grand Master.  I cannot at this time, My children, reveal in entirety the order of succession of those who seek to enslave your world." - Our Lady of the Roses, May 26, 1976

INTO  SLAVERY"O My children, recognize, I repeat, the signs of your times. You are fast selling yourselves into slavery. Your government and the governments of the world are now almost in full control of the agents of hell." - Our Lady of the Roses, July 25, 1977

"Your country must send from its shores the coalition the United Nations... I must warn you at this time, as your Mother, that you must remove yourself from this gathering of world churches. My Son has given you His true Church upon your earth. All others have left it, as they could not follow the rule. As protesters, they have cast aside the truth." - Our Lady, September 13, 1975

WND.com reported on February 6, 2017:
Two years ago, the United Nation’s architect of the global “climate change” agenda announced what may be the real goal.
At a little-noticed news conference in February 2015 in Brussels, Christiana Figueres, executive secretary of U.N.’s Framework Convention on Climate Change, virtually admitted that the goal of environmental activists is not to save the world from ecological calamity but to destroy capitalism.
“This is the first time in the history of mankind that we are setting ourselves the task of intentionally, within a defined period of time, to change the economic development model that has been reigning for at least 150 years, since the Industrial Revolution,” she said.
Referring to a new international treaty environmentalists adopted at the Paris climate change conference last year, she added: “This is probably the most difficult task we have ever given ourselves, which is to intentionally transform the economic development model for the first time in human history.”
Figueres is a woman with her own power agenda, too.
Last July, she declared herself a candidate to succeed Ban Ki-moon as secretary general of the U.N. However, she announced three months later that she was leaving the contest because of lack of support.
She led 195 countries to agree an historic pact to tackle global warming in Paris last December, and hoped this success would convince governments to back her in the contest for top post.
But a fourth Security Council straw poll last September saw Figueres finish close to bottom, receiving support from just five countries.
In a letter, the Costa Rican said she was pulling out through “loyalty to the United Nations and in order to facilitate the advance of the selection process.”
Figueres added there was still a need for a “new era” of multilateralism to tackle a variety of interconnected issues such as conflict prevention, human rights, migration and climate change.
“Never before have we had so many issues compounding each other,” she said.