Excerpted from Canada Free Press, hat tip Pat Dollard:
America and the World in 2030, by Dr. Ileana Johnson Paugh
Christian and American customs around the country are under attack by
atheist minorities and groups with anti-American agendas. Institutions,
freedoms, and traditions that we had previously taken for granted are
threatened. The church, turning left and complicit, clamoring for new
membership and revenues, has chosen to remain silent in defense of life,
liberty and Americanism. Conservative groups have abandoned their
principles in order to be popular and liked. The future of our country
in general is irrelevant to most who selfishly live in the bubble of the
moment.
The majority of Americans are either asleep, lulled into a false sense of temporary well-being and abundance, or have resigned themselves to their fate because it is hard to have spring with one flower. Those who are keenly aware of negative transformations and have seen this movie play before are shaking their heads in disbelief and speaking in the wind like mythological Cassandras.
Few seem to worry about future generations, except in empty posturing rhetoric. Lost in egotistical self-indulgence, our collective elected officials continue to make decisions predicated on the Me Generation. The Lost Generation must fend for itself when the time comes.
Since the low-information reality show spectator voters have elected the most “transformational president” in history to a second term of lavish spending and punitive socialist redistribution of wealth, if the U.N. Agenda 21 and the ginned-up class warfare succeed, the thinking Americans will watch powerlessly as the U.S. will no longer be a Constitutional Republic and a superpower, becoming a second rate nation in the dustbin of declined and fallen “empires.”
What will the world be like and what kind of country will America be in the next 15-20 years at the rate of the fast-paced involuntary and hopeless change that is aimed at pushing us “forward” to disaster?
The “unprecedented change” will drive “60 percent of the world’s population to mega-cities by 2030, and competition for food, water, and energy resources could increase the possibilities of violent conflict.” (Frederick Kempe, President and CEO, Atlantic Council)



















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