The sound of the UN prison gate slamming shut, as noiseless as the tree falling in a forest with no one there to hear, won’t initially alarm populations preoccupied with the failing economies of their own nations.

No one will be able to scale the UN wall, which makes—starting today—all of civilian society walled-in-by-bureaucracy global citizens.

It’s not the Donald J. Trump proposed temporary wall to keep America safe from undocumented refugees that’ should be the biggest worry, but the wall getting the green light today at the United Nations.

“According to the UN, only heads of state, heads of government and foreign affairs ministers are generally “empowered” to sign such international agreements.”

“They include the U.S., Japan, Australia, Canada, and European nations but also developing countries, including India, Mexico, Brazil and Indonesia.

“United Nations and world leaders are touting the likely historic nature of the April 22 ceremony—they expect to set a record for the number of leaders signing an international agreement on a single day—with a total of 162 nations planning to send representatives to UN headquarters, the UN said April 19.

“Four months after nearly 200 nations finally reached an historic deal in Paris to address climate change, more than 160 of them will send representatives April 22 to sign it in New York, in hopes of getting the deal entered into force well before 2020. ( Bloomberg , April 20, 2016)

But, after today, no country will be allowed the distinction of sovereignty as civil society becomes the UN’s long-touted One World Order, instituted under the cover of Agenda 21/2030’s global warming/climate change.

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Global pooh-bahs will be signing climate accord documents without the approval of their own citizens.

“UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said the record gathering, drawing more than 60 heads of state, including French President Francois Hollande, will underscore world commitment to implement the climate accord. He said it would outstrip the previous record of 119 nations that traveled to Jamaica more than 30 years ago to sign the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea. (Bloomberg) “People say a [world] record exists to be broken,” Ban said April 15 at a World Bank forum. “Well, this time we are going to break [that] record.”“ “Some may ask about the importance of a signing ceremony, Ban said. But he acknowledged that the outpouring of support will remove any doubts that a global effort to address climate change is underway.”

Part of the pomp and circumstance of the signing ceremony is that the signing is taking place on Earth Day, 2016.

The day’s events also include a luncheon in the afternoon termed a ‘High-Level Signature Ceremony of Paris Agreement’, at which former Vice President Al Gore, now chairman of Generation Investment Management and the Climate Reality Project will be keynote speaker.

While the UN has become the unsolicited Armed Forces of rising greenhouse gas emissions, and has recently added ownership of the world’s seas to its booty, cracks in allegiance to its agency, the United Nations Industrial Organization (UNIDO) are starting to show.

Pieter-Henk Schroor, Deputy Permanent Representative—Permanent Mission of the Kingdom of the Netherlands to the United Nations Organizations, has confirmed to Canada Free Press (CFP) that the Dutch government intends to submit a bill to Parliament regarding its withdrawal from UNIDO.