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In this episode of Connecting the Dots, Dan Happel investigates the hidden power structure behind global governance, focusing on the role of Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs), Councils of Governments (COGs), and Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs). These entities, often unelected and operating outside of constitutional checks, are reshaping local governance into regional technocratic systems that undermine American sovereignty.
Joining Dan Happel is Gregg Smith, a retired U.S. Navy veteran and former Bureau of Land Management Range Technician who witnessed firsthand how environmental NGOs and UN-driven programs like Agenda 21 infiltrate land use policy. After nearly 30 years of farming in rural Minnesota, Smith now educates citizens through SaveYourCities.com, a resource dedicated to exposing how NGOs and public-private partnerships erode property rights, self-government, and local accountability.
Listeners will discover in this episode how:
NGOs act as Trojan horses for globalist policies, channeling funding and influence into local governments.
COGs consolidate towns and counties into regional blocs, bypassing elected officials and local decision-making.
PPPs blur the line between corporations and government, creating unelected power centers that enforce sustainability agendas.
Agenda 21/2030 frameworks transform land use, energy, and resource policies into mechanisms of control.
Local communities often adopt these programs unknowingly through grants, model legislation, and “sustainability” partnerships.
Solutions exist when citizens educate themselves, organize locally, and push back against unconstitutional regionalism.
This conversation reveals how globalist strategies translate into real-world impacts on American farms, ranches, and towns and how ordinary citizens can resist by reclaiming authority at the local level.
Unelected power structures are reshaping governance.
Regionalism undermines sovereignty.
“Sustainability” is often a cover for control.
Money drives compliance.
Ignorance enables infiltration.
Public-private partnerships centralize power.
Citizens must reclaim oversight.
Exposing deception is half the battle.
By happelmtIn this episode of Connecting the Dots, Dan Happel investigates the hidden power structure behind global governance, focusing on the role of Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs), Councils of Governments (COGs), and Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs). These entities, often unelected and operating outside of constitutional checks, are reshaping local governance into regional technocratic systems that undermine American sovereignty.
Joining Dan Happel is Gregg Smith, a retired U.S. Navy veteran and former Bureau of Land Management Range Technician who witnessed firsthand how environmental NGOs and UN-driven programs like Agenda 21 infiltrate land use policy. After nearly 30 years of farming in rural Minnesota, Smith now educates citizens through SaveYourCities.com, a resource dedicated to exposing how NGOs and public-private partnerships erode property rights, self-government, and local accountability.
Listeners will discover in this episode how:
NGOs act as Trojan horses for globalist policies, channeling funding and influence into local governments.
COGs consolidate towns and counties into regional blocs, bypassing elected officials and local decision-making.
PPPs blur the line between corporations and government, creating unelected power centers that enforce sustainability agendas.
Agenda 21/2030 frameworks transform land use, energy, and resource policies into mechanisms of control.
Local communities often adopt these programs unknowingly through grants, model legislation, and “sustainability” partnerships.
Solutions exist when citizens educate themselves, organize locally, and push back against unconstitutional regionalism.
This conversation reveals how globalist strategies translate into real-world impacts on American farms, ranches, and towns and how ordinary citizens can resist by reclaiming authority at the local level.
Unelected power structures are reshaping governance.
Regionalism undermines sovereignty.
“Sustainability” is often a cover for control.
Money drives compliance.
Ignorance enables infiltration.
Public-private partnerships centralize power.
Citizens must reclaim oversight.
Exposing deception is half the battle.