The United Nations Signs The Pact for the Future – What Comes Next?

By Derrick Broze

The United Nations has signed the Pact for the Future. Will the people of the world comply with their Technocratic vision, or chart our own course?

On Sunday September 22nd, the United Nations signed the Pact for the Future on the first official day of the Summit of the Future. The UN also signed two complementary documents, the Global Digital Compact and the Declaration on Future Generations. As The Last American Vagabond (TLAV) has been reporting since July 2023, the Summit of the Future and the signing of the Pact for the Futurerepresent a significant step towards empowering the UN to be a world government.

The Summit of the Future was held at the beginning of the current 79th session of the annual UN General Assembly. The summit has been in the making since at least 2022 after repeated calls by UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres to shift financial resources to rapidly complete the Agenda 2030 goals set by the UN in 2015.

The United Nations official Summit of the Future website states:

“World leaders adopt a Pact for the Future that includes a Global Digital Compact and a Declaration on Future Generations. The Pact covers a broad range of themes including peace and security, sustainable development, climate change, digital cooperation, human rights, gender, youth and future generations, and the transformation of global governance.”

While the vast majority of the UN’s member states voted in favor of the Pact, seven nations voted against the document, including Iran, Russian Federation, Belarus, Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, Nicaragua, Sudan, and Syria. Fifteen countries abstained from the vote.

The UN notes that the Pact for the Future is only the latest step in a long line of moves towards world government, or, as they prefer, “global governance”.

“The Pact and its annexes foresee concrete follow-up mechanisms: a high-level review for the Global Digital Compact in 2027, a high-level plenary meeting in 2028 for the Declaration on Future Generations, and a Heads of State and Government meeting at the beginning of the 83rd session of the General Assembly in 2028 for a comprehensive review of the Pact for the Future.”

The UN references several other upcoming gatherings as opportunities to “build on the agreements and advance the actions contained in the Pact for the Future”. These upcoming meetings including the Fourth International Conference on Financing for Development, the Second World Summit for Social Development and upcoming UN Climate Change Conferences.

The completion of the Pact for the Future’s goals will require “national-level engagement, implementation and accountability”. This should be seen as an indication that individual nation states will now use their national budgets and laws to enforce the aims of the Pact.

Read More: The United Nations Signs The Pact for the Future – What Comes Next?


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