The Abundance Agenda Is Agenda 2030 Wearing a New Word | 5-9-26

by | May 11, 2026 | News & Politics

Executive Summary

The same architects who sold America fifty years of scarcity have suddenly discovered abundance — and We the People need to ask why.

This week on The Mel K Show, Lisa Logan walked us through what she calls intentionally inverted language — the deliberate strategy of borrowing our vocabulary and refilling it with the opposite of what we think we are agreeing to. The current word of the day is abundance. Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson wrote the book. Larry Fink — who runs BlackRock and now also runs the World Economic Forum — talks about it from the Davos stage. Governors are signing onto it. Mayors are signing onto it. And underneath the new word sits the exact same infrastructure that Agenda 2030 has been quietly building for a decade — tokenization of natural resources, public-private partnerships, smart meters, cloud seeding, walkable cities, and the appointed boards that approve all of it before voters ever know it is happening.

How did the scarcity-mindset crowd flip to an abundance message overnight? Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson say it themselves in their interviews. The 1972 Limits to Growth report from the Club of Rome — the same report that gave us Dennis Meadows on camera saying you should only have the right to two children — was costing the left elections. American voters had had enough of doom-and-gloom. So the architects rebranded. Same agenda. Same destination. Same supranational bodies. New brochure. And because the press coverage rarely connects the new word to the old report, most Americans cannot see the inversion happening.

In Lisa’s backyard in Utah, this is not theoretical. A sixteen-football-field data center was being pushed through an appointed board called MIDA — the Military Industrial Development Agency — that the elected county commissioners did not even know existed until two weeks before the vote. Five of MIDA’s eight seats were appointed by Governor Cox. The community showed up the night before this episode aired and voted the data center down. That is the recovery program. That is what works. The architecture is real, but the architecture is also defeatable when We the People show up.

Scroll to the bottom for Key Takeaways.

How the Scarcity Agenda Became the “Abundance Agenda”

The 1972 Limits to Growth report sat at the foundation of fifty years of global policy. Finite planet, population bomb, resource exhaustion — the Club of Rome’s framing built the modern environmentalist apparatus and the policy spine of Agenda 2030.

Then it started losing elections. American voters watched their kids get bused to May Day marches, watched the energy bills climb, watched the smart-meter letters arrive in the mail telling them they were in the wrong percentile of water usage — and they had enough.

So the architects pivoted. Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson — and they say this on the record — wrote a book reframing the same agenda with the opposite word. Abundance. Because of technology. Because of AI. Because we can now measure every resource, every tree, every barrel of water, every cow, every breath of carbon, every human being from birth to death.

The strategy is straightforward. Measure everything. Tokenize everything. Then redistribute everything — not by what the local community needs, but by what the global community decides.

Who Sits at the Top of the New Word

Larry Fink still runs BlackRock, which manages most American public pensions. Larry Fink is now also the head of the World Economic Forum. From the Davos stage, he calls for tokenization of natural resources — the natural asset class — and the Fourth Industrial Revolution.

A year ago there was public pushback when the natural asset class proposal surfaced. So the language changed. The structure did not.

This is the documentary record. ESG renaming. Public-private partnerships repackaged as “stakeholder solutions.” The same architects, the same supranational bodies, the same destination — “you will own nothing and be happy” — sitting underneath every “abundance” headline.

America’s Hidden Abundance — and Why It Is Locked Up

Here is the piece of the conversation that should stop every American cold. America does not have a scarcity problem. America has a policy problem dressed up as a scarcity problem.

Lisa rattled off what we were never taught. Uranium across Utah. Lithium across Utah and the Grand Canyon. Antimony across Appalachia. The critical minerals every politician is suddenly so worried about — they are sitting under federal land that an American citizen cannot legally walk on without an officer arriving within minutes.

Operation Gigawatt convenes in Park City, Utah this month. Geothermal, nuclear, the “both-and” energy strategy that Democratic leadership has quietly signed onto while telling its voters it wants to phase out fossil fuels.

The “abundance agenda” is being deployed to unlock that artificial scarcity on supranational terms — not American ones. The same Barack Obama who signed America onto Agenda 2030 in 2015 with Samantha Power and Susan Rice was walking around carrying Fareed Zakaria’s The Post-American World. That is not subtle. That is the playbook on the cover.

Dictatorship by Bureaucracy — The Real Threat

Hannah Arendt named it in The Origins of Totalitarianism. She called it dictatorship by bureaucracy. The threat to a constitutional republic is not the king. It is the unelected board that makes the decisions while the elected officials rubber-stamp them.

Public-private partnership has nothing to do with the public — meaning us. It means the appointed administrators who make decisions above us, without our vote and often without our knowledge. PIDs. TIFs. Special districts. Development authorities. Every state has its own version under different names.

Rahm Emanuel told us where this was going when he was mayor of Chicago. He wrote that the future of America would be run by mayors. Go to weforum.org and search the mayor program — sixty-five cities. Then search the Bloomberg mayor program — seven hundred mayors. These are not random local officials. They are trained, networked, and aligned with the Sustainable Development Goals while the press coverage in their hometowns still frames their politics as red versus blue.

The first time President Trump pulled the United States out of the Paris Agreement, hundreds of mayors and governors publicly announced they would stay on it anyway. John Kerry said it on camera. The uniparty signs onto the global agenda below the level most voters watch.

What Works — Box Elder County, Utah

The night before this episode aired, We the People won one. Box Elder County voted down a sixteen-football-field data center. The community filled the room. They told MIDA no. They told their commissioners no. They told the public-private-partnership infrastructure no — to its face — at a public meeting.

This is the entire playbook in one event. Show up. Read the fine print. Ask who appointed the board. Ask why the commissioners did not know. Ask why your water pressure is going to drop and your energy bill is going to spike so that an offshore-owned AI training facility can drink your aquifer dry. Then vote no.

And if they push it through anyway — sue. Public-private partnerships are unconstitutional. Government in this republic is by the people, for the people. When the covenant gets inverted, the people get to invert it back.

This is not Republican and Democrat anymore. Either you are for the United States of America, the Constitution, the Bill of Rights, our sovereignty, borders, language, culture, our children, and our future — or you are not. We the People are the answer, and the answer is local every single time.

Key Takeaways

  • “Abundance” is the new “scarcity.” The 1972 Club of Rome Limits to Growth doom message lost the left elections — so the same architects rebranded the same agenda with the opposite word.
  • Larry Fink runs BlackRock and now runs the World Economic Forum — and openly calls for tokenization of all natural resources, including the natural asset class.
  • America’s “scarcity” is a policy choice. Uranium, lithium, antimony, and other critical minerals sit in Utah, the Grand Canyon, and Appalachia — much of it on federal land Americans cannot legally access.
  • Dictatorship by bureaucracy is the real threat — unelected boards, special districts, and public-private partnerships make the decisions while elected officials rubber-stamp them.
  • Mayors are the WEF’s distribution network — weforum.org’s mayor programs and the Bloomberg seven-hundred-mayor network keep the Sustainable Development Goals advancing regardless of who is in the White House.
  • Box Elder County, Utah voted down a sixteen-football-field data center the night before this episode aired — proving the architecture can be stopped at the local level when the community shows up.
  • Public-private partnerships are unconstitutional — communities that lose at the appointed-board level should sue.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the “abundance agenda” really the same as Agenda 2030? According to Lisa Logan’s research, yes. The same architects who built fifty years of scarcity policy on the 1972 Club of Rome Limits to Growth report are now using abundance as the wrapper for the same destination — tokenized, measured, redistributed resources under public-private partnership administration. Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson openly explain in interviews that the doom message was costing the left elections, so the wrapper changed.

Why didn’t pulling out of the Paris Agreement stop this? Because the agenda does not run through national elections. The first time President Trump pulled out of the Paris Agreement, hundreds of mayors and governors publicly committed to staying on it. John Kerry said it on camera. The Sustainable Development Goals advance through mayors, appointed boards, special districts, and public-private partnerships — below the level most voters watch.

What is MIDA and does my state have something like it? MIDA is the Military Industrial Development Agency in Utah — an appointed board that approved a sixteen-football-field data center without the elected county commissioners’ knowledge. Five of its eight seats were appointed by Governor Cox. Every state has equivalent bodies under different names — PIDs, TIFs, special districts, redevelopment authorities. Find yours. They are operating in your county right now.

Is this anti-technology or anti-progress? Not at all. This is anti-unaccountable technology and anti-managed progress. The American founding promise is that the people decide what gets built in their communities — not a supranational body, not a tokenization platform, not a board of appointees no voter ever met. Real abundance is what happens when free people make their own decisions with their own resources.

What can I actually do this week? Find your local appointed boards and make a list of who appointed each member. Show up to one public meeting — county commission, school board, planning board. And audit the vocabulary. Every time you hear abundance, stakeholder, sustainable development, well-being economy, smart city, natural asset class — translate it. Ask whose abundance. Whose stake. Whose public. Whose well-being.

Watch the full episode on Rumble: https://rumble.com/v79mr5c-mel-k-and-lisa-logan-intentionally-inverted-language-exposed-again-5-9-26.html

For my readers – Yes, we used AI to turn this episode into something readable for you. My team reviews everything first and does their best to sound like me. If it doesn’t, that’s fair, the robots aren’t perfect…yet. If you want the real thing – unscripted, unfiltered, and exactly how I said it – that’s what the full episode is for. You can always find it here [https://rumble.com/v79mr5c-mel-k-and-lisa-logan-intentionally-inverted-language-exposed-again-5-9-26.html]