Berit Kjos argues that sustainability advocates seek to "brainwash" the public into changing their values away from the bible, and "the unadulterated U.S. Constitution" and towards peace and community. This to her is obviously a dangerous precursor to full-on socialism: she uses the teaching of the Little Red Hen in kindergarten to show that children are taught not to hoard the fruits of their labor, but to share.
Henry Lamb tells the story of a 70-year-old woman arrested for not watering her lawn in Utah as an example of how the "sustainable development craze" endangers property rights and imperils freedom:
What should be immediately obvious to the most casual observer is the fact that where sustainable development prevails, individual freedom cannot. Private property rights take a back seat to the collective vision in a sustainable community. In a sustainable community, a committee of "stakeholders" decide what private land owners may do, or may not do, with their own property. This is not freedom.His example seems odd, because Envision Utah, the initiative he blames for the woman's arrest, lists water conservation as one of its eight quality growth strategies and hopes to promote "water-wise landscaping." So it stretches the imagination to consider her falling afoul of its vision by not watering her lawn.
ICLEI is also a target: Tom DeMeese urges readers to remove the organization from their towns' local planning process. ICLEI, a nonprofit organization that came out of the United Nations and seeks to help sustainable development policy at the local level, is here a clear example of international takeover of U.S. policy.
Talk against sustainable development is not idle theoretical discussion. One talk radio program in New Rochelle discusses sustainability there:
[The town's new sustainability coordinator] Kooris presents "sustainability" as asking ourselves whether decisions we make will benefit all of the facets of New Rochelle but what he is really talking about is placing limits on economic growth. If you push hard on this you will find that the organizations behind pushing this idea are talking about a fundamental reduction in demand. New Rochelle residents might want to understand how these groups propose to fundamentally reduce demand for resources. The answer will have something to do with population control.The program has an extended series on ICLEI's involvement in the town and sustainability in general, trying to convince listeners that such policy is extreme and leads to socialism.