Aubrey Corp Meeting Summary; The WEF wants the Land
Come out to support private land ownership Thursday 2/9, 4-6 pm.

The next open house to as advise The Aubrey Corp attorney about your goals for responsible development is Thursday 2/9 from 4-6 pm at the County courthouse 135 W. Cherokee, Ave.
One thing became clear last night at the Aubrey Corp “open house” to sell the wholesale rezoning of a major chunk of Bartow county. There are many competing interests. Very few seem to be respecting the goals of the Bartow County citizens to have reasonable development of single family homes. The interests illustrate a struggle between two very large competing sources: Big Money and Environmental activist groups who seek to mothball land. The players are…
Big developers looking to find a way to make a big profit from high density development
Massive environmental activist groups looking to remove wild land from future development permanently.
Private land owner (The Neels) looking to get a good profit from sale of their land.
Government seeking to the situation to generate tax base and mollify constituencies.
A much smaller group of ordinary citizens who would like responsible development that respects Bartow county’s character. (This is the group represented by the Bartow Freedom Coalition)
Two big environmental activist groups were well represented and are both globalist entities: The Nature Conservancy and the Trust for Public Land. Both have agendas of removing land from development and keeping it wild. They seek to return land to “indigenous people”. They seek to stop any development, very much in keeping with the World Economic Forum Agenda of putting people into hyper-dense population zones while removing land from responsible use by humans.
To his Credit, the land attorney, Jim Ramseur, representing the owners of this 16,500 acres in North central Bartow county (The Neels) fielded many questions and engaged in good discussion. While he tended to obfuscate and offer some bluster, he did answer many questions directly. He told us these things:
There is no buyer for the land in question at this point. The prior unannounced buyer backed out
He wants the owners to get the “Fair Market Value” for their land. He states this would be the Georgia “yellow book” value and not “highest and best use”.
He is working closely with state officials in the Georgia Department of Natural Resources.
He is in contact with developers with large mining and industrial interests as well as in residential developments.
He spoke a lot about “smart development” without defining it and hinting that it could be consistent with the WEF agenda (“sustainable”, “green”, “responsible infrastructure”)
There were clearly average citizens from Bartow who just wanted reasonable development consistent with the response from the recent development survey. That is single family homes on large lots.
However, there was a major contingents who wanted to get state and federal money to somehow go to “The Nature Conservancy” or “The Trust for Public Land” so the land could be bought outright and then mothballed forever. These group’s have connections to the World Economic Forum. The Nature Conservancy’s CEO Jennifer Morris was in Davos at their recent meeting. On this panel she was pushing to take land out of circulation. The trust for Public Land, also hailed by the WEF, works to buy land, remove it from development or put it under the management of “Indigenous people”. One of the first comments made at the Tuesday night meeting was for most of the proposed Aubrey Corp land to be turned over to “indigenous people”.
Again, Responsible development is good. But hyper-dense development is a problem for Bartow citizens. It removes traditional American homes from the market (single family homes with larger lots) and forces people into tiny boxes stacked on top of each other. However the other extreme of “no development” is harmful to America. It means that private land owners can’t develop. It also means that WEF-affiliated groups with open agendas of denying human access to land for human use will work to remove the land from private hands. That is the goal of the Nature Conservancy and the Trust for Public Lands.
In navigating these waters, Bartow citizens will need to work to allow responsible development and some conservation, but avoid extreme agendas that harm them. Unfortunately, moneyed and powerful interests are involved: developers, large corporations, big governments, well funded environmental groups. The attorney for the Neels (Ramseur) could easily advise them to partner with the Nature groups to mothball the land, with government to fund it, and with developers to build hyper-dense residential communities in what ever land is leftover for human occupation. That would be a bad approach for Bartow County.
Here is a better path forward for the Neels as represented by Ramseur and the planning commission here in Bartow as well as county commissioner Steve Taylor:
Modify the proposed zoning so that true lower density housing is built on 90% of the land zones for residential development.
Ensure any mining is environmentally responsible.
Avoid working with the unaccountable groups like the Nature Conservancy and Trust for Public Lands. (Instead work with government to protect a small segment of land that can be managed by the representatives of the people: elected government).
Ensure the zoning commission and County Commissioner Taylor only approve development as supported by the citizens of Bartow annunciated ion the development survey.
This is an excellent summary, thank you! This all ties in with Agenda 2030, as do the traffic cameras I keep posting about. I won't seem so crazy soon, unfortunately.
I guess we will see which group ends up winning out. I am all for private control of private land. If the "tree hugging globalist" groups raise enough money to buy the land and the Neels agree to sell to them, then they can do what they wish with their land, be it greenspace or indigenous peoples. I feel the same way about the warehouse group or the large residential group. To the victor goes the spoils.