Menu

Stop Agenda 2030 in Indiana — Oppose the LEAP Project

Alert Summary

Indiana authorities are developing a World Economic Forum-inspired 15-minute city near Lebanon, Indiana. State legislators must stand against the United Nations’ Agenda 2030 and the WEF’s Great Reset by opposing such dangerous schemes!

Take Action Now

Indiana authorities are developing a World Economic Forum-inspired 15-minute city near Lebanon, Indiana. State legislators must stand against the United Nations’ Agenda 2030 and the WEF’s Great Reset by opposing such dangerous schemes!

In Lebanon, Indiana, authorities have already started construction of a 9,000-acre development called the LEAP Project — a 15-minute city — and are looking to construct a pipeline to transport millions of gallons of water for it.

As The New American explains:

It’s promoted by the Indiana Economic Development Corporation, which is a public-private partnership and is funded by the state. The IEDC website boasts “international offices” in Japan, South Korea, China, Israel, the U.K., Italy, and its “European headquarters” in Germany. Also behind the Leap Project is the Indiana Economic Development Foundation, backed by various utility companies such as AES Indiana, CenterPoint Energy, Duke Energy, Indiana Michigan Power, and NIPSCO.

They’re looking at pumping 100,000,000 gallons of water a day out of aquifers not too far from the injection sites. They’re planning to pump the water to Lebanon, Indiana, for a UN sustainable development city. One of those 15-minute cities.

The LEAP Project is an example of the UN’s Agenda 2030 being implemented. Agenda 2030, officially titled “the 2030 Agenda,” is a United Nations program that seeks totalitarian control of the entire planet, including the economy, our country, our lives, and our children. Agenda 2030 is divided into 17 Sustainable Development Goals, or SDGs, along with 169 specific “targets” to be imposed on humanity.

The SDGs include “universal health coverage,” “vaccines for all,” and “universal access to sexual and reproductive health-care services, including for family planning [i.e., abortion]” (Goal 3). It also advocates for socialist indoctrination of youth (Goal 4), global wealth redistribution (Goal 10), and radical actions to combat alleged “climate change” (Goal 13). None of these goals are constitutional or even adhere to the spirit of the U.S. Constitution and the Founding Fathers.

Other prominent examples of Agenda 2030’s implementation include the global war on farmerscarbon-capture pipelines, and the transition toward “green” energy.

Although touted as “nonbinding,” Agenda 2030 is being implemented in communities across the U.S. via “soft law,” meaning that portions of the agenda are adopted into local, state, and federal laws, thus becoming legally binding. As a result, Americans are losing the ability as citizens to run their own communities through elected officials.

The Indiana General Assembly must take strong action against this insidious agenda. Contact your state legislators, and urge them to enact strong legislation prohibiting all implementation of Agenda 2030 and the Great Reset, and stopping projects such as the LEAP Project.


Although we provide a way to easily email legislators, we know from long experience that it takes a lot more interaction with your legislators to get your point across than that provided by emails alone.

That's why we provide an easy way not only to email them, but to contact them by phone, tweet, and even video message them.

Contact your state legislators

Please help enact legislation stopping the LEAP Project and all similar projects, and banning implementation of Agenda 2030, by contacting your state legislators. Urge them to stand up for individual freedom, self-government, and the U.S. Constitution and to oppose all central-planning schemes such as Agenda 2030.

Take Action Now

Clicking this button will take you to a page where you can send a pre-written letter, call your officials, and/or send video messages.

Get Legislative Email Alerts

Learn More
Join the John Birch Society