After the ‘Great Reset’, here’s Klaus Schwab’s troubling new message that risks shaping our lives
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS — From his perch at the dystopian-titled “World Government Summit” in
Dubai at the end of March, World Economic Forum chairman, Klaus Schwab, followed
up his repeated calls for a “great reset” and a “fourth industrial revolution”
with what he now describes as a “great narrative”. According to the description
of his book published earlier this year, “The Great Narrative for a Better
Future”, “Vital issues abound: economic, environmental, geopolitical, societal
and technological. But solutions do exist and are within our grasp. The Great
Narrative proposes some hopeful and inspiring narratives around them.”
Look, no one outside of the Davos club wants narratives — or propaganda — from
unelected figures at the helm of global governance institutions, OK? It’s pretty
clear by now what the agenda is. That is, to exploit global chaotic events and
crisis in order to impose “solutions” that give even more power and control to
the same group of profiteers who stand ready to offer the “solutions” for every
exacerbated “crisis”. Oh, where would we ever be without these saviors? Before
Schwab was promoting the need for solutions to chaos, his organization was
presciently holding simulations of them, including pandemics and cyberattacks.
Almost like a self-fulfilling prophecy.
Some of the same shadowy figures who rub elbows at Davos have also subsequently
been advising governments on their own responses to recent crises. In Canada and
France, opposition politicians have demanded answers for the involvement of big
global consulting firms in the advising governments — a real concern when one
realizes that these firms often serve to re-home former high-level government
officials and civil servants, who end up costing citizens far more money in the
form of government contracts than they ever did as government employees.
The issue is most markedly dogging French President Emmanuel Macron in the final
days of his re-election campaign. It has emerged in a French senate report that
billions of euros have been spent for private consulting firms to advise the
government on everything from digital transformation to climate change and the
COVID-19 pandemic. How utterly coincidental that these happen to be the very
same issues on heavy rotation at the World Economic Forum. Worse, there’s an
inherent lack of public accountability due to the fact that details of such
private contracts would fall under nondisclosure confidentiality agreements and
therefore be difficult for public inquiries to access. The average citizen
therefore remains in the dark over exactly how much influence these unelected,
unaccountable entities serving various masters and clients have had on recent
policymaking.
It’s worrisome that, for example, there’s nothing prohibiting a big consulting
firm from having tech companies, drug companies, and governments as clients all
at the same time. Now, imagine what kind of advice regarding the necessity of
imposing certain drugs or vaccinations, coupled with a digital ID rooted in big
tech, as a “solution” to a coronavirus — all with the insistence that an entire
system be built and kept in place for future use beyond the duration of the
illness itself.
If such things tend to incite conspiracy theories, it’s no wonder. It’s amazing
how quickly conspiratorial doubt can be erased with a little transparency. And
the fact that little to none is ever forthcoming regarding these truly global
and well-organized arrangements only serves to perpetuate the worst assumptions.
The fact that Schwab has now moved on to peddling a “narrative” to support his
“great reset” suggests a troublesome need to control how people think. And
there’s no better way to that than to dismiss anything that falls outside of
“acceptable” thinking — as defined by these same elites — as misinformation,
disinformation, or propaganda, and to use technology as a means of controlling
and quashing genuine and legitimate dissent and contradictory debate. This isn’t
some potential future scenario — it’s already the case. For example, any content
that does not strictly adhere to the official World Health Organization’s
doctrine regarding the COVID-19 pandemic is removed from YouTube. Twitter and
Facebook have also engaged in information control in response to government
requests.
And it’s set to get worse. Melanie Joly, the Canadian foreign affairs minister
and member of the World Economic Forum’s Young Global Leaders’ class of 2016,
has proposed a new law, C-11, to further press online platforms to crack down on
dissent — this time with the effect of limiting debate about the conflict in
Ukraine. “Social media companies need to do more to prevent propaganda, and to
counter any form of disinformation,” Joly said, according to the National Post.
Since when is it the foreign affairs’ minister’s job to act as a censor for
internal debate? It isn’t. These people are overreaching. And they’re losing
their minds while doing it, tossing out all western principles of free speech
and freedom. First it was climate change hysteria, then anti-Trump hysteria,
then COVID-related hyperventilation, and now psychosis over anything
Russian-related. And sometimes, there’s even conflation of one or more of these
issues. EU Commissioner, Margrethe Vestager, advised Europeans recently to limit
their hot water to prevent Russian energy consumption. “Every time you turn off
the water, say: take that, Putin!” Vestager said.
Schwab’s new slogan is blatantly honest about the deliberate intent to install
groupthink. Will enough of us realize it and fight to defeat it before the
straitjacket is firmly in place?
COPYRIGHT 2022 RACHEL MARSDEN