[Edit: This post has been updated to reflect that I mistakenly said today was Veterans Day. Obviously it is Memorial Day. I apologize for this mistake.]
(First off, please excuse the lame attempts of sarcasm and humor. I still see these as silly people who truly believe that a fascist New World Order is just around the corner. I personally do not believe they are going to be able to pull it off but then, I also predicted that Putin wouldn’t go into Ukraine just proving me less than clairvoyant. They offer empty promises to make life better for our existence while moving in the background—more so foreground now—to subvert our way of life. They are evil and vile and what they believe is truly terrifying.)
This year’s collection of sociopaths that met in Davos followed the theme: History at a Turning Point: Government Policies and Business Strategies. From the 2022 Forum’s website:
The philosophy of collective action has endured for more than 50 years and it has never been more needed than now. The meeting is the starting point for a new era of global responsibility and cooperation. The moment demands it. (emphasis mine)
Seig Heil!
Well, as this post is sent out, the meeting has come to a sad, bittersweet end. As they departed, crocodile tears streaming down their cheeks, hugging goodbye, expending vast plumes of CO2 in their wake, they all dreamt of next year’s event, Holy Shit! Only Seven Years Left to 2030!
They realize that even with the accelerated pace established during their Covid fiasco, the 2030 deadline is quickly approaching and they know they will have to continually double down to meet their agenda. That means that the man made catastrophes will be accelerated. More wars cutting off grain shipments, more fertilizer shortages, and “non-green energy” sources. You are officially being conditioned by the globalists.
Here is a cherry-picked list of forum discussion groups from the official 89-page Global Agenda (I personally could only stomach about 40 pages, leaving 49 for you to discover if you so wish):
Forging Multistakeholder Partnerships for Radical Climate Action
The world is on track for a 3°C temperature increase, which would impair food and water supplies, disrupt supply chains, increase migration and damage the global economy. Join leaders from the Forum's Climate Action Platform to identify the key steps for delivering radical climate solutions that combine resilience, justice and growth at their core.
Why haven’t the oil spigots been completely turned off yet? And where is Don Quixote?
What Role for Carbon Dioxide Removal Technologies?
Carbon dioxide removal (CDR) is essential to limit warming to 1.5°C and hit net-zero targets along with rapid, deep decarbonization across sectors. What role should CDR technologies play in the world's response to the climate crisis and how can they be deployed responsibly?
We’ll starve off a billion or so this summer as our manufactured food crisis continues—fewer breathers, less carbon.
Ushering in a Safer Digital Future
With 4.8 billion internet users globally, all forms of harmful content online need to be tackled. Pervasive issues such as health misinformation, terrorist content and state-sponsored informational campaigns contribute to a complex environment where long-standing problems, including online exploitation and abuse, also persist. What principles and practices can government and industry align on to reduce the risk of online harms and build safer digital spaces?
Hey guys, any other ideas for expanding our censorship abilities and propagating our propaganda? Ideas? Anyone?
AI on the Street: Managing Trust in the Public Square
As social unrest and organized retail crime have spiked over the last year, many governments and businesses have turned to artificial intelligence (AI), including facial recognition, to bolster law enforcement. The expanding scope of this technology has led to public concern and calls for regulation, but investment growth looks set to continue. How can we ensure that the use of AI in public services and spaces does not conflict with the public interest?
We’re making a killing off of constant surveillance technologies. How do we get these pesky vermin to stop with their demands for civil liberties?
Skills of the Future
The global skills landscape has been transformed by the growing demand for green skills, digital skills, care services skills, along with creative problem solving and interpersonal skills. How can educators, business and government promote, measure and mainstream these new economy skills everywhere and for everyone?
How do we dumb them down faster so we can wheel in the robots and cyborgs?
Tackling Youth Mistrust
The rise of youth protests around the world reflects increasing anger towards the generation in power for its perceived failings on climate change, social justice, inequality and conflict. What will it take to win back the trust of young people, safeguard their future and close the widening generational divide?
Is there a way to get even more white privileged indoctrinated trust fund babies onto the streets?
Forum Initiative Briefing - BiodiverCities
Some $31 trillion is at risk from nature loss in cities and more than 1.4 billion people living in urban centres are threatened by natural hazards. The BiodiverCities by 2030 initiative supports city governments, businesses and citizens to create nature-positive and climate-resilient cities. This session uses the Forum’s digital tools to anchor a discussion on the initiative and its impact and will feature the insights and outcomes of the BiodiverCities by 2030 initiative as well as Colombia’s leadership in this area.
(BiodiverCities. How clever.) How do we get all of these human sheep into our futuristic internment, I mean, cities by 2030?
A great reset recap:
Who was there?
Here is the official list of attendees to this year’s summit. There is one that stands out, not that I know who this guy is other than he hails from the USA:
Matthew Blake, Head of Shaping the Future of Financial and Monetary Systems, World Economic Forum LLC.
Head of Shaping the Future of Financial and Monetary Systems? Kiss that 401k bye-bye. Maybe he led the discussion panel to begin the transformation to an all international digital currency.
And another:
Zara Ingilizian, Head of Shaping the Future of Consumption; Member of the Executive Committee, World Economic Forum LLC. (Billy Gates printed artificial meat is leaving us all wondering, where’s the beef?)
There were several representatives from both The New York Times and The Washington Post. Reps from CNN, CNBC, NBC, TIME, Bloomberg, and The Wall Street Journal as well—and no, not all were covering the event; most are executives of their respective outlets.
BlackRock was well represented as were Meta (Facebook), Microsoft, Google, Bank of America, State Street, Goldman Sachs, Mastercard, Citi, Fidelity, Cargill, Tyson, Gulfstream (might be there simply to sell more G700s to these wonderful people), PayPal, McKinsey, Verizon, and AIG among many others.
One attendee that makes me say, No, say it ain’t so, is Michael Dell of Dell Technologies. I went to high school with him—he was a couple of grades below me and I didn’t know him personally—but served as an inspiration to many as he went off to UT-Austin, dropped out and revolutionized the personal computer industry—and made a butt load of money in the process.
Why, Micheal, why?
Who else? Billy Gates, (Johnny Kerry isn’t listed but you know he’s lurking around in the weeds somewhere), Henry Kissinger, Jared Kushner, Georgie “Porgy” Soros and his lovely son Alexander, Lord Mark Malloch- Brown (a real piece of work), and will.i.am (just weird).
Now, a few examples of job titles of the attendees:
Chief People and Sustainability Officer
Chief Sustainability Officer
High-Level Climate Action Champion
Chair, Task Force on Sustainable Finance
Chief Communications and Sustainability Officer
Global Head, Sustainability and Inclusive Growth
Chief Corporate Affairs and Sustainability Officer
Partner, Sustainability and Responsibility
Global Sustainability Services Lead and Chief Responsibility Officer
Executive Director, Sustainable Development Goals
Executive Vice-President and Chief People, Policy and Purpose Officer (CPPPO)
Co-Chief Investment Officer, Sustainability
Chief Sustainability Officer; Chief Diversity and Inclusion Officer (multitasking!)
Head, Global Advisory and Executions (works for a Chinese company)
Vice-President and General Manager, Environmental, Social and Governance and Sustainability Strategy
Begging the question: What are all of these people supposed to be sustaining?
And I can see a couple of guys standing around drinking martinis or slamming shots of Jägermeister (kidding, that was my college experience) in between breakout sessions.
One, a eurocreature with pinched nose and a Dormeuil Vanquish II suit (retail $95,319) that fits like a glove, glances down at his Patek Philippe Worldtimer Guilloché (retail $5.5 million—there are only four made in the world but our friend got the last one on clearance for $5.45 million), obviously bored with the conversation. He browses a cowed Brit with glasses precariously balanced at the edge of his nose, wearing a pedestrian off-the rack Brooks Brothers suit (retail $14,000) and Blancpain Villeret (retail $25,700) and thinks, well at least his watch is more expensive than his suit.
“So,” asks eurocreature in his eurocreature accent—slightly effeminate and indistinguishable between French, Italian, and/or German—“what is it, exactly, that you do?”
Our slightly out-of-place corporate bureaucrat says, “I’m a Chief People, Policy and Purpose Officer, or CPPPO.”
“Oh,” exclaims eurocreature. “At least you have some purpose.”
Of note: If you haven’t read my latest piece in American Thinker, you can read it there or here.
Remember why today is called Memorial Day.