Klaus Schwab and the World Economic Forum

CNN is WEF controlled
Gemma Mortensen Co-Founder and Member of the Board, More In Common CNN Inspirational Women 2014

Carlos de Vega Anchor, El País 1999, part of the founding team of CNN+:

Strive Masiyiwa Group Executive Chairman, Econet Wireless Global one of the 15 Global Influentials of the Year, CNN Time Poll (2003)

Brent Stirton Senior Photographer, Getty Images Inc. working exclusively on commissioned assignment; work has appeared in Newsweek, National Geographic, CNN, New York Times Magazine, Washington Post Magazine, London Sunday Times magazine, Le Express, Le Monde

Anas Aremeyaw Anas Managing Director, Tiger Eye 2007 CNN MultiChoice African Journalists Award;

Kimmie Weeks Founder and Executive Director, Youth Action International (YAI) CNN's African Voices series featured his life and work.

Rod Beckstrom Chairman, Stanford Cybersecurity Policy Program, Stanford University Frequent CNN geopolitical and cybersecurity commentator.

Geena Rocero Founder, GenderProud Has been featured in media publications such as CNN, Al Jazeera America, MSNBC, Today Show

Dalia Dassa Kaye Director, Center for Middle East Public Policy, RAND She has appeared in many media outlets, including BBC, CNN, MSNBC and NPR.

David Jones Founder, One Young World described by CNN as the “Young Davos”

Andrea Sanke Journalist and Senior Presenter, TRT World reporting for CNN International's news

Teresa K. Kennedy Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Power Living Enterprises She has been in various media, including CNN and Oprah's book Live Your Best Life!

David Rothkopf Author of books including: Power, Inc.; Superclass; Running the World; National Insecurity; The Great Questions of Tomorrow (forthcoming). Columnist, Foreign Policy and CNN.

Javier Okhuysen Founder and Chairman, salauno He has been honored by CNN

Kennedy Odede President, Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder, Shining Hope for Communities (SHOFCO) The New York Times, CNN, and Project Syndicate are some of the Media Houses who’ve published his opinion articles on urban poverty.

Richard Sezibera published numerous articles and interviews in major national, regional and international media houses including the Washington Post, Foreign Affairs magazine, CNN, VOA, BBC

Teymoor Nabili Executive Editor and Presenter, Channel NewsAsia edited news and current affairs programmes for Al Jazeera, BBC, CNN and CNBC.

Gary Al-Smith Journalist, Multimedia Group Limited regular by-lines with global media houses like the Guardian, BBC, CNN, the New York Times

Yinka Adegoke Editor, Strategic Initiatives, Rest of World contributor to TV networks including CNN, CNBC and BBC. Twitter: @YinkaWrites

Shiza Shahid Co-Founder and Global Ambassador, Malala Fund featured in multiple publications including Forbes, Fast Company, Elle, Glamour, Town and Country, The Edit, CNN, ABC, Al Jazeera, MSNBC

Lionel Barber Has appeared on ABC, CBS, CNN and on Danish, Dutch, Finnish and French television.

Heidi Crebo-Rediker Senior Fellow, Council on Foreign Relations Views on financial and economic matters have been carried in forums including CNN, BBC, Wall Street Journal, The National Interest, Foreign Policy, The New Republic, Forbes and Financial News. Named one of the Top 25 Women in Business, The Wall Street Journal Europe.

Andy Serwer Editor-in-Chief, Yahoo Finance Has been a guest on MSNBC’S Morning Joe and CNBC’s Squawk Box and other TV and radio programmes. 2001-06, Business Anchor, CNN’s American Morning.

Issam Chleuh Alumni, Global Shapers Community His work has been featured on The Economist, Forbes and CNN

Ramzi Jaber Director, e.construct Fz LLC Ramzi's work has been featured in CNN, BBC, Fortune, Policy Mic, Foreign Policy , Fast Company, Jazeera, Open Democracy, Stanford Daily, Global Voices, Guardian and has given talks at Google Mountain view and a TEDx Talk

Gloria Guevara Manzo President and Chief Executive Officer, World Travel & Tourism Council (WTTC) Recognized as one of the most influential women in Mexico by CNN

David R. Gergen Founding Director, Center for Public Leadership, Harvard Kennedy School of Government CNN Snr Political Analyst

Nicolas Cary President and Co-Founder, Blockchain His media appearances include the NYT, TedX, NPR, WSJ, Financial Times, Wired, Forbes, Entrepreneur, CNN, CNBC, TechCrunch, CNET, World Economic Forum, OECD, Marketwatch

Frida Polli Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Pymetric She has been featured in and on CNN, BBC, CNBC, Bloomberg, the Wall Street Journal, the Financial Times, the New York Times, the Economist, Fortune, Forbes

Lisa Caputo Executive Vice-President and Chief Marketing and Communications Officer, The Travelers Companies Inc. co-host for CNN’s “Crossfire”, and CNBC/MSNBC’s “Equal Time”. Prior to embarking on a career in business, she served as the Deputy Assistant to the President of the United States and Press Secretary to the First Lady in the White House from 1993-1996.

Erwann Michel-Kerjan Partner, McKinsey & Company regularly featured in popular outlets, ranging from BBC, Bloomberg, CNN, FT, The Economist, NYT, Time, WSJ, Nature and Science.

Danielle Schlosser SVP, Clinical Innovation, Compass Pathways Ltd My work has been featured in several media outlets including, CNN, Technical Times, Fortune Magazine, and the Pacific Standard

https://www.weforum.org/people/edith-kimani News Anchor, Deutsche Welle She is a CNN journalism Fellow.

https://www.weforum.org/people/rodrigo-baggio President and Founder, RECODE Rodrigo was selected by CNN, Time and Fortune as one of the principal voices in economic development and received a certificate of recognition from the Clinton Global Initiative.

https://www.weforum.org/people/david-mann David appears regularly on CNN, BBC World, CNBC and Bloomberg Television

https://www.weforum.org/people/felipe-estefan Principal, Investments, Omidyar Network Felipe was a planning producer at CNN’s Washington, DC bureau and was part of the Permanent Mission of Colombia to the United Nations in Switzerland.

https://www.weforum.org/people/paula-escobar-chavarria Opinion Columnist, La Tercera She is a columnist/ panelist at La Tercera, CNN Chile and Duna radio.

https://www.weforum.org/people/ajay-chaturvedi Founder and Chief Executive Officer, HarVa (Harnessing Value of Rural India...) He is a CNN Youth Icon.

https://www.weforum.org/people/chloe-cho-heemyung Presenter and Executive Producer, Channel NewsAsia CNN World Report contributor

https://www.weforum.org/people/ai-jen-poo Director, National Domestic Workers Alliance Her work has been featured in many publications, including Marie Claire, The New York Times, Washington Poo_st, TIME, Jezebel, and CNN.com.

https://www.weforum.org/people/daniela-carvajalino-martinez Global Shaper, Cartagena Hub featured in BBC News, CNN and Telemundo

https://www.weforum.org/people/juan-carlos-navarro Political Leader and Presidential Candidate of Panama (Partido de la Revolución Democrática - PRD Named one of 100 most promising young leaders of the planet for the next millennium, Time magazine (1994); named a Latin American Leader for the Next Millennium, Time magazine and CNN (1999).

https://www.weforum.org/people/ameerah-taweel Founder and Chief Executive Officer, TimeAgency Has spoken out publicly in the US on NBC's Today, CNN International and NPR, as well as in Time magazine and Foreign Policy Magazine in support of both women's rights in Saudi Arabia and the broader issue of women's overall empowerment to contribute fully in Saudi society. Speaker, Clinton Global Initiative 2011.

https://www.weforum.org/people/hugh-whalan Chief Executive Officer, PEG Ghana He has been covered in a wide range of mainstream media, including CNN, Forbes, New York Times and Fast Company. He is also an occasional contributor for Fast Company.

https://www.weforum.org/people/lorenzo-a-mendoza Chief Executive Officer, Empresas Polar Recipient of awards, including: Leadership and Courage Award, Poder CNN, US (2010); Latin America Industrialist of the Year, World Business Forum, Ecuador (2010); CEO of the Year, America Economia, Chile; Social Responsibility CEO of the Year, Latin Trade Bravo Business Award, US.

https://www.weforum.org/people/irfan-alam Chairperson, Sammaan Foundation Irfan is CNBC Young Turk and CNN Young Indian Leader award winner.

https://www.weforum.org/people/jamil-farshchi Chief Information Security Officer, Equifax where he was responsible for defending the infrastructure and content of entities such as Warner Bros., CNN, and HBO; and at Los Alamos National Laboratory, where he secured some of the United States’ most sensitive national security and nuclear weapons information. He served as the VP of Global Information Security at Visa, where he was responsible for protecting over $7 trillion of payment card transactions annually,

https://www.weforum.org/people/zapiro Editorial Cartoonist, Zaprock Productions Recipient of awards including: category prize, African Journalist of the Year, CNN (2001);

https://www.weforum.org/people/barabara-comstock Founder, Program for Women in Leadership, School of Policy and Government, George Mason Universit Barbara regularly appears on network and cable news shows such as "Meet the Press," "Fox News Sunday," CNN's "State of the Union," and others as a commentator on political and policy issues of the day.

https://www.weforum.org/people/daniel-zovatto Regional Director, Latin America and the Caribbean, International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance Colaborador frecuente de diversos periódicos latinoamericanos y El País (España), al igual que de CNN en Español.

https://www.weforum.org/people/charlotte-karam Visiting Research Scholar, American University of Beirut Charlotte is often invited to speak about the work that she does at the intersection of research and activism, such as at the European Group of Organizational Studies (sub-plenary), the Academy of Management (PDW), the Arab Centre for Scientific Research and Humane Studies in Morocco (panelist), and in international media outlets (e.g., CNN).

https://www.weforum.org/people/ciiru-waweru-waithaka Chief Executive Officer, FunKidz
 
Washington Post is WEF controlled
Washington Post Edition

Simon Denyer Beijing Bureau Chief, The Washington Post

Lally Graham Weymouth Senior Associate Editor, The Washington Post

David Ignatius Associate Editor and Columnist, The Washington Post

Souad Mekhennet Staff Reporter, The Washington Post

Elisabeth Bumiller Washington Bureau Chief, New York Times

Barton Gellman Special Projects, National News, The Washington Post

Heather Long Economics Correspondent, The Washington Post

Jeremy Bailenson He has written opinion pieces for The Washington Post, CNN, PBS NewsHour, Wired, National Geographic, Slate, The San Francisco Chronicle

Karen Kornbluh written extensively about technology policy, women, and family policy for The Atlantic, The New York Times and The Washington Post

Leana Wen Visiting Professor of Health Policy and Management, George Washington University contributing columnist for The Washington Post, writing on health policy and public health.

Mike Allen co-founder of POLITICO where he started Playbook, the agenda-driving newsletter that led The New York Times Magazine to dub him “The Man The White House Wakes Up To.”

Kate Whitefoot Assistant Professor, Carnegie Mellon University Her work is published in Science, the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, and Environmental Science & Technology among other journals, and featured in the Washington Post, Popular Mechanics, Bloomberg Business, and Business Insider.
 
Google / Android is WEF controlled
Google is not a search engine -- sure it searches, but results are included or excluded for political means. Next time you search for a hot topic, try Bing and Yandex.com and compare the results. They control Android too - so infiltration here is dangerous.

All of these people are important enough to have people pages on the WEF web site. People like Justin Trudeau and Xi Jinping.

David Weller Director, Economic and Trade Policy, Google Inc.

Sundar Pichai Chief Executive Officer, Alphabet; Chief Executive Officer, Google

Jacquelline Fuller President, Google.org, Google

Charles Murito Director, Government Affairs & Public Policy, Sub-Saharan Africa, Google

Michele Turner Senior Director, Google Smart Home Ecosystem, Google

Karen Kaufman Head, Executive Content, Google

Ego Obi Global Lead, Access for Education, Google

Kate Brandt Sustainability Officer, Google

Adriana Noreña Vice-President, Spanish Speaking Latin America, Google

Shalini Puchalapalli Managing Director and Country Manager, Google Cloud Storage, Google

Erika Johansson Product Marketing Manager, Social Impact Technology, Google Inc.

Michelle Bryan-Low Senior Director, Ads, Marketing and Events, Europe, Middle East and Africa, Google

Larry Page Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Google

Philipp Schindler Senior Vice-President and Chief Business Officer, Google

Ruth Porat Senior Vice-President and Chief Financial Officer, Google

Nicholas Bramble Senior Counsel, Google

Melike Yetken Head, International Organizations, Google

Tania Aidrus Head, Digital Pakistan (2019-2020)

Mustafa Suleyman Vice-President, Artificial Intelligence Policy, Google

Eileen Naughton Vice-President and Managing Director, UK & Ireland Sales and Operations, Google Inc.

Alyssa Newman Lead, Responsible Supply Chain - Responsible Minerals, Google

Neil Chugani CFO and Head of Strategy & Operations, Global Direct To Consumer, Discovery Communications

Luke Mckend Managing Director, South Africa, Google

Jeanette Manfra Director, Risk and Compliance, Google Cloud, Google

Titi Akinsanmi Lead, Government Affairs and Public Policy, West and Francophone Africa, Google

Therese Lee Director, Ethics & Business Integrity, Google
 
Bloomberg is WEF controlled
Justin Finnegan Managing Director, New Economy, Bloomberg

Jon Moore Chief Executive Officer, Bloomberg New Energy Finance

Daniel Moss Columnist, Bloomberg Opinion

Daniel Cancel Managing Editor, Latin America, Bloomberg News

Peter T. Grauer Chairman, Bloomberg

Tom Keene Editor-at-Large, Bloomberg Television & Radio

David Ingles TV Anchor and Reporter, Bloomberg Media Group

Justin Fox Journalist, Bloomberg

David Tweed

International Economics Editor, Bloomberg Television

Robin Ried Urban Planning Consultant, Bloomberg Associates

Stephanie Flanders Senior Executive Editor, Economics, Bloomberg LP

Rishaad Salamat TV Anchor and Reporter, Bloomberg LP

Erik Schatzker Editor-at-Large, Bloomberg Television & Radio

Jennifer Semakula Musisi City Leader in Residence, Bloomberg Harvard City Leadership Initiative, Harvard University

Juan Pablo Spinetto Executive Producer, Bloomberg News

James Anderson Head of Government Innovation, Bloomberg Philanthropies

Haslinda Amin Chief International Correspondent, South-East Asia, Bloomberg News

John Fraher Senior Executive Editor, Bloomberg News

John McCorry Executive Editor, Americas, Bloomberg News

Stephen Engle Chief North Asia Correspondent, Bloomberg Television, Bloomberg News

Michael Liebreich Chief Executive, Bloomberg New Energy Finance

Francine Lacqua Editor-at-Large and Presenter, Bloomberg Television

Jacqueline Simmons Executive Editor, Global Business, Bloomberg News

Maryam Nemazee Anchor, Bloomberg Television

Shawn Donnan Senior Writer, Bloomberg News

Ozlem Dalga Head, Economics, Bloomberg HT

Elena Mariscal Alumni, Global Shapers Community Elena was a co-anchor for El Financiero Bloomberg's morning show.

Daniel Doctoroff Chief Executive Officer, Sidewalk Labs Currently, President and CEO, Bloomberg;

Andres R. Martinez Bureau Chief, Buenos Aires, Bloomberg News

John Micklethwait Editor-in-Chief, Bloomberg News

Rich Jaroslovsky Executive Editor, Bloomberg News

https://www.weforum.org/people/daniel-hertzberg Executive Editor, Finance, Bloomberg News

https://www.weforum.org/people/anisa-kamadoli-costa She is frequently quoted in publications such as The Wall Street Journal, Forbes, Bloomberg, Financial Times, Business Insider, Barron’s, The Times UK, Vanity Fair, Marie Claire, and Women’s Wear Daily.

https://www.weforum.org/people/ryan-whalen served in the office of New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg as Chief of Staff for Government Affairs and Communications.

https://www.weforum.org/people/fanyu-lin She serves on the Bloomberg New Economy Cities Council to collaborate on a methodical, citizen-centric approach to urbanization.

Global Lead, Air Quality, World Resources Institute Jessica has published book chapters and articles on infrastructure, Indian political economy, IT and governance, environmental regulation and other institutional design topics in international academic and policy venues including Cambridge University Press, Journal of Development Economics, Stanford Social Innovation Review, Foreign Affairs, Bloomberg Business Week

https://www.weforum.org/people/david-callaway Chief Executive Officer, The Street Formerly: with Bloomberg News in Europe for five years, including two years covering Davos; Editor, CBS Marketwatch for a decade. Currently, Editor-in-Chief, USA TODAY,

https://www.weforum.org/people/doreen-lorenzo She has been featured in ABC News, Bloomberg Radio, Fast Company, Fortune, The New York Times,

https://www.weforum.org/people/zach-sims Advisor to Bloomberg Beta

https://www.weforum.org/people/olanrewaju-akinola Director - BMIA (Bloomberg Media Initiative Africa) Pan - Africa Convening

https://www.weforum.org/people/miles-corak Professor of Economics, Stone Center on Socio-Economic Inequality, City University of New York (CUNY) showing that higher inequality is often associated with less social mobility, and has been cited by many of the major print and electronic media including The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, The Economist, Bloomberg Business Week, The Sunday Times, The Guardian, The Washington Post as well as the BBC, the CBC, TVO and The Globe and Mail.

https://www.weforum.org/people/bernice-lee-884f8727-91fe-4f36-840d-343aad0abb7b Hoffmann Distinguished Fellow for Sustainability; Director, Research, Futures, Chatham House was covered in international media including the Financial Times, BBC, New York Times, Reuters, Bloomberg, Wall Street Journal, Foreign Affairs, Caijing and in the Harvard Business Review and the Americas Quarterly.

https://www.weforum.org/people/christopher-burns Journalist, Euronews Over 25 years' experience as journalist with Bloomberg TV, CNN and AP;

https://www.weforum.org/people/michael-mann-f851016864 Professor, Pennsylvania State University He made Bloomberg News' list of fifty most influential people in 2013.

https://www.weforum.org/people/sally-bundock Formerly, Creator and Presenter, Bloomberg Money and covered G-7 conferences, EU Summits, aftermath of 9/11

https://www.weforum.org/people/jonathan-rosenthal Africa Editor, The Economist worked for several years at Bloomberg News in London and Johannesburg.

https://www.weforum.org/people/gerard-meuchner Vice-President and Chief Global Communications Officer, Henry Schein Formerly: 10 years with Bloomberg News as a founding member of the financial news service; led Communications & Public Affairs

https://www.weforum.org/people/karen-harris Managing Director, Macro Trends Group, Bain & Company regularly featured in major media outlets including the Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, The Harvard Business Review, Forbes, Economic Times of India, Caijing China, and CEO Forum Australia, and Bloomberg Television

https://www.weforum.org/people/alfred-sommer University Distinguished Professor and Dean Emeritus, Johns Hopkins University 1990-2005, Dean, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

https://www.weforum.org/people/laurie-hays Senior Advisor, Brunswick Group LLC Since 2008, with Bloomberg, overseeing 1,200 reporters and editors globally, covering government, economics, markets, finance and companies. Member, Council on Foreign Relations, Economic Club of New York.

https://www.weforum.org/people/lara-setrakian Impact Partner, Fresco Capital Setrakian spent more than five years as a foreign correspondent, covering the Middle East for television, radio and digital platforms, for ABC News, Bloomberg Television, the International Herald Tribune and Monocle Magazine.

https://www.weforum.org/people/kim-slicklein Chief Executive Officer and Founder, Enclave Rising Slicklein led the sustainability and CSR initiatives at Droga5, including the launch of ‘WindMade’ at the Davos World Economic Forum alongside the United Nations Global Compact, The World Wildlife Federation, The Global Wind Energy Council, PWC, Vestas, Lego and Bloomberg.

https://www.weforum.org/people/heba-aly CEO, The New Humanitarian Work for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, the Christian Science Monitor, Bloomberg News and IRIN, among others, has taken her to places like Syria, Afghanistan, Iraq, Chad and Libya

https://www.weforum.org/people/susan-goldberg Editorial Director, National Geographic Partners with Bloomberg News, latterly as Executive Editor, federal, state and local government coverage

https://www.weforum.org/people/lindene-patton Advisory Committee, Bloomberg,

https://www.weforum.org/people/william-k-spindle Middle East Bureau Chief, The Wall Street Journal Formerly: with Newsday, Bloomberg News and Business Week,

https://www.weforum.org/people/jimena-romero Global Shaper, Quito Hub She is currently an international consultant for Bloomberg Philanthropies as Global Road Safety Initiative Coordinator in Quito and Part Time Professor at Universidad de Las Américas.

https://www.weforum.org/people/zemedeneh-negatu Has been featured on the BBC, Bloomberg, SABC and Indian National TV.

https://www.weforum.org/people/edward-thai Alumni, Global Shapers Community . Efforts covered by Bloomberg, BBC, Forbes, TechCrunch, and various leading Asia regional and local Vietnamese outlets.

https://fr.weforum.org/people/ravi-velloor Associate Editor, The Straits Times Editor, Singapore Region, Bloomberg News;

https://www.weforum.org/people/russell-flannery Senior Editor and Bureau Chief, Shanghai, Forbes Magazine ver 20 years' experience reporting on Asia's businesses for Bloomberg, the Asian Wall Street Journal and Forbes.

https://www.weforum.org/people/ian-bremmer Ian is also a frequent guest on CNN, Fox News, MSNBC, the BBC, Bloomberg

https://www.weforum.org/people/lee-brailey sponsorship and communications roles at Lloyds Banking Group, Goldman Sachs and Bloomberg

https://www.weforum.org/people/patrick-kwabena-stephenson is training as a financial journalist on the Bloomberg Media

https://www.weforum.org/people/arvind-satyam Chief Commercial Officer, Pano AI Has contributed to articles for the Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg Finance, the Atlantic, the New York Times, Fortune, Harvard Business School Alumni Magazine

https://www.weforum.org/people/richard-stromback Founder, Stromback Global Advisors His insight has been sought out by such publications as The New York Times, Bloomberg and The Wall Street Journal

https://www.weforum.org/people/e-benjamin-skinner Founder and President, Transparentem umerous publications including Bloomberg Businessweek, Time, Newsweek, Travel + Leisure, Los Angeles Times, Foreign Policy

https://www.weforum.org/people/linda-yueh Adjunct Professor of Economics and Economics Fellow, London Business School former Economics Editor at Bloomberg TV.

https://www.weforum.org/people/carl-bjorkman Head of International Organisations and Government Affairs, World Economic Forum Geneva Formerly positions at Bloomberg, United Nations and the European Commission.

https://www.weforum.org/people/yoriko-kawaguchi Professor, Meiji Institute for Global Affair Member of the Board of Trustees of the International Crisis Group; Member of the Advisory Board of Bloomberg New Economy Forum; Council Member of the Global Future Council, World Economic Forum
 
CBS is WEF controlled
I expected this list to be larger ...

Christine Ockrent eight years with 60 Minutes, CBS

Vladimir Duthiers Correspondent, CBS News

Enrique Acevedo News Anchor, CBS News

David Rhodes Group Director, Sky News - BSkyB President of CBS News from 2011-2019, responsible for all CBS News broadcasts and news gathering across all platforms including television, radio, digital, streaming.

Charlie Rose Correspondent, Sixty Minutes II, CBS. Journalist anchoring nightly PBS programme. Member, Council on Foreign Relations

Jamie Cooper Chair, The Children's Investment Fund Foundation (CIFF) experience with Centre for Policy Alternatives, CBS News, Atlanta Project.

Cyriac Roeding Chief Executive Officer, Co-founder, Earli At CBS, the largest U.S. television network, Cyriac built their mobile division as EVP of CBS Mobile, across entertainment, sports and news. I

David Callaway Chief Executive Officer, The Street Editor, CBS Marketwatch for a decade.

Nicholas Thompson Publisher and Chief Executive Officer, The Atlantic Editor-in-Chief, Wired Magazine. Contributor, CBS News.

Elizabeth Comstock Senior Vice-President and Chief Marketing Officer, GE Held a succession of roles at GE, NBC, CBS and Turner Broadcasting. Former President, Integrated Media, NBC Universal

Nina Easton Senior Editor and Columnist, Fortune Magazine appeared on Meet the Press, NBC, and Face the Nation, CBS

Leigh Farris she was communications director at CBS News

David B. Agus CBS News contributor

Liz Claman Anchor, Fox Business Network Formerly: News Associate, KCBS-TV (CBS),

Lionel Barber Has appeared on ABC, CBS, CNN and on Danish, Dutch, Finnish and French television.

Paul Sagan XIR and Partner, General Catalyst Partners positions with CBS, including Director of News, WCBS-TV. 1992-96, positions with Time Warner, including: Senior Vice-President, Cable Programming;

Deborah Kan Founder and Executive Editor, Being Patient News Journalist in San Francisco, at KPIX-TV, a CBS affiliate

Kavita Patel Fellow and Managing Director, Engelberg Center for Health Care Reform, Brookings Institution frequent guest expert on CBS, NBC and MSNBC

Lisa Caputo Executive Vice-President and Chief Marketing and Communications Officer, The Travelers Companies Inc. Caputo was a senior communications executive at the CBS Corporation and at the Walt Disney Company
 
Al Jazerra is WEF controlled
This is a small organization compared to MSNBCBCBS or whatever we should call the integrated, global, propaganda complex. Therefore, a shorter list. However, with a news director and presenters being WEF agents, consider it propaganda too.

Mostefa Souag Director of News, Al Jazeera Satellite Channel-Arabic

Adrian Finighan Presenter, Al Jazeera English

Kamahl Santamaria Presenter, Al Jazeera English

Michael Hanna Senior Correspondent, Al Jazeera English

Wadah Khanfar 1997, began career with Al Jazeera, covering some of the world's key political zones, including South Africa, Afghanistan and Iraq; 2003, Chief, Baghdad Bureau; then Managing Director of the network; 2006, Director-General; during 8-year tenure, the network transformed from a single channel into a media network including Al Jazeera Arabic, Al Jazeera English, Al Jazeera Documentary and the Al Jazeera Center for Studies.

Dominik Hangartner Associate Professor, London School of Economics and Political Science widely covered by the media (e.g. CNBC, Al Jazeera, Swiss Radio and Television, New York Times, Washington Post).

Julia Bacha Filmmaker and Creative Director, Just Vision Julia Bacha is a media strategist and award-winning filmmaker whose work has been exhibited at Sundance, Tribeca, Berlin, Jerusalem, and Dubai International Film Festivals, and broadcast on the BBC, HBO, Al Jazeera and Al Arabiya television channels

Ali Velshi Anchor, NBC News Formerly with Al Jazeera, Host, Real Money with Ali Velshi, a half hour nightly business news programme on Al Jazeera America.

Jamal Khashoggi General Manager and Editor-in-Chief, Al Waleed 24 News Channel Regular political commentator for local Saudi channel, MBC, BBC, Al Jazeera TV, Abu Dubai and Dubai TV.

Jason Mojica Executive Producer, VICE Documentary Films Formerly with Al Jazeera English as a Producer on the network’s weekly media analysis programme, The Listening Post, and as a Field Producer for Josh Rushing’s series, On War.

Julie Owono Executive Director, Internet Sans Frontières (Internet Without Borders You can also watch her analyze the news on international channels, including Al Jazeera, BBC, CGTN, France 24,

Alexander Betts . He has written for Foreign Affairs, the Guardian, and the New York Times, and appears regularly on the BBC, CNN, and Al Jazeera.

Rosebell Kagumire She has expertise in media, gender, peace and conflict issues. Her writing appears in international media like The Guardian, Al Jazeera and Quartz

Denise Dunning Founder and Executive Director, Rise Up a renowned thought leader and speaker whose work has been featured by The New York Times, The Guardian, Al Jazeera, Ms. Magazine, and The Christian Science Monitor

Sarah Mousa Sarah has written for the New York Times, the World Economic Forum, and Al Jazeera English on social issues in Arab countries

Tena Prelec Research Fellow, Department of Politics and International Relations (DPIR), University of Oxford Her writing and commentary have appeared in numerous international outlets, including the New York Times, the Financial Times, Al Jazeera and Foreign Policy
 
Canada is ruled by the WEF -- All major party leaders are Klaus's agents
Update: The descriptions are snips from the WEF biographies. Many of these are out of data, so notes from comments below have been added. Even though they are gone, they may have stuffed administrative positions under them with people that have similar beliefs. They may also have lots of connections they can use to implement WEF agenda, even though they no longer hold that office.

Chrystia Freeland Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance, Office of the Deputy Prime Minister of Canada

Justin Trudeau Current Prime minister of Canada (2022)

Stephen Harper former prime minister

https://www.weforum.org/people/andrew-scheer Leader, Conservative Party of Canada: Notes -- Andrew Sheer is the leader of the conservatives Twice removed. Erin O'Toole was the most recent leader until he got ousted. Now Candace Bergen is the interim leader until an election is run.

Melanie Joly Minister of Foreign Affairs, Global Affairs Canada

Navdeep Bains Member of Parliament, Parliament of Canada

Marc Kielburger Co-Founder, Free the Children

William Francis Morneau Pension Investment Adviser to Ontario's Minister of Finance

Mark Wiseman Mark was President & CEO of the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board (CPPIB

James Moore Chancellor, University of Northern British Columbia

Michael Sabia President and Chief Executive Officer, Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec (CDPQ)

Kevin Lynch Thirty-three years with the Government of Canada, including: Clerk of the Privy Council; Secretary to the Cabinet; Head of the Public Service of Canada; Deputy Minister of Finance and of Industry. Executive Director, IMF. Currently, Vice-Chairman, BMO Financial Group

Carmen Sorger Director, International Assistance Relations, Global Affairs Canada

Catherine McKenna Minister of Infrastructure and Communities of Canada (2015-2019)

Brad Wall Premier of Saskatchewan, Government of Saskatchewan

Peter Van Loan Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs and Minister for Sport; 2007, Leader of the Government, House of Commons and Minister for Democratic Reform; 2008, Minister of Public Safety.

Rona Ambrose Leader of the Official Opposition, Parliament of Canada

Maya Roy Chief Executive Officer, YWCA Canada

Elissa Golberg Assistant Deputy Minister for Strategic Policy, Global Affairs Canada

Renée Maria Tremblay Senior Counsel, Supreme Court of Canada

Ailish Campbell Ambassador of Canada to the European Union, Global Affairs Canada

Giovanna Mingarelli Has contributed to: Harvard Business Review, CBC Radio-Canada, The Globe and Mail, The Toronto Star and the Hill Times. Regular contributor to the Huffington Post.

Robert Greenhill Founder, Global Canada

Leslie Norton Ambassador and Permanent Representative, Permanent Mission of Canada

Terry Beech Member of Parliament; Parliamentary Secretary, Department of Fisheries, Oceans and the Canadian Coast Guard, Parliament of Canada

Marc-André Blanchard Executive Vice-President; Head, CDPQ Global, Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec (CDPQ)

Rasha Al-Katta She previously served at the Centre for Global and Community Engagement, Canada’s Permanent Mission to the Office of the United Nations in Geneva, and Global Affairs Canada.

Ratna Omidvar Senator, Senate of Canada

Désirée McGraw McGraw was Senior Policy Advisor to Canada's Minister of International Cooperation and the Prime Minister of Canada.

Benjamin Fung Benjamin Fung is a Canada Research Chair in Data Mining for Cybersecurity, a Full Professor in the School of Information Studies (SIS), and an Associate Member in the School of Computer Science (SOCS) at McGill University.

Heather Munroe-Blum Committee on University Research; Canada Pension Plan Investment Board;

John Manley President and Chief Executive Officer, Business Council of Canada

Marie-Claude Bibeau Minister of Agriculture and Agri-food, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada

Indira V. Samarasekera President, University of Alberta

Mary Deacon Chair, Bell Mental Health Initiative, Bell Canada International

Christian Paradis Director, Canada World Youth

Maria Bartiromo Anchor and Global Markets Editor, Fox Business Network

Clément Gignac Official Canadian delegate for G20 workgroup, Dept of Finance, Canada. 2009-12, Minister for Economic Development and Innovation of Quebec, and Minister of Natural Resources.

https://www.weforum.org/people/david-juncker HIS PAGE WAS DELETED -- did he defect?

Karina Gould Minister of Families, Children and Social Development, Employment and Social Development Canada

https://www.weforum.org/people/fred-ninh Global Shaper, Ottawa Hub WTF?

https://www.weforum.org/people/catherine-potvin Canada Research Chair in Climate Change Mitigation and Tropical Forests, McGill University

https://www.weforum.org/people/philippe-couillard Premier of Quebec, Government of Quebec Note: Hasn't been premier since 2018

https://www.weforum.org/people/meghan-watkinson Director Governance, Global Issues and Development, Global Affairs Canada

https://www.weforum.org/people/yi-hsin-cathy-chen Global Shaper, Vancouver Hub

https://www.weforum.org/people/samantha-nutt Founder and Executive Director, War Child Canada

https://www.weforum.org/people/steve-williams President and Chief Executive Officer, Suncor Energy Inc.

Atlantic provinces - very little -- Canadian maritimes aren't that important politically, alhtough they did help Justine Maudeau come to power. However, Justin is by no means the only president/prine minister to belong to the WEF.

https://www.weforum.org/people/rhonda-i-zygocki Executive Vice-President, Policy and Planning, Chevron Corporation

https://www.weforum.org/people/mathews-a-p-chikaonda Assistant Professor of Finance and Associate Professor of Finance (tenured) from 1988 to 1991, and 1992 to 1994, respectively, at Memorial University of Newfoundland in Canada before serving as Deputy Governor of the Reserve Bank of Malawi from August 1994

Quebec https://www.weforum.org/people/philippe-couillard Premier of Quebec, Government of Quebec

https://www.weforum.org/people/dominique-anglade Minister of Economy, Science, Innovation and Digital Strategy for Québec

https://www.weforum.org/people/simon-thibault Director, Capitale-Nationale Region & Battery Value Chain, Propulsion Quebec

https://wwww.weforum.org/people/anita-marangoly-george Executive Vice-President; Deputy Head, CDPQ Global, Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec (CDPQ)

https://www.weforum.org/people/yvan-allaire Executive Chair of the Board of Directors, Institute for Governance of Public and Private Organizations (IGOPP)

https://www.weforum.org/people/monique-f-leroux Former: Associate, Ernst & Young; Senior Vice-President, Québec Division

https://www.weforum.org/people/kang-zhuang DELETED !!! During the course of work, received a master's degree in project management from the University du Québec, Canada. He served as chairman and general manager ...

Marie-Claude Bibeau Minister of Agriculture and Agri-food, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada

Ontario https://www.weforum.org/people/doug-ford Premier of Ontario, Government of Ontario

https://www.weforum.org/people/jagmeet-singh Leader, Canada's New Democrats, New Democratic Party of Canada

https://www.weforum.org/people/john-m-beck previously Chairman of the Board of the Ontario Power Authority as well as a member of the Board for the Ontario Financing Authority

https://www.weforum.org/people/autumn-peltier Chief Water Commissioner of the Anishinabek Nation

https://www.weforum.org/people/nishin-nathwani Global Changemaker, British Council Global Changemakers

Mark Wiseman Mark was responsible for the private equity fund and co-investment program at the Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan

https://www.weforum.org/people/james-m-flaherty Member of Ontario Provincial Parliament; 2006 and 2008, elected Member of Parliament. Formerly: Deputy Premier and Minister of Finance; Attorney-General and Minister Responsible for Native Affairs; Minister of Labour; Minister of Enterprise, Opportunity and Innovation. Since 2006, current position.

https://www.weforum.org/people/john-baird Minister of Foreign Affairs (2011-2015)

https://www.weforum.org/people/frances-westley J.W. McConnell Emeritus Professor of Social Innovation, University of Waterloo

https://www.weforum.org/people/suzanne-fortier Principal and Vice-Chancellor, McGill University

https://www.weforum.org/people/maryam-monsef Member of Parliament for Peterborough—Kawartha

https://www.weforum.org/people/david-mckay President and Chief Executive Officer, RBC (Royal Bank of Canada)

https://www.weforum.org/people/julian-birkinshaw Professor of Strategic and International Management, London Business School

https://www.weforum.org/people/jim-watson Mayor of Ottawa, City of Ottawa << no profile

https://www.weforum.org/people/fatima-muneer Advisory Council, Ottawa Hub

https://www.weforum.org/people/roland-paris Professor of International Affairs, University of Ottawa

https://www.weforum.org/people/rashid-timbilla Global Shaper, Ottawa Hub

https://www.weforum.org/people/liora-raitblat Global Shaper, Ottawa Hub

https://www.weforum.org/people/sana-khan Global Shaper, Ottawa Hub

https://www.weforum.org/people/david-runnalls Advisory Committee on Smart Regulation, Canada

https://www.weforum.org/people/ahmed-hussen Minister of Families, Children and Social Development, Employment and Social Development Canada

https://www.weforum.org/people/margaret-catley-carlson Formerly: Diplomat; Deputy Minister of Health, Canada; Assistant Secretary-General, UN, Deputy Director, Operations, UNICEF. 1983-89, President, Canadian International Development Agency;
 
USA Congress / Senate WEF Schwab agents
These people have unlimited press funding -- the WEF media will give them favorable coverage while demonizing opponents.

The descriptions are from their profiles. Some may not be up to date.

Elise Stefanik Congresswoman from New York (R), 21st District, United States House of Representatives

Tulsi Gabbard Congresswoman from Hawaii (D), 2nd District, United States House of Representatives

Nita M. Lowey Congresswoman from New York (D), 18th District, United States House of Representatives

Jane Harman Distinguished Fellow and President Emerita, The Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars Former Congresswoman from California

Melissa Sandgren Senior Manager, Corporate Programmes, Yahoo worked for: UN-Women, Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi,

Adam Kinzinger Congressman from Illinois (R), 16th District, United States House of Representatives

Darrell E. Issa Congressman from California (R), 50th District, United States House of Representatives

Seth Moulton Congressman from Massachusetts (D), 6th District, United States House of Representatives

Patrick McHenry Congressman from North Carolina (R), 10th District, United States House of Representatives

Adam Schiff Congressman from California (Democrat), 28th District, United States House of Representatives

Kevin McCarthy Congressman from California (R), 23rd District, United States House of Representatives

John K. Delaney Congressman from Maryland (D), 6th District, United States House of Representatives

Mario Diaz-Balart Congressman from Florida (R), 25th District, United States House of Representatives

Greg Stanton Congressman from Arizona, 9th district (D), United States House of Representatives

Brian Baird Congressman from Washington (D), 3rd District (1999-2011

Mark Meadows Since January 2013, Congressman for North Carolina's 11th District;

Tulsi Gabbard Congresswoman from Hawaii (D), 2nd District, United States House of Representatives

Christopher A. Coons Senator from Delaware (D), United States Senate

Susan M. Collins Senator from Maine (R), United States Senate

John McCain Senator from Arizona (R), United States Senate

Lindsey O. Graham Senator from South Carolina (R), United States Senate

Saxby Chambliss Senator from Georgia (R), United States Senate

Mark R. Warner Senator from Virginia (D), United States Senate

Robert Menendez Senator from New Jersey (D), United States Senate

Patrick J. Leahy Senator from Vermont (D), United States Senate

Edward J. Markey Senator from Massachusetts (D), United States Senate

Rob Portman Senator from Ohio (R), United States Senate

Joseph R. Biden Jr President of the United States of America, Office of the President of the United States

Thanks Wu_Flu_Ca_Choo - TheDonald

Dan Crenshaw...Class of 2019 https://web.archive.org/web/2019070...8=%E2%9C%93&region=a0Tb00000000DC9EAM#results

Peter Buttgag...Class of 2019 https://web.archive.org/web/2019070...8=%E2%9C%93&region=a0Tb00000000DC9EAM#results

Tom Cotton...Class of 2015

Excellent list... anyone remotely affiliated with Klaus Schwab must be exposed and removed. Here are some Young Global Leaders for your list

Dan Crenshaw...Class of 2019

Peter Buttgag...Class of 2019

Tom Cotton...Class of 2015
 
USA State Governor WEF agents
The descriptions are from their profiles. Some may not be up to date. Add more in the comments if you know more of them.

Jay R. Inslee Governor of Washington, United States Office of the Governor

Gavin Newsom Governor of California, United States Office of the Governor

Jack Markell Governor of Delaware, United States Office of the Governo

Kate Brown Governor of Oregon, United States Office of the Governor

John W. Hickenlooper Senator from Colorado (D), United States Senate Since 2011, Governor of Colorado.

Jerry Brown Jr Governor of California, United States Office of the Governor

John R. Kasich Governor of Ohio, United States Office of the Governor

Rick Perry Governor of Texas (2000-2015), Americans for Economic Freedom

Kerry Healey Former Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts

David Beasley Executive Director, United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) 1995-99, Governor of South Carolina

Mark R. Warner Senator from Virginia (D), United States Senate 2002-06, Governor of Virginia

Cyrus Habib Priest, Society of Jesus (Jesuits) 2016, elected Lieutenant Governor of Washington, at the age of 35. Had previously served in the State House of Representatives and the State Senate, as Democratic Whip and a member of the Democratic leadership team.
 
Texas WEF Agent list
Most WEF agents in texas seem to have their tendrils in the education system, though exceptions exist.

Also note, that the biggest concentration of WEF agents I've looked at so far is in banking, universities, the mainstream media, NGOs and the UN. I was expecting more WEF members in Texas, so this is good news.

The descriptions are from the WEF biographies and may be out of date. I did not include people who simply studied in Texas and left.

Kay Granger Congresswoman from Texas (R), 12th District, United States House of Representatives Since 1997, US Congresswoman; Chairwoman, Appropriations Subcommittee on State-Foreign Operations, Vice-Chair of Appropriations Subcommittee on Defense. Member of the Board, International Republican Institute. Commissioner, Center for Strategic and International Studies. Member, Congressional Advisory Committee, National Endowment for Democracy.

Rick Perry Governor of Texas (2000-2015), Americans for Economic Freedom

Karina Sanchez Presidential Fellow, Open Society Foundations Sánchez served as a field manager for Beto O’Rourke’s Texas congressional campaign

Rabi Mohtar TEES Research Professor, Biological and Agricultural Engineering and Zachry Department of Civil Engineering, Texas A&M University

Daron Roberts Founding Director, Center for Sports Leadership & Innovation ecturer in the humanities at the University of Texas, Austin

Kenneth A. Hersh President and Chief Executive Officer, George W. Bush Presidential Center Communities Foundation of Texas. Former Member: Board, St. Mark's School of Texas

John Mendelsohn Co-Director, Institute for Personalized Cancer Therapy, The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center

Earl Shipp Vice-President and Site Director, Dow Texas, The Dow Chemical Company

Ruth J. Simmons Council on Foreign Relations. Member of the Board: Texas Instruments;

Andrew S. Natsios Director of the Scowcroft Institute of International Affairs and Executive Professor, Bush School of Government and Public Service, Texas A&M University

Crystal Ashby effective January 2020 is a Director on the Board of Texas Reliability Entity, Inc. (Texas RE)

Mohammed Saleh Al Sada Chairman, Qatar Petroleum Member of the Board of Directors, Qatar Foundation. Chairman, Joint Advisory Board, Texas A&M University Qatar;
 
An exploration of EVIL. The Intersection of the WEF (Klaus) and Clinton
Jin Canrong Professor and Associate Dean, School of International Studies, Renmin University of China Between Hope and History by President Bill Clinton and Diplomacy by Henry Kissinger.

Jacob J. Lew Assistant to President Clinton;

Shai Reshef President, University of the People appearances include the Clinton Global Initiative;

Hayat Sindi Chief Executive Officer, i2 Institute, Emerging Explorer, National Geographic Society Hayat Sindi received Clinton Global Citizen Awards "leadership in Civil Society"

Bethlehem Tilahun Alemu Alumni, Global Shapers Community emale African entrepreneur to address the Clinton Global Initiative
 
Journalism NOT controlled by WEF
In the thousands of people's profiles on the WEF site, not a single one mentioned the following organizations.

I am not suggesting that they aren't impartial - just that they appear not to be part of the WEF and the global integrated propaganda complex.

It is clear that the global integrated propaganda complex is everywhere on radio and TV. We now need to figure out where to get the truth. You've heard there are three sides to every story - mine, yours and the truth. At least with good independent journalism, you can read various authors and converge on the truth.

SouthFront: Crisis News, World Events, Political Survey

Newsmax.com - Breaking news from around the globe

Zerohedge

Home - Global Research

https://sputniknews.com/

Rebel News

One America News Network

The Epoch Times - Truth & Tradition. Fact Based. Unbiased. Accurate News

Real Journalists

Glen Greenwald Glenn Greenwald

... I will add more ... there are dozens of good people who endanger their lives to tell the world what is happening.

Independent analysis

Paul Craig Roberts Paul Craig Roberts - Official Homepage

The Saker https://thesaker.is/

Plato's Guns Plato's Guns and http://thesaker.is/category/breaking-articles/
 
A History of Klaus Schwab
The History of Klaus Schwab

The Schwab family, the Nazis, weapons of mass destruction and the rise of a model technocrat

In case you ever tried to find information on Klaus Schwab you probably found yourself staring at a very short and disappointing Wikipedia entry. Or you were looking at his sugarcoated biography on the WEF’s website but no matter how you are looking at it you will probably not be satisfied with what you’re finding. It sure is a bit surprising to look up someone like Klaus Schwab who has a reputation of knowing everyone on the world stage (or as Donald Trump put it: “I assume they [all the world’s political and industry leaders] are here [in Davos] because of Klaus.”) and then have nothing but generic information coming up once you try to get some more insights about his life.

To find out more about this mysterious man who allegedly steers the world you’d have to dig a lot deeper. Schwab stated during the World Economic Forum’s annual meeting in 2021 that the building of trust in his organization would be a key factor to the success of his agenda. He elaborated that in order to achieve this, the WEF would expand its already massive public relations campaigns. There is one thing he might have overlooked though: Trust is being built through transparency. And since there is absolutely nothing easily to be found on the person behind the Great Reset agenda it leaves a bitter aftertaste. Luckily for him, I am here to help — after reading this you can reflect and decide whether you wish to trust this man or not.

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Klaus Schwab’s grandfather Gottfried was born on 10 July 1870 at the height of the Franco-Prussian War in Karlsruhe, Germany. In 1893, while he was working as a simple baker, Gottfried Schwab officially departed from Germany, gave up his citizenship and emigrated to Switzerland where he met his future wife Marie Lappert who was born in Kirchberg near the Swiss city of Bern. (The source for this information has since wondrously been removed.) The couple married in Roggwil on 27 May 1898 and the following year, on 27 April 1899, Eugen Schwab was born. At this time Gottfried Schwab had become a machine engineer. When Eugen was around a year old, Gottfried and Marie Schwab decided to return to Karlsruhe.

Eugen Schwab followed the example of his father and became a machine engineer, something he advised his own children to do in later years as well. Eugen began working at Escher-Wyss in Ravensburg which was a Swiss industrial company focusing on engineering and turbine construction with a long history of economic ties to the Ravensburg area.

During the 1920s, Escher-Wyss had found itself in serious financial troubles and continued to lose money despite large scale civil engineering contracts that are noted in an official correspondence written in 1924 from Wilhelm III to the company and to the asset manager of the House of Urach, accountant Julius Heller.

The engineered Great Depression in the early 1930s laid waste to the global economy leading to Escher-Wyss announcing that “as the catastrophic development of the economic situation in connection with the currency declines; The company [Escher-Wyss] is temporarily unable to continue its current liabilities in various customer countries.” The company continued in stating that they would also apply for a court deferral to the Swiss newspaper Neue Züricher Nachrichten, which on 1 December 1931 reported that “the company Escher-Wyss has been granted a stay of bankruptcy until the end of March 1932 and, acting as curator in Switzerland, a trust company has been appointed.” And went on that “there should be a prospect of continuing operations.”

However, by the mid-1930s, Escher-Wyss was still sailing troubled water. In an attempt to rescue the company, a consortium was appointed to aid the dying engineering company. It was formed by the Federal Bank of Switzerland (whose head by that time was a man named Max Schwab who apparently is of no relation to Klaus Schwab). It was decided that an engineer, Colonel Jacob Schmidheiny, became the new President of the Board of Directors and after the war broke out in 1939, Schmidheiny stated that “the outbreak of war does not necessarily mean unemployment for the machine industry in a neutral country”, which leads to believe that Escher-Wyss was already well underway in ensuring that their near 20-year financial crisis ended with profits made from the upcoming war.

In the years prior, Eugen Schwab already led the Ravensburg factory and continued to ensure that Escher-Wyss stayed the largest employer in the area. Not only that, but Hitler’s Nazi party awarded Escher-Wyss’ German branch the title of “National Socialist Model Company” while Schwab was managing it. The Nazis saw the company as a valuable partner in the coming war and their advances were reciprocated.

During the war Eugen Schwab diligently managed the company and aided the Wehrmacht in producing significant amounts of weapons. They continued in manufacturing parts for the German Luftwaffe before moving on to more sinister projects. During that time Escher-Wyss was of great interest for western intelligence agencies. Record Group 226 (RG226) was compiled by the Office of Strategic Services (OSS) which shows that Allied forces were aware of the Escher-Wyss business dealings with the Nazis. There are three specific mentions of the company:

  • File number 47178: “Escher-Wyss of Switzerland is working on a large order for Germany. Flame-throwers are despatched from Switzerland under the name Brennstoffbehaelter. Sept. 1944.”
  • File number 41589: “Business relations between Empresa Nacional Calvo Sotelo (ENCASO), Escher Wyss, and Mineral Celbau Gesellschaft. 1 p. July 1944; see also L 42627 Report on collaboration between the Spanish Empresa Nacional Calvo Sotelo and the German Rheinmetall Borsig, on German exports stored in Switzerland. 1 p. August 1944.” which basically implies the storage of German exports in supposedly “neutral” Switzerland.
  • File number 72654: “Hungary’s bauxite was formerly sent to Germany and Switzerland for refining. Then a government syndicate built an aluminium plant at Dunaalmas on the borders of Hungary. Electric power was provided; Hungary contributed coal mines, and equipment was ordered from the Swiss firm Escher-Wyss. Production began in 1941. 2 pp. May 1944.”
In addition, the Nazis’ only industrial plant capable of producing heavy water, an ingredient needed for making plutonium for the Nazi atomic bomb program, called Norsk Hydro, located near Rjukan, Norway, was powered by Escher-Wyss. Allied forces managed to partially destroy the plant but production continued until Norwegian resistance forces were able to sing the ship carrying the heavy water. This means that Escher-Wyss was actively helping the Nazis’ efforts in bringing victory by the use of atomic warfare.

In Ravensburg, Eugen Schwab was busy putting forced laborers to work. During WW2 around 3,600 forced laborers worked in local companies, including Escher-Wyss. Because of this large number it was necessary to set up one of the biggest recorded Nazi forced labor camps in in the city.

Klaus Schwab was born on 30 March 1938 in Ravensburg. While people claim that his mother is related to the House of Rothschild because it better fits their narrative, I now have to disappoint you: Klaus Schwab is in no way Jewish, or related to the Rothschild family. All of these claims can — as for now — not be proven.

Between 1945 and 1947, Klaus attended primary school in Au, Germany before he went to the Spohn-Gymnasium in Ravensburg between 1949 and 1957 and then graduated from the Humanistisches Gymnasium.

In 1962, he completed his mechanical engineering studies at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich. In the following year, he completed an economics course at the University of Fribourg, Switzerland. In 1965, Klaus worked on his dissertation on: “The longer-term export credit as a business problem in mechanical engineering”. It is as boring as it sounds.

During this time his father, Eugen, who apparently had managed to avoid retributions regarding his involvement in Nazi crimes two decades prior to this, was elected as President of the Ravensburg Chamber of Commerce.

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Klaus received his Doctorate in Engineering in 1966, and his Doctorate in Economics from the University of Fribourg in 1967, as well as a Master of Public Administration from the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard, USA. During his time at Harvard, Klaus was taught by Henry Kissinger, who he would later say were among the top figures who had most influenced his thinking.

“Years later, when I came back from the US after my studies at Harvard, there were two events that had a decisive triggering event on me. The first was a book by Jean-Jacques Servan-Schreiber, The American Challenge – which said Europe would lose out against the US because of Europe’s inferior management methods. The other event was – and this is relevant to Ireland – the Europe of the six became the Europe of the nine” - Klaus Schwab, Irish Times 2006.
In 1967, Klaus Schwab entered the public stage by leading the merger between the Swiss companies Sulzer AG and Escher-Wyss. Sulzer initially bought 53% of Escher-Wyss, leading to the company being named “Sulzer Escher-Wyss” before taking it over completely a year later.

Escher-Wyss had been involved in manufacturing nuclear technology at least as early as 1962, as shown by this patent for a “heat exchange arrangement for a nuclear power plant” and this patent from 1966 for a “nuclear reactor gas-turbine plant with emergency cooling”. After Eugen Schwabs departure, Sulzer Escher-Wyss went on to develop turbo compressors for uranium enrichment to yield reactor fuels.

Klaus Schwab himself joined Sulzer Escher-Wyss in 1967 and began transforming the company into a technology corporation. Immediately Sulzer Escher-Wyss became more pronounced in the dark aspects of the global nuclear arms race. With Klaus Schwab’s arrival began the company’s participation in the illegal proliferation of nuclear weapons technology. A man named Peter Hug eventually revealed that Sulzer Escher-Wyss began secretly building key parts for nuclear weapons in 1960. He went further into detail, pointing out that the company had supplied vital components to the South African government and found evidence of Germany’s role in supporting the racist regime, also revealing how the Swiss government “was aware of illegal deals but ‘tolerated them in silence’ while supporting some of them actively or criticised them only half-heartedly”.

At the time when Klaus Schwab left Sulzer AG (by the way, a company that is to this day remains tied to the WEF) in 1970, the company was deeply involved with nuclear technology as stated in the records of the Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg.

The same year Klaus wrote to the European Commission and asked for help in setting up a “non-commercial think tank for European business leaders”. The European Commission agreed and sponsored the event. They sent a French politician Raymond Barre who famously is known for his anti-Semitic statements, to act as the forum’s “intellectual mentor.”

In 1971 the first meeting of the World Economic Forum — then called European Management Synopsium — took place in Davos, Switzerland. A mind blowing 450 participants from 31 countries took part in Schwab’s first gathering. They were mostly made up of managers from various European companies, politicians, and US academics.

Later that year Schwab married his secretary Hilde Stoll who helped organizing the gathering.

Klaus later reflected on how the Club of Rome was one of the most influential groups that spurred the creation of the WEF. The Club had been founded in 1968 by Scottish chemist Alexander King and Italian industrialist Aurelio Peccei and has ever since been controversial for its obsession with reducing the global population. In the club’s first publication in 1972, “Limits to Growth”, the author warned that “if the world’s consumption patterns and population growth continued at the same high rates of the time, the earth would strike its limits within a century.” A year later Peccei would visit the third WEF meeting and summarize said book which — as the WEF states on its website — had a profound impact on the further direction it was taking. Also in 1973 the Club of Rome published a report detailing an “adaptive” model for global governance that would divide the world into ten, inter-connected economic/political regions.

Many of the Club of Rome’s earlier policies have long been criticized as being influenced by eugenics and neo-Malthusian. In 1991, the club published its second, more widely known, publication called “The First Global Revolution”. The first iterations of this book are nearly impossible to find these days.1 However, in this book though the author put the following very telling and very sinister statement:

“In searching for a common enemy against whom we can unite, we came up with the idea that pollution, the threat of global warming, water shortages, famine and the like, would fit the bill. In their totality and their interactions these phenomena do constitute a common threat which must be confronted by everyone together. But in designating these dangers as the enemy, we fall into the trap, which we have already warned readers about, namely mistaking symptoms for causes. All these dangers are caused by human intervention in natural processes, and it is only through changed attitudes and behaviour that they can be overcome. The real enemy then is humanity itself.”
In the years since, the Club of Rome and the World Economic Forum have frequently argued that population control methods are essential to protecting the environment. It is unsurprising that the World Economic Forum would use the issues of climate and environment as a way to market otherwise unpopular policies, such as those of the Great Reset.

Over the past 50 years Klaus Schwab has — unknown by most — become one of the most powerful people on the planet, controlling an ever expanding web of politicians, business leaders, celebrities, artists and writers from the shadows.

Apparently it is appealing to see some kind grandpa in him who might wishes to make up for the crimes of his father, that he keeps in secret and refuses to talk about, by helping the world’s population to live a better life. But with every new insight into the WEF’s agenda, every new piece of knowledge that is being uncovered, every new detail about Schwab’s involvement with nuclear weapons, that image deteriorates quickly. When looking at all that is attached to him I don’t see a savior of humanity. I see a well-connected man with a family history of helping racist governments in creating weapons of mass destruction.

The Apartheid regime in South Africa was close to what the Nazis were back in their days. Klaus diligently pursued a course following his father’s footsteps and when looking at all of this, the fact that he supports a world in which a certain group of people is being discriminated, segregated and vilified does not come as a big surprise anymore. If Klaus Schwab is anything, he is a threat to global peace, a threat to our freedom and a threat to humanity.

I leave it up to your mind to come to conclusion as to which values his father Eugen as a known Nazi collaborator has passed on to his son.

1
A newer version can be found here: Club of Rome PDF (184 Pages)
 
some dude calling himself Spartacus has a neat explanation over on substack
To understand the threat posed by technocracy, we must first go back to the very beginning. Thorstein Veblen was a late 19th century/early 20th century critic of capitalism who wrote several books on the topic. Though he developed a reputation as something of a womanizer and a maverick whose teaching style was regarded as dry and boring by his students, he was rather more infamous for his writings; his books were considered highly provocative at the time they were written, and today, Veblen’s legacy lives on in the terms that he coined, such as conspicuous consumption, which is the notion that the wealthy consume luxury goods solely for the purpose of demonstrating their status.
Conspicuous consumption is very much alive and well, by the way. Just ask anyone who’s ever bought an iPhone 13 when their iPhone 12 was perfectly good enough to suit their purposes, just so they could brag to all their friends and coworkers about their new acquisition.
Veblen was a progressive and Post-Marxist economist and sociologist, whose critiques spanned the entire breadth of human activity. Many of his books are available to read for free, having long since passed into the public domain.
Project Gutenberg - Thorstein Veblen
The Theory of Business Enterprise
The Engineers and the Price System
In The Theory of Business Enterprise and The Engineers and the Price System, Thorstein Veblen argued that capitalist economies create artificial scarcity by restricting production such that goods can be sold profitably, rather than maximizing the use of all available resources. In other words, managers under a capitalist system create unemployment by necessity; overproduction of a physical good to the point of it becoming essentially free would bankrupt the manufacturer.
Thorstein Veblen argued for a form of socialism based around the leadership of engineers; a society where the price system would potentially be abolished and replaced with calculation-in-kind, much like the ideas of his contemporary, Otto Neurath, who advocated for naturalkalkul.
Central to these disputes was a conflict over what constituted value. What is value? Rarely is the question asked, and yet, it is a central facet of much of human activity. People work for money because they want to buy things, and then they buy things because they desire them. In short, a price is a measure of nothing physical, but of people’s desires in the abstract. You may not want something all that badly if it cost a hundred dollars, but if it were marked down twenty percent, you might reconsider. A price measures you, in other words. It measures your willingness to purchase something weighed against the opportunity cost of not being able to budget for something else as a result.
Veblen and the Logical Positivists, on the other hand, saw this type of valuation as a form of subjective make-believe. They wanted to determine exactly how much of each physical good people actually, objectively needed to fulfill their scientifically determined physical needs, and then manufacture and distribute precisely that much of each good to each person in society.
In other words, they wanted to take subjectivity out of the equation and apply a one-size-fits-all rule to basically everyone.
Ludwig von Mises wrote a lengthy critique against this point of view in 1920 entitled Economic Calculation in the Socialist Commonwealth, wherein he argued that prices convey valuable information, and that planned economies that forsake a price system are essentially forced to grope around in the dark to figure out how to allocate resources.
However, many socialists ignored his warnings and forged ahead with their utopian vision, anyway. They were determined to make everyone equal, practicality be damned. History shows us the consequences of this, from Stalin’s gulags, to the mass starvation of Mao’s Great Leap Forward, to Pol Pot’s killing fields.
And yet, alongside Communism, another form of socialism was brewing. A socialism of computers, automation, and scientific expertise, drawing upon Veblen’s writings for inspiration. One that presaged new technologies that supposedly promised to deal with the socialist calculation problem.
They called it Technocracy.
Howard Scott was a either a visionary or a con man, depending on who you ask. With little in the way of formal education, and a background involving such prestigious activities as pouring cement and selling floor polish, in the early 1930s, at the height of the Great Depression, he founded the Technocracy Movement, an organization devoted to establishing a “North American Technate”. In Thorstein Veblen’s writings, Howard Scott and other members of his organization saw a prescription for universal employment and the replacement of the price system with a system of energy credits as the cure for the ills of the Great Depression.
Others who were not involved in the Technocracy Movement, like Bernard London, had some other, similarly radical ideas on how to end the Great Depression, like deliberately destroying vast swaths of property and accumulated wealth so it could be profitably replaced, which is why he wrote an essay entitled Ending the Depression Through Planned Obsolescence, where he advocated that goods come with an expiration date beyond which they are to be considered legally “dead”.
At their peak, the Technocracy Movement boasted hundreds of thousands of adherents, who went all over the country in fleets of gray cars, preaching the end of capitalism and its replacement with a scientifically-managed economy operated by engineers and experts. They did not regard themselves as a political party of any kind. In fact, they sought to abolish partisan politics and replace that with scientific management, too.

In science we trust
Technocracy Incorporated was not a political movement – in fact, politicians or members of political parties were not allowed to join. It was founded in New York City in 1933 as an educational and research organization promoting a radical restructuring of political, social and economic life in Canada and the United States, with science as its central operating principle.
There would be no politicians, business people, money or income inequality. Those were all features of what Technocracy called the “price system,” and it would have to go.
There would be no countries called Canada or the United States, either – just one giant continental land mass called the Technate, a techno-utopia run by engineers and other “experts” in their fields. In the Technate, everyone would be well-housed and fed. All material needs would be taken care of, whether you had a job or not.
To deal with the socialist calculation problem, the Technocracy Movement proposed to precisely monitor the factors of production and all of the physical inputs and outputs of society in such a manner that calculation-in-kind became practical. To do this, they planned to appoint armies of skilled and certified technicians and engineers to manage society scientifically, doing away with politicians, parties, voting, and so on. They also sought to leverage the most advanced forms of automation, from early mechanical computers to modern-day integrated circuitry, to achieve this goal.
However, because of FDR’s New Deal and America’s growing distaste for socialist totalitarianism in all of its myriad forms, the Technocracy Movement was increasingly associated with the evils of fascism and communism in the popular consciousness. As a result, their membership waned over the years. Today, the organization is but a shadow of its former self.
This early Technocracy Movement was the harbinger of modern-day technocracy, an entirely different system championed by a far more well-connected and insidious network of wealthy and influential individuals. However, before the unprecedented rise of Silicon Valley and the modern-day technocrats, there were other projects over the course of the 20th and early 21st centuries that shared similarities to the overall goals and intentions of technocratic socialism.
In 1971, Salvador Allende, the President of Chile and head of the Popular Unity alliance of socialist parties, embarked on an ambitious project to manage the entirety of Chile’s resources, labor, and material goods through a network of mainframe computers and telex machines.
This project was called Cybersyn, and it aimed to overcome the failings of the Soviet Union’s central planning by using advanced computer networks to monitor the factors of production and allocate resources more efficiently. Stafford Beer, an expert in management cybernetics, was the chief architect of Cybersyn, and Gui Bonsiepe designed the Star Trek-esque control room where Allende and his aides would monitor and control every aspect of Chilean life.
The program was brought to a sudden and brutal end when Augusto Pinochet utterly obliterated Allende’s government in a military coup. However, the ideas behind Cybersyn have persisted to the present day, with many aspects of management cybernetics worming their way into capitalist power structures.

Cybersyn is very much alive and well, but it is called by a different name, today; the internet, big data, algo-trading, algorithmic monitoring of consumer preferences, and so on. Every time you go on YouTube or Netflix and receive a slate of recommendations based on the kinds of things you liked watching in the past, that’s Neo-Cybersyn at work. China’s social credit score system? Cybersyn on steroids. Google censoring search results and Twitter censoring tweets? That’s the New Cybersyn, too, only extended to human-to-human interactions, under the mistaken notion that corporations have some sort of social responsibility to bar people from interacting with others if their views lie outside the Overton Window. The obsession with controlling human behavior extends into the fields of civil engineering and ergonomics. Armies of anthropologists, psychologists, and sociologists are now paid huge sums to psychoanalyze others and determine how to engineer subtle speed bumps into society to curtail harmful or asocial behavior.

From the RAND Corporation’s usage of game theory and their scientific forecasts, to Richard Thaler and Cass Sunstein’s Nudge, today’s executives have become control freaks obsessed with monitoring and shaping people’s private lives to a degree previously unheard of. All of it can be traced back to Frederick Winslow Taylor’s concept of scientific management, and to its socialist equivalents in Cybersyn and the like. Today, it is difficult to find a bureaucrat who won’t first privately cite the Prisoner’s Dilemma before publicly proposing a policy, and then proceed to use their reductionist assumptions of human life to justify inhuman, fanatical, and nigh-on-robotic totalism.
Jacque Fresco was a futurist, architect, autodidact, and utopian thinker who left behind many failed business ventures to found his own organization in Venus, Florida that he termed The Venus Project. The so-called Venus Project built upon his prior ideas of something called “sociocyberneering”, which bore more than a few similarities to Allende’s Cybersyn, Howard Scott’s Technocracy Movement, and the writings of Thorstein Veblen.
I’m sure you can already see where this is going; abolish the price system, manage the factors of production directly with calculation-in-kind, et cetera, et cetera. Jacque Fresco believed that if money was done away with and society was managed technologically, with all of its inputs and outputs monitored by computers, it would solve all existing problems with poverty and the like. He was also very fond of the idea of circular cities, for some reason.

Jacque Fresco passed away in 2017, with few, if any of his ideas ever put to any practical use.
Largely unconnected from the prior manifestations of the technocratic ideal, Western Oligarchies have implemented many of technocracy’s ideas, albeit within a capitalist framework, with profit as the overall motive. Considerable human resources in the form of scientists and social engineers have been employed by the world’s biggest corporations to figure out how to corral their customers and modify their behavior to be as vain and materialistic as possible while squeezing as much money as they can out of them. The end-result of their efforts has been a new class war between the urban professional-managerial class of college-educated Elites and their employers, and an underclass of suburban and rural laborers and tradesmen who have seen their livelihoods utterly destroyed by the steady march of globalism and outsourcing.
The pain experienced by America’s growing number of homeless and our shrinking middle class due to the increasing wealth gap is very real. It has led to large tracts of America undergoing a kind of Weimarization; politically hyper-polarized and rife with drug abuse and prostitution. Our small towns have been flooded with opioids. Our infrastructure is outdated and crumbling right in front of us. In the midst of this bleak landscape, the tech titans of Silicon Valley have risen to fill the gap in leadership left behind by the ineffectual puppet politicians who support their agendas.
The 2010 Citizens United decision placed more power in the hands of the wealthy than ever before. Occupy Wall Street, the last gasp of bipartisan populist resistance, was smote by the ceaseless promotion of divisive rhetoric about race, gender, and sexuality which persists in the present, over a decade later, with parents ranting at school boards about the teaching of divisive and polarizing topics like critical race theory.
The economy became the domain of supranational institutions, with average citizens barred from having any influence upon how we are employed and remunerated. Tech giants have viciously silenced political dissent by characterizing it as harassment, abuse, misinformation, and so forth. They have done so with the blessing of the very same supranational institutions that our leaders have given away our political representation to.
They have bolstered this system of control by manipulating every aspect of American life. How we learn, how we eat, what we watch. The average American teen, by the time they’re ready to go to college, has already been brainwashed by the public school system for twelve years straight. Under the guise of teaching various topics like math, chemistry, history, and so forth, America’s students are, in reality, taught how to punch a clock, how to perform repetitive and meaningless tasks like filling out paperwork, how to obey unreasonable authority figures, and so on.
The divide between the political Left and the political Right in America is a circus. A collection of emotionally-charged, inherently polarizing absurdities. Its only purpose is to distract average, working-class people from the real political divide, which is between neoliberals and anti-neoliberals.
Klaus Schwab and the World Economic Forum Run Away from Their Past
When Klaus Schwab, the founder of the World Economic Forum, starts railing against “the neoliberal global order,” the world should take notice. “For the past 30 to 50 years, the neo-liberalist ideology has increasingly prevailed in large parts of the world.”
And he added: “This approach centers on the notion that the market knows best, that the ‘business of business is business,’ and that government should refrain from setting clear rules for the functioning of markets.”
Mr. Schwab goes on to solemnly declare: “Those dogmatic beliefs have proved wrong. But fortunately, we are not destined to follow them.”
On the one hand, you have classical liberals who promote austerity, the elimination of social programs, more conservative fiscal policies, more privatization, and so on, and on the other, you have democratic socialists who want more spending, more welfare, more nationalization, and so forth. These two groups are two sides of the same exact coin. That coin is the abject failure of the post-WWII liberal welfare state to make any meaningful progress in how society is run, coupled with the rise of an appalling and paternalistic strand of elitism that strives to exclude the lower and middle classes from meaningful politics.
Outside of that struggle, you have the ongoing meta-struggle between nationalism and globalism. Globalism represents both neoliberal and anti-neoliberal forces that seek to control the global markets and institutions for their own ends. Nationalism, on the other hand, is supported by a frayed, conservative-leaning citizenry and a network of political outsiders desperate to patch their governments together and retain the advantages of national sovereignty. This latter group are unfairly cast as neanderthals and reactionaries simply for expecting a first-world living standard; the perks of the nuclear family, access to education and well-paying jobs, and home ownership. The globalists, meanwhile, are trying to demolish all of those things and replace them with a cult of empty materialism.
The class of new technocrats, composed of a clerisy of bureaucratic Ivy-League elites, have effectively stuffed a pacifier in the public’s mouth. That pacifier is the constant divisive rhetoric that is spread by our media, which separates the working class into progressive and reactionary camps. Meanwhile, the elites discuss real politics - the politics of the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, the Bank for International Settlements, and the World Economic Forum - amongst themselves. The rest of us are not even invited to the conversation. We have become the unwilling captives of these elites.
It is in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic that the elites have seized even more power over our societies in the name of “public health”, aiming to radically restructure how we live, how we work, how we travel, and how we amuse ourselves. Our consent isn’t part of the equation. While blubbering about “preserving democracy”, these petty tyrants have done the exact opposite; they have transferred all political power to a shady and unaccountable network of private-public partnerships, NGOs, private intelligence firms, drug companies, arms dealers, and media conglomerates. There is no longer a point in voting, because politicians don’t set policy. Bureaucrats and businessmen up in their ivory towers set policy, and they do it according to principles they learned in private schools and prestigious colleges you could never afford to send your children to.
We see strains of technocracy in public life every day now, when we are exhorted to obey the proclamations of scientists, engineers, doctors, biologists, and other people with various degrees, because their credentials are taken as a license to create rules for others to follow. Almost overnight, armies of unaccountable, unelected “experts” have taken control of the very foundations of our society.
This is where the new technocracy differs from the old. Rather than being a bottom-up utopian pipe dream of the working and middle classes, it is instead a highly sophisticated system of tyrannical control imposed from above by the architects of business and high finance, using cutting-edge scientific management theories and vast technological resources - algorithms, big data, machine learning, and networked sensors - to monitor people’s consumption habits, direct and control their impulses with propagandistic advertising, and curtail speech aimed at revealing the system’s disgusting infringements upon our civil liberties and property rights.
The world promised by the New World Order and the UN’s Agenda 2030 is not one that any sane American should ever want to live in.

Imagine a world where private property has been largely abolished and replaced with servitization. You don’t own things anymore. You pay a subscription fee to rent them. Society is already being nudged in this direction. Instead of buying a DVD, you just get a Netflix or Hulu subscription and there you have it. Thousands of movies. Until you stop paying, and then you don’t have any movies. Adobe Photoshop and Microsoft Word are sold on subscription models.
Imagine paying a subscription for a car. Not even leasing to have one on your driveway, because you won’t have a driveway, or a garage. Why do you need a garage, anyway? Do you plan on tinkering in there and building things that endanger the safety of others? No, you’ll pull up your phone, and hail a driverless Uber that has no steering wheel whatsoever, and you tell it where you want it to go, and it drives you to your destination, drops you off, and then, it’s no longer a part of your life until you summon it again.

Picture if almost everything you owned worked like this, where you pay a subscription fee to use the communal whatever. You don’t have property. The corporations do, or the Party does. Everyone pays money, over and over, to use the same unit of production. Zuckerberg’s Metaverse is practically the ultimate expression of this rent-seeking phenomenon; in a Metaverse, you pay for digital goods for your make-believe living room, like in Second Life. No laborers are necessary to produce these goods in quantity, since a copy of a piece of data essentially costs nothing to make, and all of the profits get funneled straight to the absentee owners of the businesses that contract some down-on-their-luck 3D artists to make the “digital goods”. Eventually, AIs will spit these things out procedurally, with no human involvement whatsoever.
Why would they do this? Why would they impose a system like this on us? Well, because owning real property is bad for the environment and causing global warming and sea level rise, or something of that nature, or so they say.
The real reason has to do with the velocity of money. You see, if the material needs of a large portion of the population are satisfied and they don’t really need to consume anything more beyond that, then that will lead to an economic depression, because our economy is actually a global pyramid scheme based on a shaky foundation of mutual obligations and idiotic paper-shuffling, and any interruption in the flow of money will lead to a collapse.
Therefore, it is in the interest of the architects of high finance to ensure that you’re always consuming things nonstop, even if you don’t really need them. That’s why, even though we always see talking heads proclaiming our impending doom if we don’t do something about the environment, billions of dollars of tech gadgets are produced by sweatshop workers in China, shipped to the West on gigantic container ships burning nasty heavy fuel oils that produce the pollution of millions of passenger cars, consumed for the sake of vanity, and then thrown in a landfill after a couple years with all the other two-year-old smartphones and laptops and tablets. This model worked for a while, but it had a fatal flaw. People were financing their consumption by taking on massive, unsustainable levels of debt. Wall Street has kicked the can down the road, over and over, by Quantitative Easing and other such desperate measures, but eventually, these debt bubbles always burst.
So, how do you engineer a financially metastable society where people are always paying for things? Simple! You make it impossible for average people to accrue wealth, by replacing property ownership with a subscription model and making it so that people’s savings expire. Basically, passing down dynastic wealth through inheritance is made impossible for the lower classes.
Digital Currency: Yuan comes with an expiry date: Spend or it will vanish
The digital yuan is programmable to the point that the currency can be made to expire, thus forcing consumers to use it up by a certain date. This is a twist on an obscure, unconventional monetary policy innovation known as a Gesell currency: expiring money, which gives the issuing government a heightened degree of control over money velocity.
The way they plan on doing this is by forcing everyone to go cashless and digital, first by collapsing existing currencies, and then by replacing them with a central bank digital currency. This currency would be centrally controlled. It would be impossible for the citizenry to sock away cash under the mattress. All transactions would be monitored and specific goods rationed. Did you exceed your meat quota for this month? Sorry, your card has been disabled for that purchase. An attendant will come and put that steak back on the shelf. Are you a dissident? Whoops. Your bank account has been completely disabled. What happened to the truckers in Canada, with PayPal and GoFundMe cutting off their money and the Canadian government freezing people’s bank accounts, was a glimpse of what the future will look like under an all-digital, cashless system.
This is how the Elites of society intend to pull up the ladder and create a permanent, neo-feudalist caste system; by leveraging the tricks and tools of technocracy and scientific management to do so. The important thing to understand is that these people actively despise you. It’s not sensationalist to say that. It’s a fact. They know that you are upset at not getting your share of the enormous pie that is the past few decades of our GDP growth, after they’ve spent years and years actively eroding your labor rights and shipping your jobs overseas. They know, and they don’t care that you’re upset. In fact, they aim to take away the thin sliver of table scraps they’ve been giving you for years, and actually leave you with literally nothing, forced to pay them rent from now unto eternity for the privilege of living in a police state with mass surveillance that scrutinizes every little thing you do.
Technocracy: The Operating System For The New International Rules-Based Order
The new IRBO has nothing to do with representative democratic principles. It is entirely estranged from concepts such as freedom of speech and expression, democratic accountability, freedom of the press, freedom to roam and eschews all inalienable rights.
It is based upon a fusion between the political state and global corporations. We have recently seen this put into devastating effect in the Five Eyes nation of Canada. On 14th February 2022, in response to the ongoing nationwide Truckers Freedom Convoy protests, Canadian Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland stated that the government had arbitrarily decided “to broaden the scope of Canada’s anti-money laundering and terrorist financing rules.”
Starting with crowd-funding and payment platforms, including crypto-currency exchanges, these private corporations were required to report all “suspicious” transactions to the government. This quickly progressed to freezing protestors banks accounts. Freeland said that the private corporations were “collaborating properly and effectively.”

That is the New World Order. It is a collection of private-public partnerships made up of depraved control freaks engaged in a global racket that is aimed at stripping you of your property rights, your civil liberties, and your very humanity. While the authorities screech about “protecting democracy” from the ravages of free, unrestricted speech out of one side of their lying faces, they contrive to strip you of all of its benefits when they meet in Davos each year, hailing the New World Order out of the other side of their lying, hypocrite faces and bragging about how humans are now “hackable animals” subject to every kind of manipulation.
Patrick Wood is a man who saw the writing on the wall. He foresaw the threat posed by technocracy many, many years in advance, and wrote numerous books on the topic, such as Technocracy Rising: The Trojan Horse of Global Transformation, and Technocracy: The Hard Road to World Order.
Google Whistleblower: The Coming Technocracy Is More Dangerous Than Communism
“Right now we have this struggle between abusive capitalism and genocidal communism. But I think the real synthesis of that is going to be a completely different system, which I see coming really rapidly that nobody’s talking about, which is the technocracy.
“We can’t really judge it as a capitalist system or a communist system because those things were invented in the era of paper and pencil. If we’re going to rely on the era of paper and pencil to describe the thing that is coming, we need to adjust our models. What’s coming is not communism and it’s not capitalism… it’s a technocracy.
“What dangerous about it is… the average common person, their economic output is going to go down to zero. I’m not just talking about their labor because of robots, but their intellectual capacity because artificial intelligence is going to come and take it over.”

Patrick Wood has spent a great deal of time and effort trying to warn people about the ongoing erosion of our privacy, our property rights, and our civil liberties by the slow march of technocracy through our institutions.
It truly is a shame that his warnings went unheeded.
-Spartacus
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At least the Schwab family could be considered a more genuine Nazi supporting clan than the wild rumors of Soros being a Nazi collaborator
 
You do realize that Soros himself boasted about his time collaborating with the Nazis, yes?
Possibly, although Soros would have been only 14 at the time of the collaboration. I don’t mean to defend the scum bag though, but the picture of Soros in the SS uniform is not the real Soros. The scum was too young to have joined the SS.
 

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