You have five years on me, but yes, I’ve heard the talk about baby boomers. The lack of funds might not be as big of problem as they expected 30 years ago. With our greed for fossil fuels, energy and plastic, we are doing well to make the planet unlivable, as evident from the large number of our population being displaced by an ever increasing warming planet. The amount of immigrants coming into the country should help offset the costs of the baby boomers.
If Covid-19 was manufactured with a specific reason in mind, I don’t know that I would call it a success. Agreed, there were a lot of elderly people who perished in care homes, but the majority of thee were private care homes rather than government run care homes. If the Canadian government was going to be a stakeholder or partner in the Great Reset, then you would think they would have let these people die, like they did in private care.
A lot of this talk about a new world order, and a flat currency depends on the total destruction of the United States. The article I read (whether it was one of these or one linked to one of these) doesn’t see that happening anytime soon. Plus some of the original planners are getting old now, and more apt to maintain the status quo, rather than continually push for change.
There’s been a lot of discussion on these issues, article read, and organizations formed but how it all fits together is still very vague, and not all the would be partners can agree on various issues. For example, the big players in the food industry:
“Abandoning pesticides is not on the table. How come?” asks Sofia Monsalve of FIAN International, a human rights organization focused on food and nutrition. “There is no discussion on land concentration or holding companies accountable for their environmental and labour abuses.” This fits into a bigger picture Monsalve sees of large corporations, which dominate the food sector, being reluctant to fix the production system. “They just want to come up with new investment opportunities.”
“The signatories to the letter fear that, with corporate involvement in the summit, food will continue to be treated “as a commodity and not as a human right”. If unchanged, industrial food systems will continue to have irreversible impacts on our health and the health of our planet.”
Then other stakeholders like the petroleum industry in Russia. Who will convince them to compromise?
How do you tell Bill Gates the Chinese will have a controlling interest?
A lot of this talk has died down since 2020, when Pierre Poilievre brought it to our attention. It brings with it a lot of talk about conspiracy theories, rather real or imaginable, it doesn’t matter. Poilievre had to let this issue alone, as no one was buying it. In order to be prime minister, I guess you have to have some ounce of credibility. Whether it resurfaces or not, in the coming years, is something we’ll have to wait and see.
Likewise, I think we’re still a long ways away from seeing stakeholder capitalism, and a one world government share controlling interests in world profit.. Getting these huge companies to agree on the same agenda, is apt to take many, many years.