
The Global Reset seems to be moving forward full steam ahead at the opening of the annual Davos gathering. The World Economic Forum event started off with the leader of the group, Klaus Schwab saying that “the future is built by us”.
NEW – Klaus Schwab tells attendees at his World Economic Forum in Davos that "the future is being built by us." pic.twitter.com/yIqB4jclNd
— Disclose.tv (@disclosetv) May 23, 2022
Schwab called those summoned before him a “powerful community,” and declared “We have the means to improve the state of the world, but two conditions are necessary: The first one, is that we act all as stakeholders of larger communities, so that we serve not only our self-interests but we serve the community. That’s what we call ‘stakeholder responsibility.’”
Not long after Klaus Schwab spoke, two more European World Economic Forum elites took the stage. Both declared that the global energy crisis is a “transition” that will be “painful” for most, but should not be resisted by nations tempted to preserve their own sovereignty over the “global agenda.”
“And second, that we collaborate,” he continued, adding “And this is the reason why you find many opportunities here during the meeting to engage into… action and impact initiatives to make progress related to specific issues on the global agenda.” In other words, countries need to fall into line with the globalists’ ‘Great Reset’ agenda:
As the day continued Monday, German vice-chancellor Robert Habeck spoke. And in so many words said, that all countries need to fall into line with the globalists’ ‘Great Reset’ agenda:
During a World Economic Forum panel on the energy crisis, German vice-chancellor Robert Habeck said countries should resist temptation to look after their own interests first. He added sustainability requires change to the "rule of the markets." pic.twitter.com/BYzQqMRDbk
— Andrew Lawton (@AndrewLawton) May 23, 2022
Later on in the event, Norwegian finance CEO Kjerstin Braathen spoke about global energy disruption as a “transition” while admitting there will be mass shortages and economic hardship, but claiming the “pain” is “worth it.”
Speaking about small and medium businesses in Davos, Norwegian finance CEO Kjerstin Braathen says energy transition will create energy shortages and inflationary pressures, but this "pain" is "worth it." pic.twitter.com/Ne70lRle5W
— Andrew Lawton (@AndrewLawton) May 23, 2022
Journalist Andrew Lawton documented more Davos elites excited over the possibilities for global control that their Great Reset could come true:
Alibaba Group president J. Michael Evans boasts at the World Economic Forum about the development of an "individual carbon footprint tracker" to monitor what you buy, what you eat, and where/how you travel. pic.twitter.com/sisSrUngDI
— Andrew Lawton (@AndrewLawton) May 24, 2022
On the World Economic Forum's panel on a "Reimagined Global Tax System," Oxfam executive director Gabriela Bucher calls for a global 25 per cent corporate tax rate and complains that countries are lowering taxes to be competitive. pic.twitter.com/zuJqsdXlUM
— Andrew Lawton (@AndrewLawton) May 24, 2022
Australian eSafety commissioner Julie Inman Grant tells the World Economic Forum we need a "recalibration" of freedom of speech. pic.twitter.com/zEq72wFhNf
— Andrew Lawton (@AndrewLawton) May 23, 2022
A CNN anchor, the chairman of Credit Suisse, and France's top central banker giddily discuss the arrival of central bank digital currencies within five years at the World Economic Forum in Davos. pic.twitter.com/nKPN2qRUI3
— Andrew Lawton (@AndrewLawton) May 23, 2022