Speaking at the B20 event in Bali, part of the G20 summit, which is comprised of 19 countries and the European Union, Klaus Schwab, founder and executive chairman of the World Economic Forum (WEF), spoke of his hopes for a “deep systemic and structural restructuring of our world.”
Back in the midst of the COVID epidemic, Schwab seized the opportunity to advance his agenda, writing, “There is now a brief opportunity for global leaders to cooperate to achieve a ‘Great Reset’ – a step forwards to a more resilient, cohesive, equitable and prosperous world.”
“If we look at all the challenges, we can speak about the multi crises, economic, political, social, ecological, and institutional crises,” Schwab said at the G20 summit. “But actually, what we have to confront is a deep systemic and structural restructuring of our world. And this will take some time and the world will look differently after we have gone through this transition process.”
“Politically, the driving forces for this transformation, of course, is the political transition into a multi (unintelligible) world, which has a tendency to make our world much more fragmented. For this reason, events like this one, the G20 and so on, are the very important connectors to unwind a too great segmentation …” he continued.
Klaus Schwab is now part of the G20 and here he is giving his instructions directly to our “elected” leaders…
🔊sound …🧐#WEF #KlausSchwab pic.twitter.com/SSpLUkUONI
— Wall Street Silver (@WallStreetSilv) November 15, 2022
“We have continuous partnerships with many governments around the world,” Schwab has said in the past. “Then of course, we have NGOs, we have trade unions, we have all those different parts – media, of course – and very important experts and scientists and academia … religious leaders, social entrepreneurs …”
“We can, says Schwab, cure ‘inequality and the unfairness that underpins it,” Daily Wire Editor Emeritus Ben Shapiro wrote in a piece titled, “The Real Story Of The Great Reset.”
“He doesn’t mean that we ought to press forward free markets and property rights more broadly – the greatest alleviators of poverty in human history,” Shapiro continued. “Instead, he means we ought reorganize the global economy in centralized fashion. Every country ought to pursue ‘a broader, if not universal provision of social assistance,’ plus ‘a move toward enhanced protection for workers in the form of mandatory benefits.’ This inevitably means that governments will ‘decide that it’s in the best interest of society to rewrite some of the rules of the game and permanently increase their roles.’”