King Charles and World Economic Forum Aligns on ‘Great Reset’ Agenda
King Charles III, who ascended to the Royal British throne following the death of his mother, Queen Elizabeth II, is yet to show the world how he plans to fulfill the new role – not just in the U.K. – but in 14 other Commonwealth realms including Australia and Canada.
King Charles, a proud member of the World Economic Forum, is actively present fight against “climate change” while publicly advocating the “great reset.”
This is what King Charles said at the launch of the WEF’s ‘Great Reset’ event in 2020:
“There is a golden opportunity to seize something good from this crisis…global crises know no borders, and highlight how interdependent we are as one people sharing one planet.”
“Unless we take the action necessary, and build in a greener and more inclusive and sustainable way, then we will have more and more pandemics.”
Watch
The WEF Annual Meeting in 2020 brought together global leaders from government, business, and civil society, as well as stakeholders from around the world, to convene in in-person and virtual dialogues, the WEF writes on its website.
The global initiative, “The Great Reset,” was launched by The Prince of Wales, the WEF, and HRH’s Sustainable Markets Initiative in 2020.
On the official Prince of Wales website, it reads:
For over fifty years, His Royal Highness has promoted action for a sustainable future to ensure that the natural assets can endure for future generations.
In January 2020, The Prince launched his Sustainable Markets Initiative at Davos, calling communities, businesses, investors, and consumers to take the urgent and practical steps required to transition to more sustainable practices.
The Great Reset, which was launched during a virtual roundtable today, aims to rebuild, redesign, reinvigorate and rebalance our world. It has been designed to ensure businesses and communities’ build back better’ by putting sustainable business practices at the heart of their operations as they begin to recover from the coronavirus pandemic.
So, with that in mind, it’s also worth noting what other strategies are outlined by the WEF to take humanity to a new “safe” and “sustainable” future.
Microchipping Children
As we reported last month, Klaus Schwab’s World Economic Forum published an article suggesting it would be “solid” and “rational” to microchip children.
A blog post on the WEF website focuses on the future of augmented reality and an “augmented society.”
The article reads: “As scary as chip implants may sound, they form part of a natural evolution that wearables once underwent. Hearing aids or glasses no longer carry a stigma.”
Scientist Kathleen Philips writes that mainstream culture and influencers will also help promote implantable chips as a must-have fashion item.
“They are accessories and are even considered a fashion item. Likewise, implants will evolve into a commodity,” Philips writes.
A.I. Censorship
In August, the WEF revealed its plan to combat “disinformation and hate speech” by using “human and artificial intelligence” in the group’s so-called battle against “the dark world of online harm.”
Vice president of Trust and Safety at ActiveFence, Inbal Goldberger, published an op-ed on the global organization’s website outlining a solution to online abuse.
One solution would enable a combination of A.I. and “subject matter experts” to “detect nuanced, novel online abuses at scale before they reach mainstream platforms.”
Goldberger adds the A.I. approach to content moderation would allow human and A.I. teams to flag and remove items deemed high risk after transmitting millions of sources through training sets.
Eating Bugs
Here is what The World Economic Forum writes on its website:
The world’s population will reach 9.7 billion people by 2050. This means that despite only 4% of arable land on the surface of our planet, an additional 2 billion more humans will have to be fed.
To address this impending crisis, world experts and leaders will meet this autumn at the U.N. Food Summit and then the COP26. Often overlooked in these discussions is the potential role insects can play in helping meet this challenge.
Insects are a credible and efficient alternative protein source requiring fewer resources than conventional breeding. Studies suggest that for the same amount of protein produced, insects, mealworms in particular, require much less land than other sources of animal proteins. A study on crickets suggests they are twice as efficient in converting feed to meat as chicken, at least four times more efficient than pigs and 12 times more efficient than cattle.
Today, 12% of the world’s wild whole-fish catch is used for farmed fish in the form of fishmeal. An alternative to fishmeal can be the products resulting from the processing of insects such as the Tenebrio Molitor. It has been shown that with mealworm, mortality in farmed fish is reduced by 40%.
Insect protein has high-quality properties and can be used as an alternative source of protein throughout the food chain, from feed for aquaculture to ingredients for nutritional supplements for humans and pets. All animal species, regardless of their diet, eat insects in their natural diet.
Destroying farming
As we reported in July, Experts accused The World Economic Forum (WEF) of being behind the global attack on farmers, most notably in Holland and the United States, as the United Nations’ “Agenda 2030” Sustainable Development Goals make headway.
The U.N.’s 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) are sown inside policies that are currently waging war on farmers and food supplies worldwide.
As the Epoch Times noted, the global plan is being helped by Chinese Communist Party (CCP) members within the U.N. system, who also assisted in creating the SDG.
According to experts, the U.N.-backed sustainability policies on agriculture and food production will inevitably lead to global famine, loss of freedom, and economic devastation.
Experts say that millions of people worldwide are facing dangerous food shortages, and it is set to get worse.
https://www.dailyfetched.com/king-charles-and-world-economic-forum-aligns-on-great-reset-agenda/
No comments:
Post a Comment