RTM | June 20, 2024
The World Economic Forum’s (WEF) Klaus Schwab unveiled a disturbing message to the organization’s “young global leaders,” leaked footage shows.
Schwab told the group during a private session back in 2022 at the WEF Young Global Leader conference that their brains “will be replicated with AI,” sparking concern on social media.
“You have the chance to look forward to a career of 50 years, in my opinion. Maybe more,” Schwab said during the start of the video shared by Wide Awake Media.
He then went on to suggest life-extension technologies that might include “injections.”
“And your brain will be replicated through artificial intelligence and algorithms…so we don’t know, but at least 50 years.”
The purpose of these technologies, as explained by Schwab himself, would be to extend a person’s career long after their physical bodies have given up.
The two-years-old clip sparked the resurface of others shocking instances where Schwab, who was never elected to his position, lays out a dystopian vision for the future.
Earlier this year Schwab announced himself to be the earth’s “trustee of the future.”
backlash after it discussed the impact of coffee production on climate change during its annual meeting in Davos, Switzerland.
“Basically, the coffee that we all drink emits between 15 and 20 tonnes of CO2 per tonne of coffee. So we should all know that this is — every time we drink coffee, we are basically putting CO2 into the atmosphere,” Swiss banker Hubert Keller said.
“Most of the coffee plantation — most of the coffee’s produced through monoculture, and monoculture is also affected by climate change. The quality of these nature assets is deteriorating quite rapidly.”
Keller also highlighted the economic aspects of the coffee industry and the plight of coffee growers by arguing, “There is an opportunity to reorganize the coffee industry.”
Tim Hinchliffe ripped the rant on X at the time, dubbing it an attack on coffee farmers.
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“They’re going after coffee farmers. When he says production is ‘fragmented,’ he’s saying it has yet to be captured by corporations & centralized,” he wrote.
“He’s putting a guilt-trip on coffee drinkers for supporting poor coffee farmers because they don’t know any better in their ‘monoculture’ endeavors.”
“It’s all a power grab to seize land and the means of production to carbon tax you and I [sic] to oblivion,” Hinchliffe continued.
Concerns sparked again in January when WEF leaders were asked how they would prepare for Trump’s possible re-election.
Germany’s Federal Minister of Finance Christian Lindner responded to one question, stating, “Doing our homework is the best preparation for a possible second term of Donald Trump, and this includes our capabilities to defend ourselves.”
European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde answered, “I think the best defense, if that’s the way you want to look at it, is attack. And to attack properly.”