World Economic Forum megalomaniac Klaus Schwab famously said: “You will own nothing, and you will be happy.” Neil Oliver takes exception to this pronouncement:
From behind one podium after
another, western leaders and their lackeys talk more and more openly about a
liberal world order – even a rules-based liberal world order. The more I hear
and see about a world ordered by self-described liberals and their rules, the
less I like it. I certainly don’t recall ever being invited to vote for it. Two
years ago I gave scant thought to acronyms like WHO, UN, WEF. Now I watch them
with the same attention I give to dogs that look like they might bite.
At some point in the past – and I
missed that point too, whenever it was, I will freely admit – the governing
class decided they were done with serving us and that they own us and rule us
instead. That cancerous thought has metastasized in recent years, so that it’s
not just governments and their bureaucrats and preferred scientists who presume
to lord it over us, to tell us what to do, what to think.
That same deranged thought is there
throughout the greediest capitalist corporations now as well. The technocrats
took free speech by the throat long ago, so as to preserve and push their own
self-described progressive ideologies. Now that same superiority complex is
everywhere else as well.
. . .
I have never in my life before
listened to government policy – and to the policies of governments all around
the world – and felt endangered. But I do now. If you feel that too – a deep
physiological response to the last two years, and a growing sense of something
malevolent – then you are not alone. Sometimes it feels like society itself has
been poisoned – and that all that society is being offered is yet more
poisonous nonsense.
We should notice that it is from
among us, the ordinary people, that the farmers and the truckers come – so that
it is we who really have the power that matters in the end.
In Sri Lanka, they’re quite a bit
further down the line than us – although hardly out of sight. Thousands of
people, driven beyond endurance by economic collapse and the worst food and
fuel shortages in living memory, found they had nothing left to lose. I read
this morning about protestors there storming and occupying their president’s
official residence in the city of Colombo.
Desperate people and desperate measures.
It’s interesting to note that, contrary to what Klaus Schwab and his World
Economic Forum might think … it turns out that when some people find they
actually do own nothing anymore – they’re really not very happy at all.
Read the full transcript or watch/listen to the video here. Also posted at America First Report here.
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