The Global Elite (WEF)
By
Paul E Vallely, MG US Army (Ret)
February 20, 2024
The global elitists may be the guiltiest of inciting anti-nationalist movements in traditional countries and incentivizing many to turn on their history and country and create puppets that conduct treason against their people. People get paid by people like Bill Gates and George Soros. Many get elected to positions in government and selected as senior officers in the military.
There are many organizations worldwide where business leaders and governments work closely together. But few are said to be as polarizing as the World Economic Forum and its founder, Klaus Schwab.[1]
On the one hand, almost every January, a few thousand leading business executives, politicians, journalists, and others flock to the miniscule alpine village of Davos-Klosters, Switzerland, for WEF’s exclusive invitation-only annual meeting. TV, radio, and print reporters fawn over the so-called good and the great.Â
The likes of Jamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan Chase, and were both there for the event that lasted from Jan. 15-19, 2024, and both were seen on TV. On the surface, things might seem benign. But scratch the surface, and you see something entirely different.
"What is interesting when you look at how the WEF was started," says Alan Mendoza, executive director of the Henry Jackson Society, a policy think tank in London, England. "It wasn’t random."
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In 1971, with the help of the European Commission (EC), a governmental body, Klaus Schwab, then a business professor at the University of Geneva, founded the European Management Forum and invited 450 business executives to a conference in Davos. The idea was to get European leaders to learn about American business.Â
The Politico report cites insiders as saying he’s like a monarch who will stay in the job until death. Similarly, he also employs family members in high-ranking posts within the not-for-profit organization. The report also states that insiders wouldn’t talk on the record as they feared reprisals, such as being banned from WEF events or even being fired just for talking.
According to a Guardian newspaper report last year, other insiders, both current and former employees, anonymously compare Schwab to Russia’s dictator. "Klaus picks his leaders using the same criteria Putin uses to pick deputies for the state duma: loyalty, guile, sex appeal," the paper quotes one of the sources as saying. Another source in the report called Schwab’s top team "nobodies."
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By 1987, it had morphed into the WEF, and seemingly nothing could stop it from then. And that’s where critics say the first problem with WEF arrives.
As the WEF has grown in popularity, they say it looks more and more like an exclusive networking club for the mega-rich and super-powerful. "It is nothing more than an official mechanism by which cronyism can flourish," says Ben Habib, co-deputy leader of British political party Reform UK. "The event legitimizes cronyism."Â
Others who have attended Davos, as the annual event is known, see it as a competitive event where the guests play a game of high-stakes social climbing where the winners get cushy, high-paid jobs at the top of massive multinational corporations.Â
Facebook and Blackrock are examples of former U.K. government ministers taking on senior roles. Nick Clegg, former leader of Britain’s center-left Lib-Dems, is now Meta's global affairs president. Similarly, for a while, George Osbourne, former chancellor of the exchequer (finance chief) for the U.K. government, became a senior adviser to the giant U.S.-based fund management company Black Rock.Â
Habib says it’s no wonder big business and top politicians are deeply in bed with each other. It is viewed by many as a powerful yet unaccountable organization that doesn’t reflect the needs or wants of all of society. Instead, it has an invitation-only policy to the annual event.
A logo of the World Economic Forum at its headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland, Jan. 9, 2024. Lian Yi/Xinhua via Getty Images© Lian Yi/Xinhua via Getty Images
Indeed, WEF has the following statement on its website: "Our activities are shaped by a unique institutional culture founded on the stakeholder theory, which asserts that an organization is accountable to all parts of society."Â
The WEF didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment on the seeming discrepancy between its statement about serving everyone and having an invite-only policy.
"The little guy is not represented anywhere in these major international forums," Mendoza says. The issue with WEF is its vast scale, he says. "If we have problems with [the little guy being silent], it is not a WEF problem; it's a broader capitalism issue."
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Released by the Stand Up America US Foundation
[1] World Economic Forum, Davos, Switzerland, 15-19January 2024/