Klaus Schwab Loves Fact-Checkers, Hates the Great Reset ‘Conspiracy Theory’

There follows a guest post by Eugyppius, the always entertaining writer, about an interview in a Swiss newspaper with SPECTRE WEF chief Klaus Schwab. You can find Eugyppius’s Substack newsletter here and subscribe to it here.

So, on the eve of the annual WEF meeting in Davos, the Neue Zürcher Zeitung published a quietly hilarious interview with Klaus Schwab. In it, the world’s most banal and uninspired supervillain talks about how the pandemic has made him more active online, how he likes writing stupid books because they help him organise his thoughts, why he disinvited all Russians from this year’s meeting, why he’s not worried about declining WEF memberships and dues, and how his hatred of armed conflicts began when somebody hit him on the head with a rock as a boy.

Here and there you get brief glances into the cavernous, hollow emptiness that is this man’s mind, as when he tries to dispense the far-sighted wisdom of an éminence grise and ends up babbling about idiot stakeholder-capitalist newspeak jargon like ‘trustshoring’:

The world will be more fragmented, probably more fragile. The world will be more in flux. It may become a bipolar, perhaps a multipolar world. Above all, we’ll be concerned with the question: Who can still be trusted? We’ll no longer be able to rely on everyone adhering to the same framework of values that we’ve set for ourselves. Instead of ‘reshoring’ or ‘homeshoring’, we should increasingly talk about ‘trustshoring’. This means that when a company designs its supply chains, it not only wants to be more resilient, but it has to ask itself who it can trust. Not only in relation to its suppliers, but also in relation to the states behind them.

Or when he talks about the people who have most influenced him and mentions… Nelson Mandela:

I’ve been especially influenced by two people with whom I’ve had long-standing connections. One was Nelson Mandela. The other was Lee Kuan Yew, the first head of government of Singapore. He once explained to me his view of the difference between the West and the East: The West is characterised by the protection of the individual from encroachment by the collective. … In Asia… it is the other way round: There, politics is about protecting the collective from the individual. We can’t say that one is right and the other is wrong. Covid has also brought this conflict to light. To what extent do we succeed in reconciling… the right of the individual with the interests of the collective? This will continue to occupy us.

You get this from reading The Great Reset, too: Schwab has a clear interest in authoritarian Chinese approaches to government, but his expression is always scattered and unsystematic. He never integrates his sporadic Sinophilia into any broader theories or ideas about government and institutional authority. It’s very similar to Gates, who loves isolated technological solutions to health problems, but has no broader conception of the purpose of medicine, what it means to be healthy, or even what third-world charitable interventions can achieve.

Q: The WEF has always been a target of critics of globalisation. In social media, this has now assumed a new dimension, one directed against you personally. You’re being branded as part of a world conspiracy, the WEF as lacky of an elite that aims to oppress people with a ‘great reset’ and deprive them of their freedoms.

A: I am shocked. I’ve tried to talk to such people. But unfortunately this has turned out to be almost absolutely pointless. When someone has fallen victim to a conspiracy theory, they no longer listen to rational arguments. In my book The Great Reset, I described the possibilities of new technologies and later referred to possible downsides of things like the surveillance state. I want to prevent abuse. But the conspiracy theorists claim that if Klaus Schwab says something is possible, he’s advocating it.

Q: How do you deal with that?

A: A media entrepreneur… once gave me some good advice, which I still take to heart today: He said the most I could achieve was that 30% of everyone think what I’m doing is great and another 30% are basically fine with it. Then 30% are rather sceptical, and 10% virulently against it. He advised me not to focus on these 10%, but to deal with the 60% in the middle. That is, the more positive and the more sceptical.

Amusingly, neither Schwab nor his interviewer appear to know that he’s just mangling the banal folk wisdom that a third of everyone will like, hate or be indifferent to what you do – with proportions substantially more favourable to him, of course.

Q: Has Corona added to the vehemence of the accusations?

A: I received threatening letters, our house was photographed and the picture put on the internet. They said absurd things, like that I support the famous maxim “You will own nothing and be happy”, which I never said or wrote. This is at another level. Many are seeking simple explanations for complicated questions.

Q: Do you draw conclusions from these hostilities?

A: I only give a few interviews now and tend to keep a low profile in the media. Fortunately, we have more and more of these so-called fact-checkers, who can show that the spiteful insinuations against me are just false.

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Lilacblue
Lilacblue
3 years ago

Bravo to anyone choosing to read more. More than I can take before gin o’clock.

John Dee
3 years ago
Reply to  Lilacblue

It’s always interesting to learn how people regard themselves (or purport to). Schwab must have some duff image advisers if he really wants to be everyone’s cuddly uncle.
As for Gates, he should be working on a ‘vaccine’ that would shrink his moobs (at the same time as being safe and effective, of course).

iane
iane
3 years ago
Reply to  John Dee

Excellent idea; he could then offer it to Fatboy in No 10.

Vaxtastic
3 years ago
Reply to  iane

😉

boristhepigman-1649436624.3734.jpg
David Beaton
David Beaton
3 years ago
Reply to  Vaxtastic

When are the posters going up around the county?

Alter Ego
Alter Ego
3 years ago
Reply to  Lilacblue

Well said. I might have read more, but my football team lost – so I’m not in the mood. There are only so many things a human being can take.

Milo
Milo
3 years ago
Reply to  Alter Ego

Touche AE. My team also lost tonight – but I doubt they are the same one. But I know how you feel!!

Jabby Mcstiff
Jabby Mcstiff
3 years ago

You have before an example of a Versailles-like reality where a clique becomes more and more removed from reality and it seems like they are inviting beheading when they are just being themselves. If you listen to the philosophy of the WEF it is infantile. Not just them though. These days it is difficult to find any adults in the room regardless of work environment. Babytalk gets the most points.

crevice
crevice
3 years ago

He denies supporting the maxim “You will own nothing and be happy”… But WEF did tweet this, post it on Facebook, have it on their website. (Essay and tweet now removed.. Not sure about Facebook.) So he’s not really being transparent about that.

Ron Smith
Ron Smith
3 years ago
Reply to  crevice

More and more people noticing and talking about that got them rumbled.

Vaxtastic
3 years ago
Reply to  Ron Smith

They got themselves rumbled. They don’t exactly hide.

What motivates Schwab and Gates is the fear of becoming irrelevant, of not mattering. That’s why they obsess over fact checking. If they were confident they wouldn’t care.

John Dee
3 years ago
Reply to  Vaxtastic

What motivates Schwab and Gates is the fear of becoming irrelevant…

You mean no-one’s told them?

Vaxtastic
3 years ago
Reply to  John Dee

Money buys a lot of favours.

ImpObs
3 years ago
Reply to  Vaxtastic

I posted BTL the other day citing Marshall Mcluhan’s famous essay: ‘The Medium is the message’

Mcluhan mite say that all of the corrective measures (really content
regulation) I mentioned, is an effort to put the internet genie back in
the bottle. While that may work for a while, he would posit that
ultimately the medium will prevail. Ultimately, all of the content
regulation is a tacit admission of the content’s veracity.

This will be the problem for the “fact checkers” and totalitarian wielders of the online hate bill (unjustly), anyone with any sense recognises the tacit admission the censored content has veracity, and that will be their downfall, eventually.

post with links to the essay is here:
https://staging.dailysceptic.org/2022/05/26/anatomy-of-a-scientific-witch-burning/#comment-810590

John Dee
3 years ago
Reply to  crevice

It’s not easy being transparent when you’re an evil genius.

RedhotScot
3 years ago
Reply to  John Dee

evil genius

LOL. I don’t think Blofeld wrote a book about his evil plans for the world. On the other hand, Hitler did.

But I don’t believe for a moment Klaus approaches the abilities of Hollywood scriptwriters or real life maniacal despots.

mariawarmth
3 years ago
Reply to  crevice

Yes. And there ‘main’ expensively made, organisations showcase, film they made says maxim as their pushed mantra. Did he know, crazy.
If he hasn’t even watched it ? that sort of detached attitude, makes him even more dangerous. By Setting up an organisation that irresponsibly takes away democratic accountability in nations and moves an unaccountable power to a global organisation should have his eye on this catastrophic idea, and close it down immediately.
All HIS young leaders are making a gigantic mess of the world, so big that OUR future generations to come will suffer as a consequence.
Daily Sceptic ATL seem to be unwittingly but not as an accomplice! endorsing this naive idea that he is some comic movie baddie, when in reality he has set in motion a negative ripple effect throughout the whole world that is evidentially catastrophic.
We can discuss whether he had done this on purpose or not but the main issue is that calamity KS and his gangsters are responsible!! We need more clued up journalists to report them to civilisation.
They are now spouting their innocence but sadly they are not.

Jabby Mcstiff
Jabby Mcstiff
3 years ago

A fundamental weakness of corporatism is averagism and the tyranny of numbers. Some smiling Brxailian guy in a grey hoodie just doesn’t cut it. anymore And nothing else will for them either because of the limitations of their system. The issue is the amount of damage they do before they are spotted.

Mr10Percent
3 years ago

Make no mistake about it, being a WEF Young Leader today (or even not so young) is akin to those post-graduates who sought and gained MBA’s in the 80’s and 90’s and the fast-track lifestyle selling your soul to the devil entails (and the same disastrous consequences to you and I for poor 1-dimensional cookie-cutter management style).

That is why so many of them are now in power or working behind the scenes of those in power currently. Secret special handshake ‘n all.

paul smith
3 years ago
Reply to  Mr10Percent

Probably still all lug around foot-long, eight-pound “mobile” phones, too, and think they’re Patrick Bateman.

Ron Smith
Ron Smith
3 years ago
Reply to  Mr10Percent

Have you seen that photo of World leaders including Macron making a pyramid shape with their hands. Think it was a G7 meeting.

eastender53
3 years ago
Reply to  Mr10Percent

Having both an 80’s MBA and a ‘special handshake’ I’d like to say please don’t generalise. Now of course if I was a Guardian reader you’d have every right!

RedhotScot
3 years ago
Reply to  eastender53

My old man was a Mason although he ‘quit’ (apparently you can’t) but I never knew until I found a very old apron, probably handed down to him over generations. I worked with lots of Mason’s in the police. They were the guys who didn’t abuse the public. Again, it wasn’t until I was in the job for several years before I figured out who was what. I was never invited to join, nor did I inquire, other than asking one of my colleagues what it was all about. He told me everything I could ever want to know about masons is in the library. I suspect I wasn’t invited because my Dad was had quit the organisation so was considered a black sheep. The reality is, he was never a ‘club’ type of bloke, nor am I. I was invited to join once by my brother in law, a senior Royal Navy Officer, who would happily have laid his life down for his country. His area of expertise was undersea bomb disposal so he flirted with doing so every time he was called to do his job. I honestly don’t understand the hostility directed at an organisation anyone is… Read more »

Vaxtastic
3 years ago
Reply to  RedhotScot

All common purpose and globalism these days. Foreign ideas rather than the homegrown ones you outline. Never a great idea, but endlessly fascinating to those who fancy themselves as our rulers.

We live in an era where the traditions that have emerged naturally from our shared experience on this island are viewed with contempt.

TSull
TSull
3 years ago

Somebody threw a rock and hit him on the head when he was a boy? That explains a lot.

By the way, the Great Reset could not possibly be a conspiracy theory when this megalomaniac and his operatives publish their plans for all to see.

MrTea
MrTea
3 years ago

If peopl like Klaus, Bill and their globalist chums all vanished never to be seen again this world would be a far better place.

Jabby Mcstiff
Jabby Mcstiff
3 years ago

When was the last time you heard reference to poetry from a potentate. Like JFK said, power corrupts, poetry cleanses. These guys don’t want a bath – it would reveal that there is nothing to them but filth.

Hopeless - "TN,BN"
3 years ago

He may be absolutely ridiculous, and come across as a pantomime villain. However, I don’t trust what he’s up to, as the proprietor of a nest of serpents. His hatchling vipers like Trudeau, Ardern, that silly Indian/American/quasi Scots woman, and the rest of the motley crew of “Young Leaders” are where the poisons and malevolence lie.

Can’t do better than quote Matthew 7.20:-
Even so every good tree bringeth forth good fruit; but a corrupt tree bringeth forth evil fruit. A good tree cannot bring forth evil fruit, neither can a corrupt tree bring forth good fruit. Every tree that bringeth not forth good fruit is hewn down, and cast into the fire. Wherefore by their fruits ye shall know them.

Mr10Percent
3 years ago

Addendum to my earlier post…….

Now that Russia (officially), China, India, Brazil (unofficially), possibly Turkey soon, are not for globalisation, the Great Reset cannot happen or happen as easily as these dangerous clowns wanted. Maybe the great reset refers to tyranny by NATO on its own people?

So the question is, with the loss of original scope of a wet-tyrannical-dream of taking over the world from their secret den in Davos, how do we get rid of the implanted parasites who work for the Special Executive for Counter-intelligence, Terrorism, Revenge and Extortion in a town-hall near you?

Vaxtastic
3 years ago
Reply to  Mr10Percent

People need to get angry first. We seem averse to that these days. We just watched tens of millions line up for an experimental biological agent still in trials.

John Dee
3 years ago
Reply to  Vaxtastic

I spoke to some, even as we watched. They wanted the BS to be true, so, to them, it was.

Vaxtastic
3 years ago
Reply to  John Dee

Yes, I agree.

Spirit of the wind
3 years ago
Reply to  John Dee

Many are reluctant to admit they made a big mistake.
The queues for boosters dropped off rapidly, that said everything.

PartyTime
3 years ago
Reply to  Mr10Percent

Now that Russia (officially), China, India, Brazil (unofficially), possibly Turkey soon, are not for globalisation

The Russian push for tyranny is if anything even stronger than in other countries. They’ve mass-vaxxed their population without any official pharmacovigilance system, WEF graduate Putin has personally promoted their vax, they love QR codes and vax passes, they are very keen to introduce central bank digital currency and they continue to support the WHO with enthusiasm despite rumours to the contrary. The WEF has dropped Russia for now but that is likely just theatre, the war is a wonderful opportunity for the WEF’s beloved digital ID, as we are seeing with Iran’s digital ration cards.

Mark
3 years ago

Rand Paul: This is the danger of a one-world government

Rand Paul on the right side of this.

Look how bad your government is in a country where you get to vote for these people. This would be a government – a world government, where you don’t get to vote on anybody. This is everybody’s worst nightmare. The bureaucracy that we have trouble with in our United States because we don’t get to vote on them, we vote indirectly – can you imagine the one world bureaucracy of all these elitists in their private jets that would rule our country?

Easy to laugh at the comedy evil genius act put on by the likes of Schwab, but this imo is the biggest issue: a near-global elite zealously imposing their fanatical collective delusions – covid, climate alarmism, normalisation of sexual deviance, BLM, Ukraine, and their obsessive need for control and for suppression of the slightest dissent, in a world in which there is no national sovereignty to protect different ideas and opinions, no outside to escape to, no alternative examples of how life could be lived better.

RedhotScot
3 years ago
Reply to  Mark

Schwab is a political lightweight, a fantasist and a con man. Simple as that.

As is pointed out, his membership is falling.

This is distraction tactics.

Mark
3 years ago
Reply to  RedhotScot

Schwab isn’t the issue, certainly. It’s the collective power getting together that’s the problem.

As Adam Smith put it in relation to tradesmen:

People of the same trade seldom meet together, even for merriment and diversion, but the conversation ends in a conspiracy against the publick, or in some contrivance to raise prices

Same applies to those whose trade is government, imo.

RedhotScot
3 years ago
Reply to  Mark

Schwab has assembled the biggest bunch of over ambitious, narcissistic, backstabbing salesmen known to man. I suspect even Boris could run intellectual rings around them. None of them have ever grown a grassroots social or political movement in their life because they are completely out their depth socially, politically and morally. All they have ever done is sold people what they think they want. Too bad when they try to sell the public something they don’t think they want. That’s the job of a politician. Which one of them will the others elect as leader? As they clearly reject democracy, that’s going to be a really tough call. Who will lead The Great Reset? It won’t be Schwab, that’s a racing certainty, he’s a pauper compared to the great and the good 1% of the wealthiest 1%. Bill Gates is far too dumb, Jeff Bezos is a retail wizard, but neither appear leaders of men. Nor do the rest of these fascist clowns, which is the common attraction. They all think they are smarter than the next guy, but the smart guys are the ones who mobilise guys smarter than them. The smartest man in the room appears to be… Read more »

Alter Ego
Alter Ego
3 years ago
Reply to  Mark

One of my favourite Smith quotes; along with (in our current situation): “Mercy to the guilty is cruelty to the innocent.”

Rowan
Rowan
3 years ago
Reply to  RedhotScot

Schwab is a Gates man through and through and he has his acolytes planted in governments as well as bureaucracies the world over. He is a conman, but dangerous and is certainly no political lightweight.

loopDloop
loopDloop
3 years ago
Reply to  Mark

Mark, please read the comments BTL the article on Vaccine safety posted today.

civilliberties
3 years ago
Reply to  Mark

I don’t think it will be a one world government but I do think it will be as it is now, potential laws are discussed with the frontmen politicians who go back and sell and then implement those laws. Look at the online harms bill, not just a UK idea but countries including France, canada, US, Australia etc etc are all discussing the same thing. It cannot be a coincidence. You dont need a visible one world government for many countries to march in the same direction as we have seen with the same response to the so called virus as well as the CDBC being talked about in many countries.

Mark
3 years ago
Reply to  civilliberties

Yes, that’s what the US sphere elites are, or aspire to being: a de facto world government, before any de jure one can be set up.

Milo
Milo
3 years ago
Reply to  civilliberties

Indeed – OWG in all but name with managers installed in each country – amounts to same thing in the end whatever you choose to call it.

Alter Ego
Alter Ego
3 years ago
Reply to  Mark

Very glad to see you back, Mark – we’ve been worried about you!

Alter Ego
Alter Ego
3 years ago
Reply to  Alter Ego

a near-global elite zealously imposing their fanatical collective delusions

Alter Ego
Alter Ego
3 years ago
Reply to  Alter Ego

Sorry, I accidentally posted the above! Meant to say re your excellent line (a near-global elite zealously imposing their fanatical collective delusions):

And all the more likely to have fanatical collective delusions, because they are so far removed from those who suffer the consequences of their impositions.

I have come to believe that a vital component of power is the capacity to remove oneself, as much as possible, from the disaffection and dislike of those over whom one rules.

I think of all those hapless employees who cop the irritation that should rightly go to their bosses, who have insulated themselves so that they never have to listen to it.

In the world these people envisage, national governments will be reduced to local complaints departments issuing meaningless assurances that our concerns will be passed on.

Mark
3 years ago
Reply to  Alter Ego

Cheers AE. Nice to be missed, even if I didn’t think I was away for long. 🙂

Jabby Mcstiff
Jabby Mcstiff
3 years ago

We won’t have to get rid of them. The reality that is coming will mean that many of them will kill themselves and others will go isane. Just look at it month by month, in terms of what is being revealed. The revelation isn’t just about power relations. Look at the aknowledgement of the rejection of Wokeness, even by Black Rock. The time that we are movng into will see a complete rejection of all of these forces.

paul smith
3 years ago

Trustwhoring

There – fixed it for ya, Klaus.

Jabby Mcstiff
Jabby Mcstiff
3 years ago

They have been on shaky ground since they were twelve years old and we haven’t. This will count for a lot. We never sold out birthright for a mess of pottage. We understood that the whole is greater than the sum of the parts. They can’t win.

Jabby Mcstiff
Jabby Mcstiff
3 years ago

How can you adpot a conspiratorial world view when they not only confess to their plan but write their whole ideology into our education system. Conspiracy suggests secrecy but the sad reality is that secrecy isn’t neccesary because most people can’t even be arsed to check the official record. It is all there and glaringly so. If you’re a cleverdick and you went along with it for a while then you should ask yourself why you did.

Ron Smith
Ron Smith
3 years ago
Reply to  Jabby Mcstiff

Yup it is no conspiracy, just fact. The only thing to discuss further is how strong is their influence.

Jabby Mcstiff
Jabby Mcstiff
3 years ago
Reply to  Ron Smith

It is like a tide that we all are part of. It is a malaise of mind. Can we offer an antidote, that is the question

Hopeless - "TN,BN"
3 years ago
Reply to  Jabby Mcstiff

As long as the antidote doesn’t come out of a syringe labelled “Pfizer” (other poisons are available).

Jabby Mcstiff
Jabby Mcstiff
3 years ago

We have no antidote. We look at the maliaise and dismiss is as something beyond our ken.

Vaxtastic
3 years ago
Reply to  Ron Smith

It is worth remembering they may groom their WEF leader types, but we vote them in.

Trudeau recently in Canada, and Macron in France. You could argue the same for Sturgeon in Scotland and of course Boris.

We do have a democracy, however damaged. These people aren’t storming parliament to gain power.

I would argue focusing on the WEF is useful because it lets us off the hook. We are voting in parties who consistently break their manifesto promises on matters that actually resonate with people, like cutting mass immigration, clamping down on woke and protecting our heritage.

We need to look closer to home to solve these problems. The Schwabs are a distraction. We British need to toughen up and vote for parties who at least promise to tackle these issues.

Jabby Mcstiff
Jabby Mcstiff
3 years ago
Reply to  Vaxtastic

If you look at them all they are all intellectual lightweisghts and they tend to be without children. All of this suggests not a presence but a coldness and vacuity. Maybe the job of the truly switched on is to point people in the direction of the fire, the spirit.

Vaxtastic
3 years ago
Reply to  Jabby Mcstiff

Trudeau, Macron and Sturgeon are homosexuals. Johnson is having enough kids to cover them all it would seem.

We forget only twenty years ago homosexuality was considered concerning precisely because it led to hedonism and it’s associated problems, vacuity being among them.

Not having a go at the gays but the historical view was to accept it happened and perhaps cut them some slack, but to recognize they were unsuited to positions of authority given their mental state.

Food for thought. But do it quick before the online harms bill has such wrongthink erased.

Jabby Mcstiff
Jabby Mcstiff
3 years ago
Reply to  Vaxtastic

They have a revulsion about the life process. Try to think yourself into that frame of mind. It is easy for me I did science A Levels and it was construed at every juncuture. That’s why I moved elsewhere. We have in our islands a hige group to draw on should we need to,

mariawarmth
3 years ago
Reply to  Jabby Mcstiff

We have pride month at school to look forward to !! I am not. On Friday in educational subjects other than RSE, highschool age students were asked to ‘design’ posters for Pride month and how it was important because this year was anniversary of Stonewall .

Mark
3 years ago
Reply to  Vaxtastic

“Not having a go at the gays but the historical view was to accept it happened and perhaps cut them some slack, but to recognize they were unsuited to positions of authority given their mental state.” That was when tolerance meant tolerance, rather than coerced approval, as it does now, in practice. Here was what the Earl of Arran famously said after the decriminalisation of homosexual activity in 1967: “I ask one thing and I ask it earnestly. I ask those who have, as it were, been in bondage and for whom the prison doors are now open to show their thanks by comporting themselves quietly and with dignity. This is no occasion for jubilation; certainly not for celebration. Any form of ostentatious behaviour; now or in the future, any form of public flaunting, would be utterly distasteful and would, I believe, make the sponsors of the Bill regret that they have done what they have done. Homosexuals must continue to remember that while there may be nothing bad in being a homosexual, there is certainly nothing good. Lest the opponents of the Bill think that a new freedom, a new privileged class, has been created, let me remind them… Read more »

RedhotScot
3 years ago
Reply to  Mark

When does homosexuality begin?

Mark
3 years ago
Reply to  RedhotScot

Why do you ask?

RedhotScot
3 years ago
Reply to  Mark

Just wondering.

Is it a peck on the cheek between mates? A kiss on the lips perhaps. Or is it just two guys sleeping side by side?

If buggery is the defining feature, then what about oral sex, is that OK?

How about holding hands in public, or owning a house and sharing a life together?

In other words, what is the defining characteristic of a gay man/woman?

Mark
3 years ago
Reply to  RedhotScot

In other words, what is the defining characteristic of a gay man/woman?”

I don’t see it that way.

Just as a murderer is someone who engages in the act of murder, so a homosexual is someone who engages in homosexual activity (I don’t seek to imply that those are morally equivalent, just trying to explain the terminology).

Some people are not at all tempted to commit murder, others are to a greater or lesser degree, but we don’t call people murderers merely because they have a violent disposition.

I see the creation of a separate identity category, prior to any act, as “homosexual” or “gay” as being a large part of the problem we now face.

That is how the issue fell into the clutches of the identity lobbyists who have done so much harm to our culture and our society, whether race or sex based.

RedhotScot
3 years ago
Reply to  Mark

I guess what you’re saying is that buggery is the definition of homosexuality, as murder is the definition of a murderer.

Which I get, and that’s fair enough. I have no issue with that definition.

But if two blokes sleep together, or engage in oral sex together, that then isn’t homosexuality?

And if buggery is the only definition, what do we call men who are attracted to buggering women?

Mark
3 years ago
Reply to  RedhotScot

“I guess what you’re saying is that buggery is the definition of homosexuality, as murder is the definition of a murderer.”

A sexual act, in general.

Granted you can always find borderline cases for any such terms, but in the vast majority of cases we pretty much have no problem recognising it when we encounter it.

Vaxtastic
3 years ago
Reply to  Mark

Great sources. Thanks for posting.

Like most people nowadays I’m relaxed about gays. But you are correct, traditional values often emerge for a reason and we ignore them at our peril.

RedhotScot
3 years ago
Reply to  Vaxtastic

I think the entire country was entirely relaxed about gays, until organisations like Stonewall pitched up and tried to ram the damn subject down everyone’s throat.

I don’t tell homosexuals how to live or who to accept, so why are a select minority group of gays, amongst gays, so influential in public life?

sophie123
3 years ago
Reply to  Vaxtastic

Trudeau is a homosexual? I thought he was being blackmailed for molesting a 14 year old female. Even less suited to a position of authority, given the control potential that crime might lead to.

Jabby Mcstiff
Jabby Mcstiff
3 years ago
Reply to  Vaxtastic

The biggest obstacles are those exposed in the mirror. When exactly did we pull out of this scam? Was is okay thirty years ago when mining companies were raping Africa? The very underpinnings of our civilisation are very frought. What common ground do we have to stand on?

RedhotScot
3 years ago
Reply to  Jabby Mcstiff

……

RedhotScot
3 years ago
Reply to  RedhotScot

How can mining companies ‘rape’ Africa?

a20044f1cd8da04aa19cde5e252b1951.png
John Dee
3 years ago
Reply to  Jabby Mcstiff

They’d like to do secrecy, but then they wouldn’t be able to jet all over the place and be photographed as VIPs.
It’s a quandary.

Vaxtastic
3 years ago
Reply to  John Dee

I think the serious money does secrecy very well. The nouveau riche rather less so.

RedhotScot
3 years ago
Reply to  Vaxtastic

Ah!

We are of like mind. WEF is a bunch of intellectual and political lightweights being allowed to indulge their fantasy.

They are, in other words, a distraction.

Vaxtastic
3 years ago
Reply to  RedhotScot

I believe so. They are dangerous in that they have enough clout to elevate nonentities like the New Zealand woman and Trudeau. I strongly suspect there are less well known people they’ve placed too.

But will it amount to anything? I suspect not. The adverts they posted about us owning nothing and you’ll like it etc. met with immediate ridicule. Instant memefest.

Schwab literally looks like a science fiction B movie madman. He even has a costume, lol.

What they do well is a yearly conference with fancy videos and websites. They tend to invite people flattered by that kind of thing. But it is all at the Nicola Sturgeon level of sophistication. I suspect the real money doesn’t go within a hundred miles of Davos.

Ron Smith
Ron Smith
3 years ago

Fortunately, we have more and more of these so-called fact-checkers, who can show that the spiteful insinuations against me are just false”

You mean the fact checkers that you fund & funded by BMGF.

Jabby Mcstiff
Jabby Mcstiff
3 years ago

On a serious note, in our times of electronic hallucio Believeations and flashes on phones. It is important that you put one or two hours a day aside just to read. The literacy will carry us forward believe me we will be under attack and we need to keep our culture alive. For me this is the most important thing possible. That we maintain a positive literate culture in Europe.We all need to become more humble and just be quiet.

Jabby Mcstiff
Jabby Mcstiff
3 years ago

It won’t be like his vision at all. Because the real longing is for the language of the spirit. That young men thousands of miles apart express the same yearning for freedom. And freedom is like walking into an independently owned corner shop and you speak with the cashier for hours.

Jabby Mcstiff
Jabby Mcstiff
3 years ago

Like MIlan Kundera said, the power of man over tyranny is the power of memory over forgetting.

BillRiceJr
BillRiceJr
3 years ago

I couldn’t take it. I had to stop reading. But, yes, this is one of the most powerful men on the planet. They ALL think this way. We’re sunk unless we expose ALL of these people.

Vaxtastic
3 years ago
Reply to  BillRiceJr

I disagree. He is one of the men the media dote on. Which is not the same thing. The media treat Apple the same way. The media loves itself and endorses anyone who espouses the views they hold dear. All the pro gay rainbow unicorn climategeddon wokery.

Ordinary people pay no heed.

eastender53
3 years ago
Reply to  Vaxtastic

All it takes for evil to succeed is for Good Men to do nothing.

Vaxtastic
3 years ago
Reply to  eastender53

Oh I don’t know. All this propaganda is resource intensive. It ain’t cheap. Going against nature never is. They are swimming against strong currents. Multiculturalism, brainwashing people’s kids and mass injections of experimental biological agents all have consequences. The backlash will be entertaining.

Jabby Mcstiff
Jabby Mcstiff
3 years ago

Doesn’t matter we are moving into very different times. Where a man’s currency will be his word. It might seem a long way away but it isn’t at all.

Vaxtastic
3 years ago
Reply to  Jabby Mcstiff

I suspect a man’s currency will be programmable central bank digital currencies if we are not more careful.

Jabby Mcstiff
Jabby Mcstiff
3 years ago
Reply to  Vaxtastic

That will be one option. But we will have another option – highwaymen who would never submit to that. If human freedom were to be reduced this way then life wouldn’t be living at all. I have faith in the human spirit,

RedhotScot
3 years ago
Reply to  Jabby Mcstiff

A man after my own heart.

Mandela was a terrorist yet promoted a culture of social change.

A highwayman represents the freedom to steal from fools.

Whatever happens, there will be courageous people who will risk death for freedom.

These people exist even in deepest China and N. Korea.

PhantomOfLiberty
PhantomOfLiberty
3 years ago
Vaxtastic
3 years ago

National governments are incompetent. Can we even imagine the next-level incompetence a one world government would display?

PhantomOfLiberty
PhantomOfLiberty
3 years ago
Reply to  Vaxtastic

For such an entity competence does not come into it. Look at their appointments: Johnson, Macron, Trudeau, Ardern etc. It’s about the survival of a tiny class.

Vaxtastic
3 years ago

How will they survive though? They ultimately rely on us.

Jabby Mcstiff
Jabby Mcstiff
3 years ago

We do need to assert some sort of reality because everyone else is out of control. Just saying.

Dylan2021
3 years ago

“A media entrepreneur… once gave me some good advice, which I still take to heart today: He said the most I could achieve was that 30% of everyone think what I’m doing is great and another 30% are basically fine with it. Then 30% are rather sceptical, and 10% virulently against it. He advised me not to focus on these 10%, but to deal with the 60% in the middle. That is, the more positive and the more sceptical.” This is not mangling “banal folk wisdom”, it’s a Machiavellian sociopath’s inversion of Professor Mattias Desmet’s elucidation of Mass formation psychosis, based on the works of Gustave Le Bon and others. This has obtained a wide audience since last year. When a process of mass formation psychosis emerges in a society, 30% of the population is hypnotized. (Machiavellian sociopath inversion – “30% of everyone think what I’m doing is great.”) 40% of the population who go along with this first group are simply going along with the current, not because they wish to but because they feel that it is too difficult and too dangerous to go against it. (Machiavellian sociopath inversion – “another 30% are basically fine with it”) The… Read more »

ImpObs
3 years ago
Reply to  Dylan2021

Excellent observation.

RedhotScot
3 years ago
Reply to  Dylan2021

Schwab himself is one of those 10,000 high-functioning and obscenely rich sociopaths

Schwab is a Walter Mitty con man. He’s no more “high-functioning” than some of the more intelligent street criminals I have dealt with in my life.

In terms of genuine wealth I would bet he’s a pauper compared to his uber wealthy overlords.

Please let’s not apportion anything other than narcissism to this self aggrandising, pompous arsehole.

Dylan2021
3 years ago
Reply to  RedhotScot

Well his cons seem to be working on a sizeable portion of the world population, including those in key positions of power.

Intelligent street criminals are by definition, high-functioning sociopaths. He was just one born into a position of wealth and influence.

I’m sure there are more powerful sociopaths in the shadows behind him but he is still one of them.

They are all narcissistic, self-aggrandizing, pompous arseholes. So what? How does that make any of what I have said incorrect?

I don’t like him either but I will apportion whatever I see fit to anyone.

Dylan2021
3 years ago
Reply to  Dylan2021

Please allow me to introduce myself
I’m a man of wealth and taste
I’ve been around for a long, long year
Stole many a man’s soul and faith

Sympathy For The Devil
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GgnClrx8N2k&list=RD9_QGfzeiNb0&index=7

Think Harder
Think Harder
3 years ago

Narcissist; he’ll never see nor understand opposing views. He probably doesn’t even understand his own motivations and if people are killed through his and his friends actions he will probably, truly believe it was their own fault or necessary “for the greater good” and they are blameless.

MikeHaseler
3 years ago

Ming the Moron

Quartzite shift
Quartzite shift
3 years ago

Klaus is deranged, these ramblings prove it beyond doubt and megalomania does that to a chap. Our problem, is that some very low people and in some very high places, rich beyond even the dreams of Croesus play the wef game and their sole ambition to destroy the west. Deconstruction and the wef wrecking ball are succeeding, brick by brick the west is falling, the crusher comes next.

RedhotScot
3 years ago

and their sole ambition to destroy the west.

How would Bill gates make money if he destroyed the west?

The WEF’s grandiose idea is not to destroy the west, it’s to rule the west, like every child has once imagined being, King of the world.

But lock a bunch of the uber wealthy WEF supporters in a room together, tell them to pick a leader, and when you opened the door again they would all have stabbed each other to death, in the back.

These people are successful salesmen. They have never organised a grass roots social or political movement in their life. They have sold people what they think they want. They have never sold a person what they don’t want.

That’s the job of a politician.

Think Harder
Think Harder
3 years ago
Reply to  RedhotScot

Very true characterisation.
Unfortunately, they are capable of killing billions of us in their power struggle to be King of World. While they’re fighting Emperor Xi will take over. The idiots will be shocked thinking they controlled him.

Milo
Milo
3 years ago

My thinking is that they are waiting until after HMQ platinum jubilee to launch the wrecking ball.

Think Harder
Think Harder
3 years ago

I would guess many corporations are hedging.

Spirit of the wind
3 years ago

The NAZI’s never went away did they?
They lurked in the shadows, and bided their time.

Vaxtastic
3 years ago

I thought they went to South America?

High-1642622169.3201.jpg
Mark
3 years ago
Reply to  Vaxtastic

Let’s hope you don’t find yourself extradited to the Scottische Reich, if Toby grasses you up to the Scotch Secret Police.

Ron Smith
Ron Smith
3 years ago
Reply to  Mark

Count Dankular awaits.

Think Harder
Think Harder
3 years ago

It’s a mindset or common insanity.

Gregoryno6
3 years ago

That awkward moment when you can’t tell which evil genius is real and which is a movie character.

Ernst Stavro Schwab.jpg
Human Resource 19510203
Human Resource 19510203
3 years ago

Neil Oliver never fails on Saturday evenings.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mS2iU1cqqYU&t=6s

Ron Smith
Ron Smith
3 years ago

Why do you say ‘fails’….Is it because he was more positive than he usually is. The girl on there who went as a journalist there was saying many prime Ministers were not there, is that because the WEF is getting more tainted, if so that is good news. Rebel News and a few other independent outlets were not treated well there. Maybe his message was a false hope and we shouldn’t lower our guard to these people?