Sunday, January 22, 2023

(Insert Own James Bond Reference Here)

It's no longer a running joke:

Additional details of Canada’s participation in an initiative of the World Economic Forum (WEF) to streamline regulations across countries to speed up the coming of the “Fourth Industrial Revolution” have been revealed through a request for information submitted by Conservative MP Leslyn Lewis.
Lewis submitted questions to the government in October pertaining to the country’s involvement in the “Agile Nations” network, a project of the WEF and the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).
The MP received a response dated Dec. 7 from the Treasury Board Secretariat (TBS) and provided a link to it on her Twitter account on Jan. 18.
“In Nov 2020 while Canadians were distracted by COVID, the Liberal govt signed a World Economic Forum-initiated Charter. The Agile Nations Charter will facilitate agile ‘rule-making’ outside of Parliament. Why the secrecy?” Lewis tweeted.
Other countries involved include Denmark, Italy, Japan, Singapore, the United Arab Emirates, and the United Kingdom.
The Inquiry of Ministry document returned by the TBS says that the WEF and the OECD also invited corporations to take part on the discussions surrounding the establishment of the Agile Nations Charter.
Those include Facebook, IBM, German industrial giant Siemens, Sherlock Biosciences, financial tech company Suade Labs, Volvo Group, and Wingcopter.
The charter, which is not legally binding, was signed by the participating governments in November 2020.
It says that technological breakthroughs are heralding a “Fourth Industrial Revolution” and that a “more agile approach to rulemaking” will help new innovations “drive economic growth and address the world’s most pressing social and environmental challenges.”
In other words, streamlining regulations will allow the proliferation of new technologies, which the WEF identifies in its Agile toolkit as gene editing, artificial intelligence, nanotechnology, and autonomous vehicles.

 

More:

 

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“If a billion people stop eating meat, I tell you, it has a big impact. Not only does it have a big impact on the current food system, but it will also inspire innovation of food systems,” Jim Hagemann Snabe, chairman of the Germany-based conglomerate Siemens AG, said during a panel called “Mobilizing for Climate.” The WEF’s conference in Davos, Switzerland, attended by many world leaders and top business executives, started Monday and runs through Friday.

 

I'll just leave this right here:

 

Nothing much has changed over the centuries.

The elite, far removed from the common man, is now planning more high-tech ways to control those around them and steal their resources.

Revolutions have historically sorted this out.


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