The WEF is also increasingly hostile to Christianity and major religions. If you read between the lines just a little, it’s clear the WEF is consciously attempting to supplant Jesus
According to the WEF, Jesus is fake news, God is dead, and you do not have a soul. You are a “hackable animal” who does not have the capacity for free will.
The World Economic Forum has spent decades quietly infiltrating democratically elected governments, penetrating cabinets and wielding an outsized influence on the world from the corridors of Schwab’s Swiss hideout in Davos.
Last night, I put out a post re: the WEF's new Disease X.
WEF stands for World Economic Forum
See post HERE
In that post, I speculated, maybe a bit sardonically, that the makers of Disease X would likely have a vaccine ready when they launch the disease at us
Now this morning, I check my news and the Salty Cracker, an entertaining channel known for not posting fake news, is talking about a bio-weapons facility in England already working on a vaccine for whatever Disease X turns out to be.
As stated in my post from last night, vaccines for organic viruses — meaning those that occur in nature and not made in a bio-weapons lab — have historically taken at least several years to develop once the virus appears.
But we all know from watching action movies that when criminals make bio-weapon type viruses in labs, they always come with a matching vaccine or antidote
Go HERE and see what the Salty Cracker is reporting
It includes info on what some are calling cremation vans and a bunch of other conspiracy theories
*we conspiracy theorists are currently batting 1000
With the people of the world safely tucked into their digital beds, the Technocrats could complete their total takeover of natural resources, the economy, and humanity itself.
Defined in the simplest possible terms, a narrative is a story about something. Stories are essential to us because as human beings and social animals, we are storytelling creatures. In his 1938 novel Nausea, Jean-Paul Sartre wrote, “A man is always a teller of tales, he lives surrounded by his stories and the stories of others, he sees everything that happens to him through them; and he tries to live his life as if he were recounting it.” Robert Shiller, the “father” of narrative economics, goes one step further, linking narratives to the decisions we make: “The human brain has always been highly tuned towards narratives, whether factual or not, to justify ongoing actions.”
The rich scholarly literature about narratives makes it clear that we think, act, and communicate in terms of narratives, and each interpretation, understanding, or model of how the world operates begins with a story. Narratives provide the context in which the facts we observe can be interpreted, understood, and acted upon. In that sense, they equate to much more than the stories we tell, write, or illustrate figuratively; they end up being the truths, or the ideas we accept as truths, that underpin the perceptions that shape our “realities” and in the process form our cultures and societies. Through narratives, we explain how we see things, how these things work, how we make decisions and justify them, how we understand our place in the world and how we try to persuade others to embrace our beliefs and values. Narratives shape our perceptions, which in turn form our realities and end up influencing our choices and actions. They are how we find meaning in life.
Klaus Schwab & Thierry Malleret, The Power of Narrative