To: higgmeister
100 elite families" sounds like some red herring. The dangerous ones have names.
Sorry, but, I don't see the 100 elite families being represented at that meeting.
Meetings that include world 'leaders' is not the same as elite families. Macron, for example, has nothing elite about him, and neither does the Chinese representative, and neither does the group of U.S. representatives. There is absolutely nothing special or elite about Kerry.
The names of the players change every time that meeting occurs, so, according to who goes to that meeting, even during republican administrations, the U.S. would be sending members of 'elite families'. That's junk thinking, akin to junk science. Made up on the fly, depending on what the need or want of the moment is.
The boogeymen of the 100 elite families seems to elude your attempts to point them out. There are, no doubt, millions of 'elite people' in the world, who do not think of themselves as elite, but they still have a lot of influence on people around the world, and perhaps a lot more than the boogeymen of the so-called 'elite families. Is Trump, for example, part of the elite who want to cause damage and control the world. Are the powers that be at FOX news part of the elite 100? Is Biden part of the elite 100? I think not, but they have a lot more influence on what happens around the world than the supposed elite families.
95 posted on
05/02/2024 6:11:23 AM PDT by
adorno
(CCH)
To: adorno
You are the one that's talking about 100 elite families, not me. What are they?
If you have never heard of the World Economic Forum and all they are doing to destroy our way of life...
"You'll own nothing and you'll be happy" (alternatively "you'll own nothing and be happy") is a phrase originating in a 2016 video by the World Economic Forum (WEF), summarising an essay written by Danish politician Ida Auken. The phrase has been used by critics who accuse the WEF of desiring restrictions on ownership of private property. The phrase has also been used by critics of the subscription business model, and software as a service.In 2016, Auken published an essay originally titled "Welcome to 2030. I own nothing, have no privacy, and life has never been better",[2] later retitled "Here's how life could change in my city by the year 2030", on the WEF's official web site. It described life in an unnamed city in which the narrator does not own a car, a house, any appliances, or any clothes, and instead relies on shared services for all of his daily needs. Auken later added an author's note to the story responding to critics, stating that it is not her "utopia or dream of the future", and that she intended for the essay to start discussions about technological development.[3]
You not knowing about this tells me all I need to know about you.
96 posted on
05/02/2024 8:40:45 AM PDT by
higgmeister
(In the Shadow of The Big Chicken! )
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