Quote (darkhead69 @ Dec 24 2020 06:08pm)
... go listen to Klaus schwab head of world economic forum ... where the hell have you been
any politician around the world using the slogan 'build back better' is in on it
This was all planned and orchestrated, half the world see's whats going on, and that half is waiting on the other half to wake the hell up, and quit watching the Controlled media
https://i.gyazo.com/ad11f4ce8a3c856ac95c5fb7daad2a7a.pngDamn your mind summarized in a few paragraphs. So this is where all your fiction stems from - I don't even need to ask you general questions anymore lol.
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The conspiracy theory of the Great Reset first spread following the initiative's announcement.[2] It spread in response to the plan alleging that "global financial elites" and world leaders have planned a pandemic, deliberately letting loose the coronavirus to cause the conditions that will allow a restructuring of the world's governments. It alleges that the main goals of the Great Reset are to take global political and economic control by instating a Marxist totalitarian regime and by extension, the New World Order.[2][7][18] It is claimed that such a regime would abolish personal ownership and property rights, send the military into cities, impose mandatory vaccination, and create isolation camps for people who resist.[15][20] Examples claimed by proponents as evidence of a conspiracy include a 2016 WEF piece describing what life might be like in 2030, Joe Biden's campaign slogan "Build Back Better", and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's September 2020 speech. According to The Daily Dot, this is merely discourse illustrating how to create a more just and sustainable world.[11][18] In some variations of the theory, US President Donald Trump is the only world leader keeping the scheme from happening, based on a video from August 2020 which has been viewed over three million times.[2][3]
Following the spread of the now-viral September 2020 speech by Trudeau,[3] in which he speaks about the Agenda 2030 goals, a conspiracy theory was spread via far-right internet personalities and groups, some also supporting the QAnon conspiracy theory, and conservative political commentators including Canadians Maxime Bernier and Ezra Levant.[2][15][11] "The elites want Covid-19 lockdowns to usher in a 'Great Reset' and that should terrify you," said Tucker Carlson on a November 17 Fox News broadcast.[11] In the same month, Candace Owens saw the Great Reset as an attempt to "implement Communist policies", while Fox pundit Laura Ingraham claimed it was a ruse to "force radical social and economic change across the continents".[21] Glenn Beck claims it is an attempt to enforce restrictions inspired by the Nazis.[22] In October, a chain email spread, claiming to be from a member of a non-existent committee within the Liberal Party of Canada, and was picked up by QAnon-associated groups.[20]
It has also been disseminated by Russian propaganda outlets. According to Oliver Kamm, in an article for the CapX website: "The propaganda apparatus of the Putin regime has for many months published wild allegations from obscure bloggers that the Great Reset is code for oligarchs to amass wealth and control populations."[23]
The conspiracy theory lacks sufficient and reliable evidence.[3][23] Flaws with the conspiracy theory include: that the WEF lacks authority to tell countries what to do; that politicians planned the COVID-19 pandemic, that they have formed a secret cabal, or that they are using the COVID-19 pandemic to destroy the global market-based economy