World Economic Forum Megathread (The Great Reset)

What's wrong with free money? I say we just sit back and let the robots do all the work.
I guess if you don't mind having a centralized power controlling ever aspect of your life, and ultimately what you're allowed to do with that free money.

That's a lot of people though, especially millennials and younger generations. They'd love to give up their civil liberties to an authoritarian left-wing centralized government in exchange for "free money".
 
Nobody's ever going to implant a chip in people to act as money, that'll start way too many loony's wailing about "The Mark Of The Beast". If we ever go to a cashless society it'll be with debit cards, or just using your fingerprints to prove your identity. Along with PIN numbers of course, we don't want to encourage muggers to start chopping off people's fingers.
 
This guy also accused Pope Francis of covering up child abuse (and he's probably right). Francis is fucking hated by Conservative catholics. The most amusing example of this was when Francis attended some event to celebrate the 500th anniversary of the reformation. Ironic that a Pope would celebrate rebelling against the pope, even more ironic that Conservative catholics would react to that by, y'know, rebelling against the Pope.
 
This guy also accused Pope Francis of covering up child abuse (and he's probably right). Francis is fucking hated by Conservative catholics. The most amusing example of this was when Francis attended some event to celebrate the 500th anniversary of the reformation. Ironic that a Pope would celebrate rebelling against the pope, even more ironic that Conservative catholics would react to that by, y'know, rebelling against the Pope.
The Catholic Church hasn't been this political since it had its own feudal fiefdoms.
 
That sort of thing can be so insidious, affecting things from industrial design and traffic engineering, to web design and big data. Think about how paper towel dispensers have changed in the past decade. They used to have a lever. Now, you grab the towel itself and pull, with the lever as a backup in case it gets jammed. This seems more hygienic than touching a lever, but what it really does is it forces you to save paper by making the motion more arduous and the count of each sheet pulled more obvious. If you had the lever, you would effortlessly crank out several sheets and use maybe half of it. They want to design everything in society like this. Behavioral alteration by means of subtle engineering changes.
This is what the insanely popular NUDGE theory proposes. So many members of the so-called elite glomped onto that piece of new-age bullshit, you'd think it's a new model of population control.

Which it probably is in the long run, as long as it's applied to polite modern societies.
 
That sort of thing can be so insidious, affecting things from industrial design and traffic engineering, to web design and big data. Think about how paper towel dispensers have changed in the past decade. They used to have a lever. Now, you grab the towel itself and pull, with the lever as a backup in case it gets jammed. This seems more hygienic than touching a lever, but what it really does is it forces you to save paper by making the motion more arduous and the count of each sheet pulled more obvious. If you had the lever, you would effortlessly crank out several sheets and use maybe half of it. They want to design everything in society like this. Behavioral alteration by means of subtle engineering changes.
I never thought of it this way. The most visible way is designs that discourage homeless people from loitering on an area but most people see that and assume it's only being done to the homeless.

Hell, the fact that most, if not all, social media feeds have switched from a chronological feed to an algorithmically determined one, coupled with the massive centralization of internet content onto sites like that, is one of the most insidious examples to me. Not only are they collecting data on you based on what kind of content you're viewing, they're also picking and choosing what content to show you at the same time. And considering places like Twitter have gone full Metal Gear Solid 2 ending with the admittance that they want to create context and shape reality based on how they handle news... yeah.

It all goes back to removing the ability to dissent. When people talk about deplatforming and its effectiveness I think this gets glossed over a lot. Deplatforming works when it comes to removing someone's capacity to dissent. Look at how these platforms handled anything to do with information on COVID-19 for example.
 
I have to say, I’ve heard this claim before and always been really skeptical of it because many actual millennials seem fairly bitter over the fact that college debt and the post-2008 economy left them with less purchasing power than they believed their parents had. The main reason a lot of younger people are renting things and avoiding making large purchases isn’t necessarily because they want to, but because they don’t think they can afford otherwise, as it wasn’t uncommon for them to enter adulthood with tens of thousands in debt right off the bat.

Personally, this is my theory as to why so many of them are pro-socialism, as they misguidedly believe it will ease their debt and make large expenses like healthcare “free”. They aren’t really thinking much beyond that. Doesn’t help that Canadians and Brits online brag about their “free” healthcare all the time. Why do you think so many young people supported Bernie Sanders? He touted the ideas of free college and forgiving all college debt.
My opinion is that quality of life has tanked to an extreme level because mass immigration is essentially selling younger people into slavery. A lot of boomers actively fight against learning new skills or systems, and most industries are absolute shit for both the worker and the consumer with seemingly no effort to ever modernize. It's expecting young people to do 6 years of school for a job, not hiring/promoting them because of race/gender, while the boomers with the job still have not learned how to use a computer. There is next to no industry which operates in good faith.

Beyond that, everyone is fat as fuck, the nuclear family has been mostly destroyed, healthy relationships have been mostly destroyed, and they're attacked by media and entertainment for race/gender. Most of the world is already a communist shithole by historical standards, and young people have next to nothing worth fighting for because past generations have already destroyed it. We might even get classic communist mass starvation soon, due to lockdowns.
 
When a dinosaur like the pope starts throwing around shit like "New World Order" and "Deep State" you know your chances of trying to squeak by are gone, not that they were really trying anyway.
Nobody's ever going to implant a chip in people to act as money, that'll start way too many loony's wailing about "The Mark Of The Beast".
HAHAHAHA
 
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This is what the insanely popular NUDGE theory proposes. So many members of the so-called elite glomped onto that piece of new-age bullshit, you'd think it's a new model of population control.

Which it probably is in the long run, as long as it's applied to polite modern societies.
I never thought of it this way. The most visible way is designs that discourage homeless people from loitering on an area but most people see that and assume it's only being done to the homeless.

Hell, the fact that most, if not all, social media feeds have switched from a chronological feed to an algorithmically determined one, coupled with the massive centralization of internet content onto sites like that, is one of the most insidious examples to me. Not only are they collecting data on you based on what kind of content you're viewing, they're also picking and choosing what content to show you at the same time. And considering places like Twitter have gone full Metal Gear Solid 2 ending with the admittance that they want to create context and shape reality based on how they handle news... yeah.

It all goes back to removing the ability to dissent. When people talk about deplatforming and its effectiveness I think this gets glossed over a lot. Deplatforming works when it comes to removing someone's capacity to dissent. Look at how these platforms handled anything to do with information on COVID-19 for example.
I’ve had the New World Order’s playbooks (and books written by their critics) sitting in my bookshelf for years. I saw what was coming. I tried warning people, like four to eight years ago. I told people to read them. They thought it was all nonsense. I told people to read Dan Ariely, Thomas Piketty, George Monbiot, Robert W. McChesney and John Nicols, David Graeber, et al. People are bewildered by what’s happening. If they read up on the theory, they would understand, and they would be rightfully angry.

Imagine a society constructed by complete psychopaths, using the TED Talks of well-meaning analysts, economists, and anthropologists as the building blocks. That is the Great Reset.





They want an UBI because they can’t employ you. The employer class has nothing for you to do, and they’re afraid that you’ll take up torches and pitchforks and kill them because of it.
 
They want an UBI because they can’t employ you. The employer class has nothing for you to do, and they’re afraid that you’ll take up torches and pitchforks and kill them because of it.
UBI is a partial solution to automation. However, there are some cases where automation fucks up very bad. See every recent Tesla car ever - new production cars needed to be hand-fitted and fixed well into the proper production run. The price of manual labour is going to skyrocket as a consequence, but it's going to be employed only when it's absolutely necessary.
In the long run, this might result in a cargo cult manufacturing culture, similar to the Technicians in the first Foundation novel - performing elaborate "rituals" which they know are going to result in something, but knowing absolutely nothing why it results in that something.

Hell, there are business intelligence systems that effectively murder middle management. The only problem is the AI can only account for what other people input and nothing else, creating problems any moderately trained manager could solve in a minute.
 
Many years ago, I used to debate people about this sort of thing all the time. I went onto boards full of liberal centrists who were generally pro-capitalism, and I proposed techno-socialist ideas that were pretty much exactly like what the WEF are proposing.
  • Abolish paper money.
  • Replace private property with communal property.
  • End private car ownership and replace it with public transportation and people basically Ubering a shared pool of driverless electric cars, since it’s a tremendous waste of raw materials to produce millions of cars only for them to sit on driveways unused most of the day.
  • Put an end to conventional farming and rural life and replace it with vertical farming in the cities.
  • End the commute and replace it with telecommuting.
  • Get rid of office buildings (and all the intervening services people visit during their now-obsolete commutes) and replace them with more residential buildings to drive down the cost of housing.
  • Aim generally for degrowth.
  • Get rid of planned obsolescence and the throw-away economy and manufacture only durable, long-lasting goods.
  • Move manufacturing closer to where products are actually used; eliminate the long transportation distances of finished goods by way of freight; each city should be an autarky in itself, capable of producing everything people need in it, hence an arcology.
  • Minimal transportation means raw materials must be procured locally and finished goods must be manufactured locally. Bio-feedstock from vertical farms would be used for plastic goods instead of petroleum, making for a readily available supply of recyclable materials for solid items.
  • Automate away most manual labor. Use the time and energy freed up to allow people to contribute to society and culture in communal Makerspaces.
  • Institute a circular economy. Nothing is wasted. Nothing ends up in a landfill. Nothing non-recyclable is manufactured. Everything is reused, recycled, and upcycled.
These ideas are not new. The so-called Technocracy Movement imagined a world much like this, many decades ago, and I drew upon them for inspiration.

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The Technocracy Movement believed that a society designed technologically, by experts, to command the economy and modify and guide human behavior, was more effective than systems of laws, fines, and other sorts of social and institutional coercion. Keep in mind that according to socialist tenets, the free market is essentially coercive by nature; refusal to participate means homelessness and destitution, and that, in turn, is considered intolerable coercion. An ideal system would basically provide for all human material needs automatically without people thinking too much about it or expending much effort (a post-scarcity system; think Culture or Star Trek).



The Technocracy Movement drew many of their ideas from Thorstein Veblen (particularly his work The Engineers and the Price System), who was a turn-of-the-last-century economic critic who argued that wealthy people consume ostentatiously just to demonstrate their wealth to other wealthy people, that industrialists actually sabotaged the efficiency of manufacturing by intentionally reducing production to keep products from becoming essentially free, that goods were designed with planned obsolescence and endless consumption in mind, and that money and debt were totally meaningless. Think Karl Marx, but straight to the point instead of all the dense philosophical meandering in Das Kapital.

There are also shades of these ideas in Jacque Fresco’s Venus Project and his idea of a Resource-Based Economy. He proposed the total abolition of money, the free market, and exchange, and treating resources and consumer goods like a utility. He also proposed the creation of “Circular Cities” (giant, EPCOT Center-like planned communities), for some reason, which would somehow solve all the problems of a normal square-grid city. To control his system, he advocated a form of governance he called Sociocyberneering, which basically involved the computerized mapping of human behavior to predict people’s needs (there are some shades of Project Cybersyn in all of it, but one can indeed see real-world parallels in the algorithms that are used to predict people’s viewing habits on YouTube and Netflix). For a while, his views were espoused by the Zeitgeist Movement.





People hated it. They thought it sounded completely inhuman, even immoral and nihilistic. Well, surprise surprise. This is apparently what the Elites had in mind for us all along, almost right down to the letter. Only, instead of it being a free and equitable system, it’s actually yet another Bolshevik scam to deprive people of their property so that the Party may have right of dispensation over it.

These ideas have the support of the most brutal and despicable totalitarians. I now see that far from being the utopia I imagined it might be, this is a monstrous evil that must be fought against. It is inhuman. Nobody likes this, nobody wants it, and it must be vehemently opposed. I suppose the best I can do now is warn people about what the powers-that-be are trying to do. I’m well-acquainted with their theories, and I know exactly how they could be misused to create a nightmare dystopia that will make the Holodomor look like fucking Disneyland.
I won't lie, I like some of those ideas. I live on the divide between suburbia and rural, and so many restaurants tout how the farms that are near us supply them with their food, naming them. It's one of the things that I thank Millennials for.

What's interesting is that I noticed how, once things were made in China (aka not America) is when the concept of planned obsolescence began to arise. I wonder if, due to lower quality, the items would break. And, not wanting people to make the connection, as well as seeing people buying more as a result, the idea that the breaking is from the engineer-side was pushed. Though I do have an anecdote regarding this, as I have a friend who designs washing machines and he confided in me that they are told to purposefully design them to break after about 5 years, due to parts or something. He didn't say it was a financial reason, or at least I didn't get the feeling. It was more that "these parts start breaking down/go bad after 10 years, so we'll design it so that problems start appearing at 5 years."

The push towards telecommuting is an interesting trend I've noticed. While you could argue that there are benefits, what is interesting is that it contrasts sharply with studies done. I don't have any idea how to access the paper (it was in a youtube video, in the 3GD flood thread), but it talked about how the Chinese built skyscraper cities for "peak efficiency". However, it ended up not being like that at all, and not just because the Chinese were behind it. There was a paper or something theorizing that the reason MIT (and the surrounding area) is behind a lot of the innovation is because of the ability for people to go and walk around the city, exposing them to various experiences that help new thinking, as a result of how the city is laid out or something. I will try to find the video again if someone doesn't link it before I can.

I will have to check out Veblen, as his ideas seem interesting (with the exception of saying money is meaningless). It's unsettling though that his ideas are like Marx, since it makes me feel like I'm Marxist-lite. Though at least I know that, while an interesting philosophical exercise, I'd never want it actually implemented. Just like post-modernism. Hmmm, maybe there's a link between the two? (Spoiler: there is).

ALSO, I am not sure if it is completely relevant (I will hold off on posting and analyzing the content if so) but I highly recommend people check out The Naked Communist by W. Cleon Skousen. Supposedly, Skousen is an FBI employee that the FBI personnel file on him refers to him as a right-wing extremist after he left. The book was published in 1972, and can be found on the archive.org site.

If nothing else, I can post passages as well as analysis that is more related to this Great Reset.
 
What's wrong with free money? I say we just sit back and let the robots do all the work.
Because the greedy cunt elites would rather just hoard all those robots and goodies for themselves and whatever worthwhile slaves can't be automated yet while those they deem 'useless eaters' get culled. It's all part of their plan, having a 'managable' population.
 
I have to say, I’ve heard this claim before and always been really skeptical of it because many actual millennials seem fairly bitter over the fact that college debt and the post-2008 economy left them with less purchasing power than they believed their parents had. The main reason a lot of younger people are renting things and avoiding making large purchases isn’t necessarily because they want to, but because they don’t think they can afford otherwise, as it wasn’t uncommon for them to enter adulthood with tens of thousands in debt right off the bat.

Personally, this is my theory as to why so many of them are pro-socialism, as they misguidedly believe it will ease their debt and make large expenses like healthcare “free”. They aren’t really thinking much beyond that. Doesn’t help that Canadians and Brits online brag about their “free” healthcare all the time. Why do you think so many young people supported Bernie Sanders? He touted the ideas of free college and forgiving all college debt.
Also Millenials are soyful idiots who buy "merch" and do weird things like make vinyl records popular again.

All of which involves buying crap for the sake of buying crap.
 
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