In Brave New World, author Aldous Huxley wrote that the slaves of the 
future are happy. Drugged and genetically modified, their personalities 
are blunted and their bodies and minds configured by a technocracy whose
 scientists design humans to maximise their outputs for the benefit of 
the ruling classes.
Outside the world of fiction, the World 
Economic Forum (WEF) is an umbrella of multibillion-dollar, mostly 
US-based corporations and billionaires; a think tank in which the rulers
 of the world meet to discuss and try to shape the general direction of 
the global order. With permanent strikers in the US, for instance, 
refusing to work in what the late anthropologist David Graeber 
eloquently called “bullshit jobs,” the WEF’s academics and researchers 
understand that they could lose their grip on power. Global financial 
inequalities are widening as anti-democratic sentiments grow within 
“democratic” societies, whose populations realise that they have no 
control over their lives.
Rather than risk revolutions in 
numerous countries from strikers – now called The Great Resignation – 
the WEF seeks to ideologically capture potential revolutionary leaders 
and re-programme them to favour the WEF system (e.g., Greta Thunberg’s 
platform at the annual conference). The businesses that fund and join 
WEF’s Davos meetings recognise that real estate remains the physical 
basis on which profitable assets are constructed. Under slogans like the
 Great Reset, the Fourth Industrial Revolution, and Build Back Better, 
WEF elites want to cement their new world order.
But what will 
that new order look like for non-elites? Unlike the present global 
malaise, the “new normal” – or “next normal” as WEF elites are calling 
it – aims to use hi-technology and data collection to tailor 
environments to the needs and wishes of the public who will be expected 
to participate in “sustainable” infrastructure and be data points for 
constant public health monitoring.
Like the hapless victims of 
Huxley’s dystopia, tomorrow’s society will be happily enslaved, at least
 in the minds of WEF planners. Workspaces will blur the lines between 
personalisation and professionalism, feelings of being cheated by the 
system will be reconceived as consuming less to help the environment, 
and the pains of reality will be soothed with immersion into joyous, 
incessant virtual reality like Facebook’s new Meta concepts....<<<Read More>>>>
 
