Search A Light In The Darkness

Wednesday, 30 April 2025

They’re Going to Starve Us and Freeze Us to Death

 In 2020, it was claimed that the Earth experienced significant climate events that were direct consequences of human-induced climate change, including large wildfires, intense hurricanes and ice loss. The UN, as usual, was pushing the anthropogenic climate change crisis narrative. In March 2019, the World Meteorological Organisation (“WMO”) – “the United Nations system’s authoritative voice on the state and behaviour of the Earth’s atmosphere” – had published its ‘State of the Global Climate in 2018’ report, highlighting “record sea level rise, as well as exceptionally high land and ocean temperatures over the past four years.”

In March 2020, WMO’s ‘State of the Global Climate in 2019’ report described “the tell-tale physical signs of climate change, such as increasing land and ocean heat, accelerating sea level rise and melting ice, contributed to making 2019 the second warmest year on record.”

Media coverage of climate change got bigger and better in 2020, according to Yales Climate Connections. “The additional coverage, coupled with increased weather extremes, helped change public opinion,” it said and went on to say that despite the ongoing covid pandemic, climate change did not disappear from public conversations and the pandemic-related economic slowdown failed to significantly reduce the drivers of climate change.

In response to the covid pandemic, then Prince Charles and the World Economic Forum (“WEF”) launched “The Great Reset” in June 2020. If the covid pandemic was not planned, then Klaus Schwab must be a super-fast writer because he published his book ‘COVID-19: The Great Reset’ on 9 July 2020.

As part of the Great Reset initiative, Schwab, WEF founder and then executive chairman, was a prominent figure in promoting the recent use of the concept “build back better.” The phrase “Build back better” was first used in the United Nations’ 2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami report and gained prominence because it was a favourite catchphrase of former US President Bill Clinton when he was the UN Special Envoy for Tsunami Recovery.

By October 2020, “build back better” had exploded onto the scene with politicians and their collaborators across the world parroting the phrase as a mindless mantra....<<<Read More>>>...