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Politics : Politics for Pros- moderated -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: skinowski who wrote (775984)1/19/2023 12:31:07 PM
From: D. Long1 Recommendation

Recommended By
skinowski

  Respond to of 793926
 
The London School of Economics used to fulfil that role roundly. Breeding ground for globalists.



To: skinowski who wrote (775984)1/19/2023 12:35:45 PM
From: DMaA1 Recommendation

Recommended By
pak73

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793926
 
The weakness of the think is, how do you get that many egomaniacs, who all think they are the smartest people in the room, on the same age about anything.



To: skinowski who wrote (775984)1/19/2023 5:08:35 PM
From: frankw1900  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793926
 
Sort of:

Schwab keeps a popular fellowship for “young global leaders”. Their political influence is already substantial. Dunno… maybe they expect that most of the world will unite in their wokeness - and demand a World Government.
These "young global leaders" are products of modern educational culture rewarded for 'participation', and told they are 'special', when they are mostly very ordinary, (e.g. Justin Trudeau). Thus, they are unwitting victims of a lie and suffer resulting cognitive dissonance; They are victims designed for the convenience of a con-man like Klaus Schwab. He provides them constant assurance they are indeed special in the form of dramatic, privileged, knowledge, (mostly rubbish), of oncoming disasters requiring great sacrifice, (by the common folk).

They are part of the surplus elites described by Peter Turchin:


Elite Overproduction, Inequality, and the Unraveling of Cooperation (Structural-Demographic Dynamics)


The Double Helix of Inequality and Well-Being

The Strange Disappearance of Cooperation in America

The Strange Disappearance of Cooperation in America II

The Road to Disunion

Below the Surface: the Structural-Demographic Roots of the Current Political Crisis

Bimodal Lawyers: How Extreme Competition Breeds Extreme Inequality