11-17-2024, 11:03 AM
(11-17-2024, 08:52 AM)Karl12 Wrote: The Rockefellers created 990 "Climate Change" institutions, foundations, and activist groups
So I expected this to be a wingnutty rant, but it turned out to be very coherent and detailed. Worth a read, if you haven't researched it before. Made me do a bit of a dive into the author, Elizabeth Nickson. She kind of seems like the real deal:
Quote:Elizabeth Nickson is a writer and journalist who has been published widely for the past twenty-five years. She was European Bureau Chief of Life Magazine in the late 80's and early 90's. During this time, she arranged photo stories and interviewed Nelson Mandela, Margaret Thatcher, the Dalai Lama, and dozens of other leaders, film and pop stars, politicians, and royalty, as well as torture victims, political prisoners and criminals. She initiated and co-ordinated the acquisition of Nelson Mandela's autobiography for Little Brown. Prior to her appointment at Life, she was a reporter at Time Magazine.
Nickson has also written for The (London) Sunday Times Magazine, The Guardian, The Observer, The Independent, Tatler, The Sunday Telegraph, Vogue, Saturday Night, Chatelaine, and Harper's Magazine. In 1994 Bloomsbury UK and Knopf Canada published her novel, The Monkey Puzzle Tree, which tells the story of the CIA mind control program in Montreal in the 50's and 60's.
In 1999, Elizabeth returned to Canada, and began writing for the Globe and Mail, as a contributing reviewer for the Books section. She then became a weekly columnist for the Globe, moving to the Comment Page of the National Post in 2000.
In 2005, she subdivided her forest property on Salt Spring Island, and built a carbon-neutral house.
This provided a window into the changes wrought by the environmental movement in land use and development. She drove 20,000 miles through rural America, documenting the very real disasters visited on rural dwellers by the environmental movement, conservation bureaucrats and once-great American foundations. Much of their work has caused unintended consequences which not only damage rural culture, the rural economy, but the ranges, forests, waterways and fields of America. The research became a book, published by Harper Collins in New York called "Eco-Fascists: How Radical Conservationists are Destroying Our Natural Heritage."
The work archived on Academia.edu is the policy-oriented version of Eco-Fascists, examining the Canadian iteration of this massive, and too often destructive, change.
https://independent.academia.edu/ElizabethNickson
Any opinions on her? There's links to some of her other articles there, too. I think I may I have read The Monkey Puzzle Tree back in the pre-9/11 world; the name seems familiar. Maybe its just that one of my neighbours has a monkey puzzle tree. They're weird.
On the subject of the WEF, I think it's important to think about them not as a policy generator themselves, but a place where the different wheels of power meet and mesh. They attempt to provide coherent expressions of policy that serve multiple agendas. So if the WEF is disregarded, that doesn't do a damn thing about the circles of influence it represents. They'd just find another way of representing themselves. It's an expression of the system, not the instigator.