from Brent Smith for World Net Daily:
There is a tsunami of authoritarianism coming. In fact, depending on the final results of the presidential election, we conservatives may get swept up in its undertow sooner than we think.
There appears to me to be an odd aggregation of ideologies merging into one on the horizon – and none of the parts, or the whole they create, is good. Merely describing it as bad does a disservice to the word bad.
Maybe catastrophic is even too mild.
If things progress the way the woke and radical world leftists envision, we may be looking at combining Alinsky’s Rules for Radicals, communism and fascism.
More and more we’re hearing terms like, Build Back Better, stakeholder capitalism, Environmental, Social, and Corporate Governance (ESG) and Social Credit System.
Think of ESG as the corporate version of an individual’s Social Credit Score. It will also employ Green New Deal and Social Justice ideals.
By sheer coincidence, leftists, seemingly worldwide, have begun using the phrase, Build Back Better. This refers to a world they envision post Great Reset.
It’s a vision of resetting global economies away from free-market, American-style capitalism to stakeholder capitalism instituted and controlled through the World Economic Forum (WEF) – a collection of the world’s billionaire know-it-alls.
The WEF sets forth rules for corporations to abide by, like the aforementioned ESG. Corporations will be expected to comply with not governmental rules, but WEF guidelines. But don’t get the idea that governments aren’t fully on board – they are.
“This is a unique moment in history to walk the talk and to make stakeholder capitalism measurable,” says Klaus Schwab, founder and executive chairman, World Economic Forum. “Having companies accepting, not only to measure but also to report on, their environmental and social responsibility will represent a sea change in economic history.”
These stakeholder capitalism metrics are “designed to provide a common set of existing disclosures that lead towards a coherent and comprehensive global corporate reporting system.”