As you must now know, there was a pro-freedom march in London today.
Led by @TRobinsonNewEra, it was a huge success. According to Metro Police, only 50k showed up.
Does this look like “only” 50k? Lol.
There is a backstory here that…
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…involved one of the speakers and goes back more than a decade:
I met Nigerian Anglican Bishop Jwan Zhumbes in seminary. We were immediately drawn to one another by a desire to confront Islam and bring aid to those who suffer at the hands of Muslims.
Knowing I was a…
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…writer, he invited me to visit his diocese in Nigeria’s Plateau State to see the sheer scale of the terror for myself. Much to his surprise, I accepted and went.
In those days you had to fly into Lagos or Abuja and take the extremely dangerous open roads to the north….
Perhaps no post-WW2 book has had such a dramatic and disastrous influence on national policy as his The Population Bomb (1968).
The book predicted (wrongly) that within the next…
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…decade hundreds of millions would die from starvation due to limited planetary resources.
Non-academic in tone, the book reads like a secular version of Revelation. The first sentence says it all: “The battle to feed all of humanity is over.”
The cover is no less…
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…alarmist: “While you are reading these words 4 people will die of starvation — and 24 more babies will have been born.”
Ehrlich’s book rocketed up the bestseller lists and penetrated popular culture. Attached below is a clip from Laugh-In shortly after the book’s release:
If you’re looking for a thread that runs through all of the countries/places I’m visiting on my latest expedition—World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland; Auschwitz - Birkenau &…
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…Nowa Huta near Krakow, Poland; Tel Aviv, Jerusalem, & Gaza; and 3 more countries to go—it is this:
I intend to demonstrate how the crackpot ideas that are historically formed in places like Davos become policy and are sent downstream and demolish the lives of millions….
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…Those who formulate these ideas are invariably leftists who are, in the words of Russian historian Sheila Fitzpatrick, “enthusiasts, zealots, and utopians mesmerized by big, distant goals…. They have the intoxicating illusion they personify the will of the people….”
Now that I’ve had time to process this year’s annual WEF Nuremberg-like rally in Davos, Switzerland, I’m ready to give you the main takeaways.
A. It starts with President Trump.
Every single report following the president’s…
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…address was either outright lies or missed the point. Trump’s thesis wasn’t Greenland or NATO or Ukraine or borders or windmills or the economy.
These were all spokes off of a central hub: “American citizens.” This is what made his remarks so remarkable, especially…
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…in a place like Davos.
The World Economic Forum has been a fundamentally anti-human organization since its founding. Their mission statement is nothing if not ambiguous: “Improving the state of the world.”
Much like a classic episode of The Twilight Zone where aliens…
People frequently ask if it’s dangerous for someone like me to attend the WEF.
No.
Then again, after last year’s WEF, I went to Cairo to see what I could dig-up on USAID, went home, and was SWATTED.
So, maybe…
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…it is. But it is much more likely that incident — the FBI still hasn’t arrested anyone — was related to my exposure of USAID’s nefarious activities in South America (human trafficking) and Egypt (funding terrorism).
Moving on…
Today’s WEF question: Who is Klaus Schwab?
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Schwab is the founder of the WEF, and, until recently, was its sole chairman since 1971.
Last year a coup forced the octogenarian Schwab out and he was replaced by Blackrock CEO Larry Fink & Roche Holding AG (think pharmaceuticals) CEO André Hoffman.