Anonymous ID: 9cbd50 June 24, 2020, 2:23 a.m. No.9727680   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7691 >>7694

>>9727655

My theory on the DS purpose of COVID.

When the economy collapses due to excessive money printing, which we've all been expecting since 2008 at the latest, the cabal will blame it on COVID. Ditto the inflation that will follow. I'm in the UK and have noticed food shortages - the latest is flour. What happens is that first a product becomes unavailable and then, when it comes back on the shelves, the price is upwards of 20% higher.

By blaming the inevitable financial collapse, inflation, food shortages etc on COVID when in reality it's the fault of the global banking cabal, they are enabled to plausibly jump in with the solution - their NWO agenda. Because people will believe that it's all due to COVID, not the cabal, they will accept the solution offered.

So the best way to fight this fake narrative is to expose the truth. That's always the way - just as Q has been telling us.

Anonymous ID: 9cbd50 June 24, 2020, 2:35 a.m. No.9727715   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7722

>>9727694

Indeed.

Check out this article from The Guardian.

https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2020/jun/03/pandemic-is-chance-to-reset-global-economy-says-prince-charles

 

Then dig World Wildlife Fund and connections, especially with the Vatican. Prince Charles and papa (Prince Philip) are heavily involved. The WWF is at or very near the top of the cabal pyramid.

The recovery from the coronavirus crisis represents an opportunity to reset the global economy and prioritise sustainable development without further damaging the planet, Prince Charles said at the opening of a World Economic Forum (WEF) virtual meeting. Outlining a five-point plan to rebuild economies following a global recession, the 71-year-old prince said the pandemic was the result of a breakdown in the link between humanity and nature that could be corrected by recognising “the interdependence of all living things”.The prince emphasised that the private sector would be the engine of recovery and was heartened by the pledges from business leaders to recognise the damage to the environment that would result from an unfettered dash for growth.“We have a unique but rapidly shrinking window of opportunity to learn lessons and reset ourselves on a more sustainable path,” said Charles, who himself has recovered after suffering mild symptoms of Covid-19.He said that the pandemic, which has forced governments worldwide to mothball their economies, had showed people that dramatic change was possible.“We have a golden opportunity to seize something good from this crisis. Its unprecedented shockwaves may well make people more receptive to big visions of change,” he added.

The five points he outlined were:

To capture the imagination and will of humanity – change will only happen if people really want it.

The economic recovery must put the world on the path to sustainable employment, livelihoods and growth. Longstanding incentive structures that have had perverse effects on our planetary environment and nature herself must be reinvented

Systems and pathways must be redesigned to advance net zero transitions globally. Carbon pricing can provide a critical pathway to a sustainable market.

Science, technology and innovation need re-invigorating. Humanity is on the verge of catalytic breakthroughs that will alter our view of what it possible and profitable in the framework of a sustainable future.

Investment must be rebalanced. Accelerating green investments can offer job opportunities in green energy, the circular and bio-economy, eco-tourism and green public infrastructure.

The WEF, which stages an influential annual gathering of business and political leaders at its annual meeting in the Swiss ski resort of Davos, has come under fire from anti-poverty groups in recent years for failing to tackle climate change and executive pay.

Charles’s speech was part of a launch event for The Great Reset, a project involving the WEF and the Prince of Wales’s Sustainable Markets Initiative, aimed at rebuilding the economic and social system to be more sustainable.

Speaking at the same event, International Monetary Fund boss Kristalina Georgieva said the world economy faced a similar situation to the UK in the second world war. She urged global leaders to recognise the success of the 1942 Beveridge report, which put forward reforms to raise welfare and health standards across Britain, and was ready to be implemented when the war was over.

“That led to a better country after the war and to a National Health Service that is saving so many lives today. We have to use all the strength we have to turn a page and have history be about the Great Reset and not the Great Reversal.”