by
Robert W Malone MD, MS
March 20, 2023
from
RWMaloneMD Website
The WEFs
committee of presidents
from the world's
leading universities...
One of the most unsettling events of the past three years has been
the globalized, coordinated messaging of socio-economic missives and
policies throughout the world.
All of us in the liberty
movement have wondered…
Who is controlling
this?
How does this happen?
I remember spending time
last fall with Nick Hudson of the
Pandata Group (Panda). We were
discussing transgender policies across the world.
We both were very
disturbed, not just by the policies but also how they came about.
How did the policies
of teaching of non-binary genders in schools and the importance
of youth "transitioning" spread across world so quickly?
How is it possible
that South Africa would be immersed in the same battles for
"trans rights," as the USA and as of most of Europe?
Of course, it isn't
possible without coordination.
Then our minds turned not just to the 'pandemic' policies of
masking, mandates and lockdowns, but to,
...not just one country,
but across the world.
The coordinated list
seems endless.
I don't remember a period in my life where most of the world
governments agreed on so much...
Where did these
policies originate?
Who is co-ordinating
them?
How did this happen?
Well today, a reader of
this substack wrote me about their discovery that the World
Economic Forum (WEF) has,
a formal committee of
presidents from the world's best universities.
That these presidents
are coming together regularly to discus and decide policy at the
top universities in the world.
These presidents are
committed to supporting the World Economic Forum.
From the
WEF website:
The Global
University Leaders Forum (GULF) community consists of the
presidents of the world's leading universities who are committed
to supporting the Forum's mission of improving the state of the
world.
Together GULF
presidents identify and address matters of common interest,
including trends, challenges and best practices in higher
education, research and societal impact.
The community is
comprised of 29 members and is chaired by
Suzanne Fortier, Principal
and Vice-Chancellor, McGill University.
In 2021, the GULF community will focus on how universities can
facilitate a more equal and inclusive recovery from the COVID-19
'pandemic', including through exploring the skills for the
future and reskilling, social inclusion, and climate action.
GULF presidents and faculty engage in multiple ways with the
Forum:
-
Expert networks:
opportunities for experts to contribute to expert
communities including the Global Future Councils
-
Insight
development: opportunities to contribute to new research,
disseminate new insights and collaborate on enhancing
Strategic Intelligence
-
Action:
opportunities to shape the world through 18 platforms
addressing social, environmental, technological and industry
challenges
-
Learning:
opportunities to develop and pilot educational modules with
Forum communities
The 29 members of GULF
are listed below:
Universities such as
Stanford, MIT, Princeton, Yale, Berkeley, University of Pennsylvania
and University of Chicago are members. International college
president memberships include Oxford, University of Cape Town (South
Africa), top Chinese and European universities.
There is a platform of 18
ideologies that these presidents are asked to support and
disseminate through out their campuses and society.
These university leaders have been awarded special status within the
WEF and are asked to sit on other councils, such as the "Global
Future Councils."
The World Economic
Forum's network of Global Future Councils is the world's
foremost multistakeholder and interdisciplinary knowledge
network dedicated to promoting innovative thinking to shape a
more resilient, inclusive and sustainable future.
The network convenes around 600 of the most relevant and
knowledgeable thought leaders from academia, government,
international organizations, business, and civil society,
grouped in expertise-based thematic councils.
It is an
invitation-only community and members are nominated for a
two-year term.
It seems to me that the
Global University Leaders Forum is yet another way that the
WEF has co-opted world leaders.
These are doing the
work of the WEF in ways we can only imagine.
People often remark that the WEF holds no positions of great
authority, that is full of pomp and circumstance but no
substance. Nothing could be further from the truth.
Remember in 2019, when the WEF and the United Nations signed a
massive PARTNERSHIP agreement.
Now, the power of the WEF
is backed up the power of the UN and vice-versa.
New York, USA, 13
June 2019
The World Economic
Forum and the United Nations signed today a Strategic
Partnership Framework outlining areas of cooperation to
deepen institutional engagement and jointly accelerate the
implementation of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.
The framework was
drafted based on a mapping of existing collaboration between the
two institutions and will enable a more strategic and
coordinated approach towards delivering impact.
Below is the
press release:
The United Nations no longer
represents nations, it is a partner with the 1000 largest
transnational corporations in the world:
the WEF...
We can only assume that
with this partnership a massive amount of money flowed into the
coffers of the United Nations.
The United Nations
and the World Economic Forum,
do not have officials
which represent the people...
Their leaders have
not been elected to make decisions on our behalf or on our
nation's behalf.
The agendas of these
organization are not those of our nation and do not reflect our
concepts of rights to personal sovereignty.
Yet through vessels such
as
Agenda 2030 and the World Health
Organization's (WHO,
a UN umbrella organization) proposed IHRs, there is the appearance
that the UN wishes to supersede national law and both national and
personal sovereignty.
Those politicians with affiliations to the WEF need to declare
themselves as foreign agents.
It is an inherent
conflict of interest to both represent and support the WEF and the
US government.
Likewise,
many of the
University Presidents named as WEF GULF leaders are from public
institutions.
They have a duty, as
public officials, to report this as a conflict of interest with
their institution.
Taxpayer's money should
not be supporting university presidents who have fealty to a foreign
NGO.
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