Or:
Or:
Yes, those are English words coming out of their mouths. But they're not speaking English.
You see, Globalese sounds like English and it employs English words, but it has its own dictionary, in which certain words have a completely different meaning.
If you think you can understand terms like "sustainable development" or "international law" by looking them up in your standard English dictionary (or, even worse, Wikipedia), you're sadly mistaken.
Thankfully, after decades of listening to these globalists speak, I have a fairly good grasp of Globalese.
Today I offer my services to help you translate the Globalese gobbledygook in the United Nation's new "Pact for the Future" into plain English.
Sorry, and you're welcome...!
Decoding the [Death] PactIf you have no idea what the Pact for the Future is, the first thing you're going to need to do is to watch my recent podcast on the subject:
There, you'll not only discover what the Pact for the Future actually is,
...but you'll also find a link to the latest revision of the document.
(That's right, just like the WHO's proposed pandemic treaty earlier this year, the kakistocrats are working on this globalist death pact right up to the last minute...!)
And now that you're up to speed, it's time to dive into the document itself.
First, let me show you how this works.
Here are the opening words from Article 1 of the latest revision, presumably setting the tone for the rest of the pact:
This is a fascinating passage, because it really does tip the hand of these conspiratorial kleptocrats.
We could compare it to the language of the schemers who convened in Philadelphia in 1787 to betray the Declaration of Independence and to co-opt the American Revolution by drafting a constitution for the United States.
When those constitutional conspirators actually put pen to paper, they at least had the sense to begin the preamble to their document with a sop to those who fought in the War for Independence:
Of course, this was a cynical piece of rhetorical manipulation on the part of the so-called "Founding Fathers.
It was not "We the people" drafting the US Constitution, after all, but a cabal of conspirators who met under the guise of revising the Articles of Confederation.
Such was the public's ignorance of what was being agreed to under their name that we have the famous (and likely apocryphal) story of Eliza Powel asking Benjamin Franklin as the convention adjourned:
To which Franklin supposedly replied:
(Let's not even get into the question of how that constitution of "We the people" was ratified.)
But the UN conspirators need no such pretense.
They simply assert that they - the "Heads of State and Government" - represent the peoples of the world and have appointed themselves the task of determining how best to "protect the needs and interests" of not only all humans living on the planet but all those humans who will ever be born in the future...!
That this gaggle of globalists would have such ambitions should not be surprising.
But that they would reveal their lust for power so blatantly, in black and white, is downright shocking.
So, where do we go from here?
Why, Article 2, of course...!
Those not versed in Globalese will doubtless read this passage without batting an eyelash.
Yes, the world is facing,
We can see that for ourselves by simply scanning the news headlines every day.
But those who are fluent in Globalese will doubtless spot the caveat cleverly inserted at the end: this crisis is "caused by the choices we make."
The implication, of course, is that you and I are responsible for this mess, that our actions - our daily drive to work or our use of air conditioning or our meat-eating habit - are threatening the future of the planet.
If this sounds like a calculated attempt by the very persons who are actually causing the world's problems - the mis-leaders heading up the war machine and the climate scam and the surveillance state and the financial system - to deflect the blame for their actions on to the masses they are supposedly "representing," that's because it is.
In fact,
Don't believe me?
Read this passage from The First Global Revolution, a 1991 book from The Club of Rome purporting to identify, diagnose and solve the world's problems:
By blaming us for the world crisis, these self-appointed "representatives" of humanity are thereby claiming that they are empowered to regulate, limit, restrict and otherwise control our activities in the pursuit of their self-appointed mandate of solving the world's existential crisis.
And in that formulation, we are their enemy.
On to Article 3:
In this passage, we should of course read "hope" as "hopium"...
"Global transformation," meanwhile, is a particularly resonant phrase for the global elitists.
But perhaps the most interesting phrase in Article 3 is "our common humanity."
Yet an appeal to "our common humanity" is exactly the type of Globalese term these cold-blooded-psychopaths-masquerading-as-regular-people would employ to get us on board with their anti-human agenda.
More seriously, the phrase evokes the "Our Common Agenda" document that UN Secretary General Antonio Güterres unleashed on the world in 2021 in response to a resolution that the UN member states passed on the occasion of the UN's seventy-fifth anniversary in September 2020.
That resolution,
(If you follow the link back to the resolution you'll find a skillfully deployed "We the peoples" embedded in Article 21!)
As Corbett Report viewers will know from my conversation with Dr. Jacob Nordangård last year, Güterres' resulting report kickstarted a process that led to the creation of a series of "Our Common Agenda Policy Briefings," which in turn informed the creation of this Pact for the Future.
Those policy documents included briefings on,
Keep in mind, when a globalist uses the phrase "Our Common Humanity",
OK, you get the idea.
I'm not going to go through every single article of this pact, because we'd be here all day. But let me help you with some of the more misleading or obscure Globalese phrases in the document.
"International Law"
There are many uses of the phrase "international law" in the pact.
For example, Article 5 informs us that overcoming the problems we face,
The term "international law" is designed to sound good to an English speaker's ear.
After all, who doesn't want law and order?
However, the globalists' "international law" refers not to an ideal of universal justice, but to a world ruled over by a singular, unaccountable world court in the manner of the Nuremberg trials - i.e., victor's "justice"...
If you want to see what "international law" actually looks like, you need look no further than,
For a deeper understanding of what the Globalese term "international law" means in plain English, please see my 2013 podcast on the subject:
"Sustainable Development"
"Sustainable development" is not just one of the most-used phrases in the Pact for the Future, it is also - as Article 9 of the pact helpfully tells us - one of the "three pillars of the United Nations" (the other two being "peace and security" and "human rights").
On its face, "sustainable development" is a straightforward English phrase
As the bastion of truthiness puts it:
But a clue to the phrase's meaning in Globalese is provided later in the same Wikipedia article, where it is noted,
For those not in the know, "The Brundtland Report" refers to the final report of a UN commission chaired by Norwegian Prime Minister Gro Harlem Brundtland from 1983 to 1987.
This report - titled (you guessed it!) "Our Common Future" - peddled the same anti-human narrative that The Club of Rome and seemingly every other globalist organization love to parrot.
You've heard their mantra by now:
Of course, this narrative is debunked pseudoscientific hogwash of the worst kind.
Nevertheless, it appeals to the indoctrinated masses, steeped as they are in the Malthusian propaganda of the globalist institutions.
In reality, "sustainable development" has nothing to do with saving Mother Earth.
And, judging from how often "sustainable development" is promoted as a noble goal by politicians, governments and international organizations these days, it seems to be working...
If you want to find out what "sustainable development" really means, you should consult my 2017 podcast on the subject:
"New Collective Quantified Goal"
Article 28 (c) of the pact makes reference to a "new collective quantified goal," or NCQG.
"COP29," as my regular readers already know, refers to the 29th "Conference of the Parties," the annual meeting of the member states that are party to the U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).
For those not keeping track at home, COP29 will take place this November in Azerbaijan, where a new collective quantified goal for climate finance is due to be adopted.
According to the UNFCCC itself, the NCQG,
And what, exactly, will this $100 billy+ in annual funding actually finance? Bring on the Globalese:
In plain English:
"Complex global shocks"
Action 56 in the pact reads:
"Complex global shocks" is an allusion to the globalists' new favorite neologism:
In Globalese, a "polycrisis" refers to,
As I explained in "Here's Why the World is Falling Apart (and What You Can Do About It!)," this word has been in vogue among the global jet-setters of late.
First coined by French post-Marxist sociologist Edgar Morin decades ago, the term was picked up and used by former European Commission president (and longtime Bilderberg stalwart) Jean-Claude Juncker in a 2016 speech reflecting on the challenges facing the European Union.
The word was then picked up and elaborated by mainstream historian (and Davos attendee) Adam Tooze in the Financial Times before becoming the "buzzword" at Davos in 2023.
It's not difficult to understand why the concept of a "polycrisis" (or, as the pact calls it, "complex global shocks") appeals to the globalists at Davos and the UN and elsewhere.
A crisis that interacts with and amplifies other crises quickly becomes so confusing and overwhelming a problem that it can be sorted out only by "experts" who have the appropriate globalist credentials.
You know,
This is exactly the way that the UN conspirators frame it in the Pact for the Future:
In other words,
THE BOTTOM LINEI could go on, but you get the idea by now.
The globalists are using English words, but they are speaking Globalese.
When you learn to speak their language, you begin to recognize that all their feel-good rhetoric about ending poverty and achieving world peace is not actually about,
Here's a test to see if you're getting the hang of this yet.
Action 3 of the pact is the pledge:
This is to be achieved by (among other things),
Using your knowledge of Globalese,
But now that we've got the hang of this, here's the bottom line:
So, let me respond to them in plain English:
I would translate that message into Globalese so the globalists can understand me better, but I don't think these words exist in their language.
Somehow, I think they'll get the message anyway...
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