Klaus Schwab, The World Economic Forum, And The New Fascism

When I began researching this series for The Daily Wire, I scarcely knew the depth of the rabbit hole into which I would descend. What started out as a straightforward article about the octogenarian German engineer Klaus Schwab and his brainchild, the World Economic Forum (WEF), an organization he has chaired since its founding in 1971, soon took on increasingly complicated dimensions.

Where to begin?

And then it dawned on me. To understand Schwab and the WEF, the place to start isn’t Davos, Switzerland, where members of the forum and hangers-on meet annually. It’s Utopia.

Oscar Wilde once said, “A map of the world that does not include Utopia is not worth even glancing at…”

Utopia, it was long assumed, lay in the distant past. The Hebrews called it Eden. A garden of innocence and spiritual perfection until man spoiled it. The Greeks, too, looked backward. With a kind of law of entropy at work in history, Plato and centuries of successors believed the further one went back in time, the more perfect things became until one reached a Golden Age at the dawn of civilization.

But it was the Renaissance and Sir Thomas More, who gave us the word Utopia — of Greek construction, meaning “no place”—that a seismic shift occurred. No longer was the perfect state a prehistoric city (or cities as More conceived it) representing the high-water mark of a lost civilization, but it was very much in the present — and in the future.

Henceforth, “Utopians,” possessed by the idea of eternal progress and the perfectibility of human society if not humans individually, would seek to build it.

There arose in the Renaissance and the Enlightenment a spate of utopian visions for the betterment of man. And, then, with the human degradation of the Industrial Revolution, came the greatest — in body count — utopian vision of all: Marxism and its promise to sweep away poverty and injustice.

Victorian novelist and critic Samuel Butler, who saw better than most the logical flaws in Charles Darwin’s epoch-defining work, also saw the inherent dangers of megalomaniacs and their undeliverable promises of paradise. In his anti-utopian novel Erewhon (1872) Butler warned of the temptation to surrender freedom to clever philosophers who would convince them their institutions were unjust and that they alone could fix them.

Butler needn’t have bothered.

The promise of a perfect world was far too alluring. And, so, the competition to build it was on.

But unlike More’s and Plato’s imaginary creations, these would-be utopias were all too terrifyingly real. At the same time that Lenin was building his utopia on the millions of Russian dead, Henry Ford was planning his model city (modestly named “Fordlandia”) in the interior of Brazil. Certain that progress was as much a constant of the universe as the laws of thermodynamics, the twentieth century saw roughly half of the world wrecked by merely that promise.

By the end of the last century, Marxism and its twin fascism would kill more than 150 million people. But utopians are seldom put off by body count, and so the experiment was repeated in the people paradises of China, North Korea, Cuba and many more besides. George Bernard Shaw, a hardcore communist, spoke for more than himself when he said after a visit to Stalin’s Russia: “It’s not a question of to kill or not to kill. It’s a question of killing the right people.”

The road to Utopia always seemed to run through a field pitted with mass graves.

But we know better now, right?

Wrong.

I give you Klaus Schwab and the World Economic Forum.

“The future is built by us!”

This might come as a surprise to the planet’s remaining eight billion people who have not elected Schwab to so much as city dog catcher. Yet, it was without any sense of irony or embarrassment that Schwab, like a true utopian, made this declaration with a brandished fist at the May 2022 gathering of the WEF in Davos. One may reasonably deduce from this that Schwab is not an avid reader of Samuel Butler — or, for that matter, Aldous Huxley, George Orwell, or the Bible. 

The WEF’s motto is not lacking in ambition: Committed to improving the state of the world. Most of us content ourselves with more modest goals, like, say, improving your credit score or golf handicap. Regardless, the WEF’s attitude toward democracy (contempt), national sovereignty (passé), patriotism (fascist), business (should be government run), and personal liberty (selfish) suggests a different agenda than world improvement. Whatever your theory on their goals, they can, says Schwab, be achieved “by a powerful community as you here in this room.”

And powerful they are. More than fifty heads of state attended this year’s meeting. Add to this the leadership of Alibaba, Blackrock, Google, Microsoft, and many other captains of industry and you have an eyebrow-raising convocation of powerbrokers —


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Klaus Schwab, The World Economic Forum, And The New Fascism

When I began researching this series for The Daily Wire, I scarcely knew the depth of the rabbit hole into which I would descend. What started out as a straightforward article about the octogenarian German engineer Klaus Schwab and his brainchild, the World Economic Forum (WEF), an organization he has chaired since its founding in 1971, soon took on increasingly complicated dimensions.

Where to begin?

And then it dawned on me. To understand Schwab and the WEF, the place to start isn’t Davos, Switzerland, where members of the forum and hangers-on meet annually. It’s Utopia.

Oscar Wilde once said, “A map of the world that does not include Utopia is not worth even glancing at…”

Utopia, it was long assumed, lay in the distant past. The Hebrews called it Eden. A garden of innocence and spiritual perfection until man spoiled it. The Greeks, too, looked backward. With a kind of law of entropy at work in history, Plato and centuries of successors believed the further one went back in time, the more perfect things became until one reached a Golden Age at the dawn of civilization.

But it was the Renaissance and Sir Thomas More, who gave us the word Utopia — of Greek construction, meaning “no place”—that a seismic shift occurred. No longer was the perfect state a prehistoric city (or cities as More conceived it) representing the high-water mark of a lost civilization, but it was very much in the present — and in the future.

Henceforth, “Utopians,” possessed by the idea of eternal progress and the perfectibility of human society if not humans individually, would seek to build it.

There arose in the Renaissance and the Enlightenment a spate of utopian visions for the betterment of man. And, then, with the human degradation of the Industrial Revolution, came the greatest — in body count — utopian vision of all: Marxism and its promise to sweep away poverty and injustice.

Victorian novelist and critic Samuel Butler, who saw better than most the logical flaws in Charles Darwin’s epoch-defining work, also saw the inherent dangers of megalomaniacs and their undeliverable promises of paradise. In his anti-utopian novel Erewhon (1872) Butler warned of the temptation to surrender freedom to clever philosophers who would convince them their institutions were unjust and that they alone could fix them.

Butler needn’t have bothered.

The promise of a perfect world was far too alluring. And, so, the competition to build it was on.

But unlike More’s and Plato’s imaginary creations, these would-be utopias were all too terrifyingly real. At the same time that Lenin was building his utopia on the millions of Russian dead, Henry Ford was planning his model city (modestly named “Fordlandia”) in the interior of Brazil. Certain that progress was as much a constant of the universe as the laws of thermodynamics, the twentieth century saw roughly half of the world wrecked by merely that promise.

By the end of the last century, Marxism and its twin fascism would kill more than 150 million people. But utopians are seldom put off by body count, and so the experiment was repeated in the people paradises of China, North Korea, Cuba and many more besides. George Bernard Shaw, a hardcore communist, spoke for more than himself when he said after a visit to Stalin’s Russia: “It’s not a question of to kill or not to kill. It’s a question of killing the right people.”

The road to Utopia always seemed to run through a field pitted with mass graves.

But we know better now, right?

Wrong.

I give you Klaus Schwab and the World Economic Forum.

“The future is built by us!”

This might come as a surprise to the planet’s remaining eight billion people who have not elected Schwab to so much as city dog catcher. Yet, it was without any sense of irony or embarrassment that Schwab, like a true utopian, made this declaration with a brandished fist at the May 2022 gathering of the WEF in Davos. One may reasonably deduce from this that Schwab is not an avid reader of Samuel Butler — or, for that matter, Aldous Huxley, George Orwell, or the Bible. 

The WEF’s motto is not lacking in ambition: Committed to improving the state of the world. Most of us content ourselves with more modest goals, like, say, improving your credit score or golf handicap. Regardless, the WEF’s attitude toward democracy (contempt), national sovereignty (passé), patriotism (fascist), business (should be government run), and personal liberty (selfish) suggests a different agenda than world improvement. Whatever your theory on their goals, they can, says Schwab, be achieved “by a powerful community as you here in this room.”

And powerful they are. More than fifty heads of state attended this year’s meeting. Add to this the leadership of Alibaba, Blackrock, Google, Microsoft, and many other captains of industry and you have an eyebrow-raising convocation of powerbrokers —


Read More From Original Article Here:

" Conservative News Daily does not always share or support the views and opinions expressed here; they are just those of the writer."
*As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases
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