Newly elected Alberta Premier Danielle Smith is being smeared by Canadian media as a “conspiracy theorist” over her refusal to comply with the agenda of Klaus Schwab’s World Economic Forum (WEF).
As Slay News previously reported, after she was sworn into office last month, Smith issued a warning to globalist Schwab regarding the “control” the WEF has over “political leaders” around the world.
In comments about the WEF, Smith said she finds it “distasteful” when billionaires “brag” about controlling sovereign nations’ “political leaders.”
She noted that Schwab has gloated about having world leaders under his control, particularly Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and key members of his cabinet.
“I think that that is offensive for people who should be directing government or the people who vote for them,” she noted.
After taking office, Smith has begun dismantling previously established ties with the World Economic Forum.
The WEF has been deeply involved in a “health consulting agreement” revolving around the province’s COVID-19 response.
The United Conservative Party premier said she is in lockstep with federal Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre.
Poilievre has stated he and his caucus will have nothing to do with Schwab or his WEF.
On her first day as Alberta’s premier last month, Smith stated that people who are not vaccinated against Covid are the most discriminated group she has seen in her lifetime.
In response, the Canadian mainstream media is pursuing a thorough hatchet campaign against Smith.
Media outlets consistently refer to all opposition to the WEF as being based on “conspiracy theories.”
As they say, if you want to know who is really in power, all you have to do is find out who you are not allowed to criticize.
After two years of authoritarian lockdowns and attempts to enforce vaccine passports in Canada, Alberta was one of the only regions in the country that asserted political opposition to executive dictates.
This helped to support the anti-vaccine passport protests by truckers and other Canadians.
It also led to Justin Trudeau using provisions for terrorism to confiscate donations to the movement.
Alberta’s Covid averages in terms of infections and deaths are no worse than provinces with strict vaccine and mask mandates.
The data proves once again that the mandates achieved nothing in terms of safety, but everything in terms of control.
The Canadian Press and other media outlets claim that criticism of the WEF is built on “online conspiracy accusations, unproven and debunked, that the forum is fronting a global cabal of string-pullers exploiting the pandemic to dismantle capitalism and introduce damaging socialist systems and social control measures, such as forcing people to take vaccines with tracking chips.”
Every “conspiracy” noted in that statement is true.
None of them have been “debunked” except perhaps the “tracking chip” claim, which is unnecessary because the WEF was already encouraging governments to use cell phone tracking apps to monitor the vaccine status and movements of their respective populations.
Many of these apps were approved by the CDC in the US, and they are mandatory in countries like China.
The WEF, acting as a kind of globalist think-tank for future policy initiatives, was instrumental in promoting many of the failed restrictions used by various national governments during the pandemic.
German econimist Klaus Schwab, the WEF’s leader and founder, specifically mentions in his writings that the institution saw the Covid pandemic as a perfect “opportunity” to implement what he calls the “Great Reset.”
The Great Reset agenda includes the concept of the “Shared Economy,” a global socialist technocracy meant to replace free markets and end capitalism as we know it.
As the WEF states, you will “own nothing, have no privacy” and you will like it.
This is not a conspiracy theory. This is an openly admitted conspiracy fact. It is undeniable.
The use of the “conspiracy theory” label is generally a tactic designed to circumvent fair debate based on facts and evidence.
If Canadian mainstream media outlets were forced to defend their position based on the information at hand, they would lose.
So, they instead try to inoculate their readers to opposing arguments by calling them “conspiracy theories” in the hope that those readers will never research the information further.
The Canadian media then cites quotations that specifically argue that not working with the WEF would put the Alberta public at a disadvantage because it would cut them off from information that the WEF provides.
It’s important to mention that there is no evidence that the WEF has provided any life-saving health information to date concerning the covid pandemic.
In fact, there is no evidence that the WEF is useful to the Canadian public in any way.
The mainstream media’s bizarre and antagonistic reaction to Smith’s shunning of a foreign organization of elitists that has no loyalty to the Canadian citizenry suggests that they may be operating from a foundation of bias.
Danielle Smith’s bravery in cutting off WEF influence from Alberta is being met with a dishonest media response.
Yet, in the long run, she is making the best decision possible.
Taking advice from a potential parasite is not good leadership.
As Slay News has highlighted, WEF leader Schwab boasted in 2017 that his organization has managed to “penetrate the cabinets” of governments around the world.
During the comments, Schwab mentioned the names of heads of governments in different countries that he said were under his control, including Canada’s PM Trudeau.
“Yesterday, I was at a reception for Prime Minister Trudeau and I would know that half of his cabinet or even more than half are actually our young global leaders of the World Economic Forum,” he said.
WATCH:
Klaus Schwab in 2017 at Harvard: "What we are very proud of, is that we penetrate the global cabinets of countries with our WEF Young Global Leaders." pic.twitter.com/dMsZWGbQ6a
— Tami Cam (@Kitsune_in_VA) January 24, 2022