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You will own nothing, seriously?

268 replies

theides · 03/10/2023 06:59

Exciting brave new future, isn't it!

lizwatt.com/articles/what-is-the-great-reset/

OP posts:
Thread gallery
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godmum56 · 03/10/2023 08:18

Nousernamesleftatall · 03/10/2023 08:11

The statement was said in a video produced by the World Economic Forum and published on their platforms. It was taken down after it got backlash so not a conspiracy theory. It’s all tied into UN agenda 2030 which the WEF and UN said at a press conference they plan to accelerate together after Covid. The U.K. government has published what it will entail and ideally they say you will be allowed purchase one item of new clothing a year and never be able to fly. It’s people like you that dismiss this slow walk into totalitarian that will wake up one day and think how did we get here. This plan is decades in the making and many world leaders talk openly about it yet you are denying it because WEF owned fact checkers tell you to.

I'd love to see links to your statements please?

TheLongGloriesOfTheWinterMoon · 03/10/2023 08:19

Nousernamesleftatall · 03/10/2023 08:11

The statement was said in a video produced by the World Economic Forum and published on their platforms. It was taken down after it got backlash so not a conspiracy theory. It’s all tied into UN agenda 2030 which the WEF and UN said at a press conference they plan to accelerate together after Covid. The U.K. government has published what it will entail and ideally they say you will be allowed purchase one item of new clothing a year and never be able to fly. It’s people like you that dismiss this slow walk into totalitarian that will wake up one day and think how did we get here. This plan is decades in the making and many world leaders talk openly about it yet you are denying it because WEF owned fact checkers tell you to.

That you Liz?

The STATEMENT wasn't a conspiracy theory. The conspiracy theorists took the statement and misinterpreted it.

As the WEF has been in existence for more than 3 decades, with all its plans etc 👀👀👀 why do you think that (according to people like Liz) it only decided to start controlling our minds and what we had for dinner during COVID?

TheLongGloriesOfTheWinterMoon · 03/10/2023 08:20

godmum56 · 03/10/2023 08:18

I'd love to see links to your statements please?

She'll say the MSM media have removed all evidence.
Twas ever thus 😂

Ginmonkeyagain · 03/10/2023 08:21

@Nousernamesleftatall put on your critical thinking hat for one tiny moment and consider if that is at all likely. Have you met our current government?

Honestly you sound as insane as the peope who think being required to attend theboffice in person once a week is a big conspiracy cooked up by the government and the owners of Pret a Manger.

theides · 03/10/2023 08:23

what the WEF couldn't get taken down!

www.weforum.org/agenda/2016/11/8-predictions-for-the-world-in-2030/

OP posts:
theides · 03/10/2023 08:25

theides · 03/10/2023 08:23

They thought they did but here it is, in al its inglorious vanity!

web.archive.org/web/20220818143555/www.weforum.org/agenda/2016/11/8-predictions-for-the-world-in-2030/

OP posts:
Deathbyfluffy · 03/10/2023 08:26

lliij8 · 03/10/2023 07:59

Already, I find that lots of great films I'd love to watch aren't available on any streaming platform. I'll have to chase down a DVD – and I didn't even have a DVD player until recently.

That's a lot of culture, art and thought lost, potentially.

Oh, and maybe you think that having everything digital is a good thing, because it can all be preserved forever? Nope! Data degradation is a thing.

Edited

All of the above can be mitigated by downloading said content and storing it on a non-volatile medium.
If degradation is a concern, you’re storing it wrong.

theides · 03/10/2023 08:27

And here's the lady who coined the phrase at the wef!

You will own nothing, seriously?
OP posts:
TheLongGloriesOfTheWinterMoon · 03/10/2023 08:29

Ginmonkeyagain · 03/10/2023 08:21

@Nousernamesleftatall put on your critical thinking hat for one tiny moment and consider if that is at all likely. Have you met our current government?

Honestly you sound as insane as the peope who think being required to attend theboffice in person once a week is a big conspiracy cooked up by the government and the owners of Pret a Manger.

You should see what she(?) thinks about COVID and vaccines.

Spoiler alert.

Funny how Great Reset and anti-vax shit go together.

TheLongGloriesOfTheWinterMoon · 03/10/2023 08:34

AlisonDonut · 03/10/2023 08:28

https://www.bizpacreview.com/2023/06/15/amazon-shuts-down-customers-smart-home-when-delivery-man-thinks-he-hears-a-racist-slur-report-1368746/

It is already happening. These are just teething problems.

It isn't a conspiracy theory if it is all part of the UN Sustainability Agenda.

My God!

My WiFi has been on the blink since Saturday.

The 👀👀👀 have cut off my access!!

Or, in the real world. Technological device malfunctions. Hold the front page.

MrsDanversGlidesAgain · 03/10/2023 08:36

Honestly you sound as insane as the peope who think being required to attend theboffice in person once a week is a big conspiracy cooked up by the government and the owners of Pret a Manger

TBF there were quite a lot of people on here in 2021 saying that they weren't going back to the office just to benefit Pret a Manger.

User174085934 · 03/10/2023 08:38

A lot of young people don't own anything. I stream music and have most the streaming channels but I still buy the CDs of my favourite artists and own DVDs of my favourite boxsets, I own my car and my house, fortunately I am old enough to miss the future when people won't own anything

AlisonDonut · 03/10/2023 08:42

TheLongGloriesOfTheWinterMoon · 03/10/2023 08:34

My God!

My WiFi has been on the blink since Saturday.

The 👀👀👀 have cut off my access!!

Or, in the real world. Technological device malfunctions. Hold the front page.

It wasn't a malfunction.

User174085934 · 03/10/2023 08:43

What a good job I probably have enough clothes and shoes to last me until I die

theides · 03/10/2023 08:50

8 predictions for the world in 2030
Nov 12, 2016

Facing the future
Ceri Parker
Commissioning Editor, Agenda, World Economic Forum
For more information, watch sessions on the Global Economic Outlook, the Global Science Outlook and The Future of Consumption from our Annual Meeting 2017.
As Brexit and Donald Trump’s victory show, predicting even the immediate future is no easy feat. When it comes to what our world will look like in the medium-term – how we will organise our cities, where we will get our power from, what we will eat, what it will mean to be a refugee – it gets even trickier. But imagining the societies of tomorrow can give us a fresh perspective on the challenges and opportunities of today.
We asked experts from our Global Future Councils for their take on the world in 2030, and these are the results, from the death of shopping to the resurgence of the nation state.

  1. All products will have become services. “I don't own anything. I don't own a car. I don't own a house. I don't own any appliances or any clothes,” writes Danish MP Ida Auken. Shopping is a distant memory in the city of 2030, whose inhabitants have cracked clean energy and borrow what they need on demand. It sounds utopian, until she mentions that her every move is tracked and outside the city live swathes of discontents, the ultimate depiction of a society split in two.
  1. There is a global price on carbon. China took the lead in 2017 with a market for trading the right to emit a tonne of CO2, setting the world on a path towards a single carbon price and a powerful incentive to ditch fossil fuels, predicts Jane Burston, Head of Climate and Environment at the UK’s National Physical Laboratory. Europe, meanwhile, found itself at the centre of the trade in cheap, efficient solar panels, as prices for renewables fell sharply.
  1. US dominance is over. We have a handful of global powers. Nation states will have staged a comeback, writes Robert Muggah, Research Director at the Igarapé Institute. Instead of a single force, a handful of countries – the U.S., Russia, China, Germany, India and Japan chief among them – show semi-imperial tendencies. However, at the same time, the role of the state is threatened by trends including the rise of cities and the spread of online identities,

Image: REUTERS/Francois Lenoir

  1. Farewell hospital, hello home-spital. Technology will have further disrupted disease, writes Melanie Walker, a medical doctor and World Bank advisor. The hospital as we know it will be on its way out, with fewer accidents thanks to self-driving cars and great strides in preventive and personalised medicine. Scalpels and organ donors are out, tiny robotic tubes and bio-printed organs are in.
  1. We are eating much less meat. Rather like our grandparents, we will treat meat as a treat rather than a staple, writes Tim Benton, Professor of Population Ecology at the University of Leeds, UK. It won’t be big agriculture or little artisan producers that win, but rather a combination of the two, with convenience food redesigned to be healthier and less harmful to the environment.
  1. Today’s Syrian refugees, 2030’s CEOs. Highly educated Syrian refugees will have come of age by 2030, making the case for the economic integration of those who have been forced to flee conflict. The world needs to be better prepared for populations on the move, writes Lorna Solis, Founder and CEO of the NGO Blue Rose Compass, as climate change will have displaced 1 billion people.

Image: REUTERS/Muhammad Hamed

  1. The values that built the West will have been tested to breaking point. We forget the checks and balances that bolster our democracies at our peril, writes Kenneth Roth, Executive Director of Human Rights Watch.
  1. “By the 2030s, we'll be ready to move humans toward the Red Planet.” What’s more, once we get there, we’ll probably discover evidence of alien life, writes Ellen Stofan, Chief Scientist at NASA. Big science will help us to answer big questions about life on earth, as well as opening up practical applications for space technology.

Image: REUTERS/Jim Urquhart

License and Republishing
World Economic Forum articles may be republished in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International Public License, and in accordance with our Terms of Use.
The views expressed in this article are those of the author alone and not the World Economic Forum.
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OP posts:
OceanicBoundlessness · 03/10/2023 08:52

ReturnOfTheRainMac · 03/10/2023 07:26

This has been spoken about for a long time and some of the younger generations are there.

They don't and won't own their house, their cars are leased and to be handed back at the end, even phones and tvs are rented. Everything is rented or subscription based.

Yes. This is how a number of my husband's colleagues live. Lots of rented or subscription based things so that they can swap to the latest versions asap.

Us, we get something and run it into the ground. Our 32 inch TV is 12. My last car was 17.

I guess we happily pay a subscription to Spotify though my kids prefer to have CDs and vinyl too.

totaldeniallimitation · 03/10/2023 08:55

Having had quite a bit of contact with conspiracy theorists and looked a little into their ideas, there is a kernel of truth in some of them. Just wildly conflated into something deliberately conspiratorial by a malicious elite who want to control us all for unexplained reasons.

However there are some legitimate concerns about who can control access to money, culture and knowledge etc, as pp highlighted especially when it is all digital. And there are those who actively campaign to limit / end exposure of others to those whose ideas they don’t like, even when those ideas are reasonable and evidence based and held by most people in society ( such as those who believe in the material reality of sex and it’s importance). We should not be blasé about that, I think.

EmmaEmerald · 03/10/2023 08:57

Nousernamesleftatall · 03/10/2023 08:11

The statement was said in a video produced by the World Economic Forum and published on their platforms. It was taken down after it got backlash so not a conspiracy theory. It’s all tied into UN agenda 2030 which the WEF and UN said at a press conference they plan to accelerate together after Covid. The U.K. government has published what it will entail and ideally they say you will be allowed purchase one item of new clothing a year and never be able to fly. It’s people like you that dismiss this slow walk into totalitarian that will wake up one day and think how did we get here. This plan is decades in the making and many world leaders talk openly about it yet you are denying it because WEF owned fact checkers tell you to.

Yes, me and my colleagues read the original article in 2014.

the subsequent "it was taken out of context" was ridiculous. It was clear this was considered a desirable model by leaders and politicians. I don't know why any of this is dismissed as CT when it's in action everywhere already.

I actually tried to get in on property investments in those blocks that are rental only - but it's a closed club.

I have kept hard copy books and DVDs of stuff that might be banned for wrongthink.

ReturnOfTheRainMac · 03/10/2023 09:00

@OceanicBoundlessness another great example. We don't even own the music that we listen to. Most of lyrics last few cars haven't even had a cd player. The world is a vastly different place to even 10 years ago.

ReturnOfTheRainMac · 03/10/2023 09:01

My not lyrics. This latest iPhone update does me no favours.

MoonShinesBright · 03/10/2023 09:01

This reply has been deleted

This has been deleted by MNHQ for breaking our Talk Guidelines.

LumiB · 03/10/2023 09:02

Not really a conspiracy theory if you can go onto their website and read it 😆

EmmaEmerald · 03/10/2023 09:06

This reply has been deleted

This has been deleted by MNHQ for breaking our Talk Guidelines.

You think what is a spoof?

OceanicBoundlessness · 03/10/2023 09:08

ReturnOfTheRainMac · 03/10/2023 09:00

@OceanicBoundlessness another great example. We don't even own the music that we listen to. Most of lyrics last few cars haven't even had a cd player. The world is a vastly different place to even 10 years ago.

The issue of books and music and film disappearing or being edited (like the Roald Dahl books nearly were) had already been discussed, but the subscription model for the temporary owning of goods is so much more expensive usually than just going out and buying something. Not to mention the stress of it. We've never gone down the route of leasing a car because then there's extra mental and physical labour involved in looking after it for someone else as you have to hand it back.