11 Comments

The thing is that the circular economy model could easily work alongside the current way of doing things, but as usual, the WEF puppets appear to want to use it to destroy humanity, not to enhance it.

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Unfortunately, the Wayback Machine also censors so the WEF article on the plan to make Sri Lanka rich is gone. Hopefully, the Dutch farmers will be more successful than the Canadian truckers!!

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The link in the article works for me. However, here's a selection of other snapshots:

https://archive.ph/https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2018/08/this-is-how-we-will-make-sri-lanka-rich-by-2025/

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Thanks, much appreciated!

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Some abattoirs feed in the cattle via a circular route, as this avoids all the upset and resistance to their impending slaughter, so perhaps the concept of a circular economy is spot on. As for Dame Ellen Patricia MacArthur, how could anyone trust someone who's entire music choice for Desert Island Discs came from music used on documentaries on Dame Ellen Patricia MacArthur?

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BTW congratulations threadsirish on being a cited source for Dr. Mercola. I subscribed to his daily emails for the last 20+ years, and the Doc has no agenda. Pretty pleased to see you credited as a source for today's (July 13) email. He cited your June 18 posting in his article about Dutch Farmers Uprising. He deletes his articles after 48 hours, though. Such is the world we navigate through.

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Informative article, will be linking once again @https://nothingnewunderthesun2016.com/

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When you want to talk about pollution and responsibility look no further than inside the room at the WEF. The corporations began to unravel and pollute the Earth in earnest in the seventies. They cared only about profit as they produced a sea of plastics, containers, parts to often replace the returnable and recyclable system that was already in place and they still are. The only difference is that now that they have polluted it they want us all to suffer the fix while they continue to enjoy their precious bottom line.

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exactly...privatize the profits and socialize the costs.

Also I am wondering if the H & M partner shown above is the same H & M that destroys its merchandise, as per many news outlets including the the Huff Post which reported: In 2017 it was revealed that fashion behemoth H&M — which has made much of its green agenda with recycling points in stores and what it calls a Conscious Collection — burned about 19 tons of obsolete clothing (the equivalent to 50,000 pairs of jeans) in a waste-to-energy facility run by one of Sweden's energy giants...

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Yes, carbon credits for us to micromanage and limit our every move, but private jet trips for them. I can’t believe anyone takes all this carbon credits stuff seriously while private jets still exist. If these people really cared about the environment, wouldn’t that be the first thing to go?

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This was a blood-chilling read! I was reminded of an article about Carrie Johnson renting her wardrobe. Sustainable, you know! It's already here: Citibikes, Zipcars, shared office space, even renting a coffin for your funeral. Smart money management articles insidiously push the agenda: https://moneysavedmoneyearned.com/things-you-should-rent-instead-of-buy/. That Sociable link mentioned "normalizing the concept....". Unfortunately, in this new service model, the consumer becomes the consumed.

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