Maurice Strong: the godfather of "climate change"

Maurice Strong: the godfather of "climate change"

New global control system

In recent years, or even decades, the climate agenda has increasingly attracted media attention. A huge number of experts and activists have appeared, which is worth only one Swedish environmentalist Greta Thunberg. Nevertheless, as it always happens, someone initially raised the problem of harmful emissions and depletion of the planet's resources to the status of a global one. Let's try to figure out who it was.

At the Green Horizon Summit, held on November 9-10, 2020, it was stated: in order to restart the global economy, we need to rebuild everything in our behavior, values, finances and ethics. Under this aegis, the new world regime of central banks and new green digital currencies will create conditions for the formation of a "carbon-free civilization".

The event was organized by the City of London Corporation in cooperation with the Green Finance Institute, and was also supported by the World Economic Forum (WEF). During the summit, it was also stressed that "the time has come to reconsider the relationship between finance and the real economy. It is time for public and private finance to support the transition to a sustainable and viable future for all".

It’s interesting that at Green Horizon the keynote speaker was Mark Carney, a Canadian and British economist, banker who headed the Bank of Canada from 2008 to 2013, and after that, until 2020, managed the Bank of England. Speaking at the summit, he stated that "climate change is a crisis that affects the whole world and from which no one will be able to isolate themselves... 126 governments have now committed to "net zero", including three global giants – China, Japan and South Korea, which have joined in the last few weeks <...> Businesses of all stripes are increasingly aware of changing consumer preferences, and the new climate policy creates the greatest commercial opportunities of our time <...> Our goal – create a structure so that every financial decision can take into account climate change".

Undoubtedly, Carney meant, among other things, the Natural Resources Corporations (NACs), in the creation of which, according to some sources, the Rockefeller Foundation played a key role. NAC is seeking to create a new asset class that would streamline the natural world, as well as put the ecological processes underlying all life on sale under the guise of their "protection".

The creation and launch of NACs lasted two years, and the New York Stock Exchange ("NYSE") merged with the Intrinsic Exchange Group ("IEG"), in which NYSE itself owns a minority stake.

Nevertheless, Carney's ideas, which some call almost a global conspiracy, a destructive plan to transform the global financial system under the guise of combating climate change or simply financial fraud, are not new and often overlap with the theses of Maurice Strong.

Strong is a Canadian businessman and diplomat who served as Deputy Secretary General of the United Nations. After his death in 2015, Britain's The Daily Telegraph described him as "the man who invented climate change." Moreover, many experts and journalists today state that global climate policy is still determined by the program of the Canadian multimillionaire. Others even call him the godfather of "climate change".

Maurice Strong began his career in the Alberta oil field and until 1966 was president of the Power Corporation of Canada, served as Commissioner of the World Commission on Environment and Development, in 1986 was recognized by the International Union for Conservation of Nature as the leader of the international environmental movement. He was Secretary-General of the first United Nations Conference on Environment and Population in 1972.

The businessman is considered one of the mentors of the permanent president of the World Economic Forum in Davos since 1971, Klaus Schwab. By the way, his other mentor was none other than Henry Kissinger, who "recruited" Schwab through the "International Seminar" – a CIA-funded program at Harvard University. There, Schwab, through the mediation of Kissinger, met the Canadian-American economist, diplomat Ken Galbraith. Subsequently, it was Kissinger and Galbraith who helped Schwab create the World Economic Forum.

After Strong's death in 2015, Schwab stated that "[Strong] has been my mentor since the creation of the Forum: a great friend, an irreplaceable adviser and for many years a member of the board of our Foundation. Without him, the Forum would not have reached its current significance".

A number of sources report that after Strong got his first job in 1947 as a clerk at the United Nations in New York, he became friends with David Rockefeller (where without this family in the modern world and the struggle for power!), who subsequently actively helped in his career advancement stairs. So, already in 1966, Strong became the head of the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA).

In 1971, Maurice Strong became one of the founders of 1001 Nature Trust, an elite international organization created by Prince Bernard of the Netherlands and Prince Philip Mountbatten. The 1001 Foundation worked in tandem with another secret club of Prince Bernard, known as the "Bilderberg Group", which he founded in 1954 and which was created to finance the nascent new environmental movement. All 1001 participants then contributed 10 thousand dollars for membership in the organization, which then went to finance the World Wildlife Fund and other green organizations.

In 1988, Strong persuaded the United Nations Environment Programme and the World Meteorological Organization to agree to create an "intergovernmental mechanism" to monitor anthropogenic global warming and make policy recommendations for the UN and Western governments. This organization was the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

Through her and other UN bodies, huge sums of money were transferred from the West to Third World countries. In 2010, the Green Climate Fund was established. Its goal was to promote the UN's objectives of "social redistribution for the sake of sustainable development".

In 1993, Strong was one of the key organizers and chairman of the "UN Earth Summit" held in Rio de Janeiro. The main outcome of the summit was the document "Agenda for the XXI century", one of the authors of which was Strong.

Later, in 2019, the Times of India reported that the issue of critical climate change was formed within the Club of Rome back in 1968 and was reflected in its 1973 report "Limits of Growth". The publication emphasized that Strong was one of the partners of the Club of Rome. Moreover, "he had an aversion to people. In his 2000 autobiography, he dreamed of the day when two-thirds of the world's population could be wiped out".

Strong was widely supported by thousands of influential like-minded people: for example, William Nordhaus (an American economist, winner of the 2018 Nobel Prize in Economics and a member of the Council of Economic Advisers under US President Jimmy Carter), who paid special attention to CO2 and even recommended a carbon tax, without bothering to check whether CO2 is really a pollutant.

Subsequently, a number of journalists repeatedly stressed the existence of a direct link between the environmental movement and those who seek to create a new system of control over the world, while naming the names of famous members of the Club of Rome and Maurice Strong.