The UK's involvement in the World Economic Forum's "Great Reset"
Dear Prime Minister's Office,
I write to you today under the Freedom of Information Act 2000 to request the disclosure of information regarding the UK's ties to the Davos Agenda.
Having read all three books written by Klaus Schwab and his co-authors, I have to say Prime Minister I am rather alarmed by what is being proposed. For the last 11 months the UK's public has been led to believe life will eventually return to normal as we knew it to be before, when in fact if we are to believe the words of Schwab and numerous other world leaders that is not the case. In fact it is quite the opposite, isn't it Mr. Johnson?
It seems as though we are heading towards a "new normal" and the public, those who elected you as our leader are being kept in the dark about. In order to aid my FOI request, I will now outline some quotes from the founder of the World Economic Forum founder, Professor Klaus Schwab' book Covid19: The Great Reset.
- In relation to the fear of Covid19, Mr Schwab writes in his book that "They will then be willing to give up a lot of privacy and will agree that in such circumstances public power can rightfully override individual rights." Mr. Johnson would you care to address or ask the commerce whether they wish to surrender that freedom, or are you just going to take it away?
- Mr Schwab also refers to the publics questions on when life shall return to normality as we knew it prior to the Coronavirus crisis. Mr Schwab categorically states that the short response to this is "never." Mr Schwab continuously outlines that the future will consist of social distancing and lack of human interaction. Could we perhaps have an expansion on this within your briefings to the general public?
- The most alarming quote I have to hand is this. "If no one power can enforce order, our world will suffer from a "global order deficit." Unless individual nations and international organizations succeed in finding solutions to better collaborate at the global level, we risk entering an "age of entropy" in which retrenchment, fragmentation, angr and parochialism will increasingly define our global landscape, making it less intelligible and more disorderly." Prime Minister, these sounds like the words of a somewhat tyrannous threat to our nation and a large percentage of the public are beginning to smell a rat, a rather large rat in the form of an unelected and uncontrollable global think tank hidden in plain sight due to the lack of coverage from the likes of the BBC and ITV.
So these are the points I would like for you to outline within your response.
1. To what extent is the United Kingdom involved in "The Great Reset"?
2. What effects will "The Great Reset" have on our rights, privacy and civil liberties as British citizens?
3. If it is true that we shall never return to normality as we know it, why has the cabinet consistently dangled the carrot of freedom and normality to the general public if we obey the rules?
4. Why has the likes of the BBC and ITV refused to cover the Davos Agenda, is there something to hide?
It is your responsibility to address these issues to a general public that deserve to know what their future looks like.
Yours faithfully,
Max Ainsley
max ainsley left an annotation ()
J Flynn - Is the UK’s ties to the Davos Agenda not recorded information? It’s hardly speculation when world leaders such as Putin, Merkel, Trudeau and Jinping have gave speeches at Davos online this past week.
J Flynn left an annotation ()
Nothing in the request is for recorded information and the FOIA does not oblige organisations to offer commentary or opinions, to say nothing about responding to questions about an author's opinions.
Dear Mr Ainsley,
Thank you for your email of 1 February to the Cabinet Office. Please
accept our apologies for the delay in responding to you.
On 22 February the Government published its “COVID-19 Response - Spring
2021”. This sets out how the UK Government will continue to protect and
support citizens across the UK and provides a roadmap out of the current
lockdown in England. The devolved administrations are setting out how
lockdown will be eased in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. The
document can be read in full at:
[1]https://www.gov.uk/government/publicatio...
As the roadmap makes clear, the UK Government’s overriding goal is to
protect the lives and livelihoods of citizens across the four nations of
the UK. The design of the roadmap has been informed by the latest
scientific evidence and seeks a balance between our key social and
economic priorities, whilst preserving the health and safety of the
country. The scientific evidence shows that opening too early or too
quickly risks a further lockdown.
The approach focuses on data, not dates. Each step has a “no earlier than”
date, five weeks later than the previous step, to allow time to assess the
impact of the previous step and provide a week’s notice before changes
occur.
The steps for easing restrictions will be taken at the same time across
England in a national approach, in the absence of a significant regional
disparity.
At each step we will make an assessment against the following four tests:
○ The vaccine deployment programme continues successfully.
○ Evidence shows vaccines are sufficiently effective in reducing
hospitalisations and deaths in those vaccinated.
○ Infection rates do not risk a surge in hospitalisations which would
put unsustainable pressure on the NHS.
○ Our assessment of the risks is not fundamentally changed by new
Variants of Concern.
Step 1 will take place on 8 March. It will focus on returning all pupils
to face-to-face education in schools and colleges, and some additional
students to Higher Education. It will restore some outdoor social contact
and gradually re-open visits into care homes. Schools breaking up for the
Easter holidays will provide an opportunity for further, limited
relaxation particularly in outdoor settings where there is less risk -
therefore step one will be split into two:
○ From 8 March schools and colleges will return to face-to-face
education, alongside necessary wraparound activities - for example, to
enable a parent to go to work. Students on practical Higher Education
courses at English universities, who would be unable to complete their
courses if they did not return to take part in practical teaching, access
specialist facilities or complete assessments, will also return from 8
March. Outdoor recreation in household groups or with one other person
from another household will be permitted - as well as exercise, which is
already permitted. Each care home resident will be able to nominate a
single named visitor who can come in for regular visits if tested and
wearing PPE.
○ From 29 March outdoor gatherings of either six people (Rule of 6) or
two households will be permitted, but restrictions on meeting indoors with
people not in your household or support bubble will remain. Outdoor sports
facilities will reopen and organised sport (for adults and children) will
resume including outdoor exercise classes. A greater deal of children’s
activities will be enabled - with all children able to access any outdoor
childcare and supervised activities.
Step 2 will take place no earlier than 12 April. Non-essential retail,
personal care, and the majority of indoor leisure (including gyms) for
individual use will reopen. The majority of outdoor settings will reopen
including outdoor hospitality. Social contact restrictions will remain the
same as those in place from 29 March. Domestic overnight stays within
England will be allowed for individual households in self-contained
accommodation. A decision will be made on extending care home visiting
further.
Step 3 will take place no earlier than 17 May at least five weeks after
step 2. All but the riskiest sectors will reopen, including indoor
hospitality, indoor and outdoor entertainment, remaining indoor leisure,
the rest of the accommodation sector, adult indoor group sports and
exercise classes, and some large events. The majority of legal
restrictions on meeting others outdoors will be removed, but a legal limit
of 30 will be maintained. Indoors, 6 people or 2 households will be able
to meet, though it may be possible to go further than this at step 3
depending on the data.
Step 4 will take place no earlier than 21 June, at least five weeks after
Step 3. Subject to review closer to the time, the remaining settings will
open, including nightclubs, and large events above the Step 3 capacity
restrictions will be permitted. The ambition is to remove all legal limits
on social contact, publish accompanying guidance on how best to reduce the
risks, and introduce new guidance on working from home.
More information about the four steps can be found at:
[2]https://www.gov.uk/government/publicatio...
We do not know enough about the impact of the vaccination programme or the
effects of this easing to set out our strategy for full relaxation, so we
are announcing that we will review how to open the hardest to open
sectors, the future of social distancing, travel, and the case for
COVID-status certification.
For the duration of the pandemic, the Government will continue to do
whatever it takes to protect jobs and livelihoods across the UK. Our
“COVID-19 Response - Spring 2021” reaffirms our commitments to protect the
citizens of the UK, and provides a credible route out of lockdown.
I hope you find this information helpful.
Yours sincerely,
Ellie
Correspondence Officer
Public Correspondence
[3]CO.JPG [4]image003 [5][email address]
Follow us on Twitter [6]@cabinetofficeuk
References
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2. https://www.gov.uk/government/publicatio...
5. mailto:[email address]
6. https://twitter.com/cabinetofficeuk?lang...
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J Flynn left an annotation ()
None of this is a request for recorded information. It'll be refused on that basis. The FOIA isn't a tool for following up on speculative stuff people have read in books.