The Global Depopulation Agenda, Up Real Close By Mrs Vera West
Igor Chudov has documented the chilling facts behind the World Economic Forum and UN proposal to reduce the number of births over the next 70 year from 130 million to 24 million per year. As he shows, the organisation Earth4All, a think tank that sprang from the Club of Rome, is also championing this agenda, one which the Club of Rome had. Earth4All wants a reduction of childbirths by 81 percent by the year 2100 compared to the present level. They have a comprehensive agenda which involves first a massive transfer of resources from the West to the Third World, as increasing wealth levels will supposedly reduce the birth rate. And as well as part of this, the program requires replicating the strategy which has been done in the West of “empowering” women, so that they are working in the workforce and to busy to worry about having children.
This succeeded in the West, but I doubt it will do much in African nations like Nigeria, as the population momentum is now too great.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demographics_of_Nigeria
https://www.igor-chudov.com/p/a-giant-leap-plan-to-reduce-birth
“The “thought leaders” who generate ideas for the World Economic Forum and the United Nations propose measures to reduce the number of births in the next 70 years from 130 million to about 24 million per year. That is about a five-times reduction!
Their radical plans are public and very specific.
The organization “Earth4All”, an influential sustainability think tank originating from the Club of Rome, plans to save the planet with the scenario having a fitting name, “Giant Leap.”
Their plan, aiming to radically transform human existence and governance on the entire planet, is quite detailed. The most important outcome of their project would be a reduction of childbirths by 81% by the year 2100 compared to the current level.
The projections are detailed in their proposal. (pages 45-46). I collated two charts together so that you can compare them. They contrast “business as usual” (on the left) with the result of their “Giant Leap” plan being fully implemented (on the right).
The Giant Leap plan (right bottom corner) reduces childbirths from the current 130 million per year to about 24 million per year globally by the year 2100.
As Earth4All explains, they originated from the Club of Rome:
Earth for All can trace its origins to The Club of Rome commissioned report The Limits to Growth published 50 years ago. Back then scientists used early computer models to show that Earth’s finite resources would eventually buckle under the weight of material consumption. Food production would fall, followed by a precipitous fall in population. Many people were shocked by the conclusion that pushing beyond the limits of the planet could lead to collapse. Over the last 50 years the world has followed the report’s worst-case scenario and we are beginning to see deep fractures in the Earth system and within societies. With Earth for All we could have explored more collapse scenarios, but we believe our future will be built on economic optimism not despair.
The same person, Sandrine Dixson-Decleve, leads Earth4all and the Club of Rome:
Earth4All is not a fringe organization. It generated the ideas that guided the World Economic Forum and the United Nations. Compare, for example, Earth4All’s Giant Leap plan (on the left) with UN’s “Sustainable Development Goals” (on the right).
I must disappoint conspiracy theory aficionados: the main idea of the plan to reduce births does not mention vaccines, toxic chemicals, or 5G. (I have no access to non-public information)
The publicly announced plan boringly amounts to removing many existing reasons for having children. It also sounds like many very nice, progressive, feel-good ideas - that have far-reaching consequences!
The Earth4All Plan - The Turnarounds
A few specific points are worth mentioning.
Impoverished people and smallholder farmers tend to have children to help with the family farms or as a social safety net for older age. So, the plan proposes to eliminate poverty by initiating massive economic transfers from wealthy countries to impoverished countries:
Noting that women with free time tend to have children, Earth4All recommends empowering women, (with many beneficial effects,) which would make womenfolk busy with life goals other than having children.
Economic growth, with steady expansion of housing, roads, and resources, also favors having children who can easily start another household after they grow up. Instead of economic growth, Earth4All and the WEF advocate for “degrowth,” that is, reduction in the resources such as housing or food consumed.”
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