Just in case you thought that climate change had fallen off the globalist agenda, think again. As the following slab from CNN explains, all of the pieces are being fitted together in the Great Reset. As I see it, the fear campaign of climate change, with movements like Extinction Rebellion, did not have the immediate dramatic impact upon the ordinary deplorables like the threat of dying from disease. Covid, apart from everything else, is very immediate, while collapse from climate change is somewhat remote and distant. Nothing scares people like a good plandemic. The article shows how the Great Reset will work, if the elites get their way.
https://edition.cnn.com/2021/04/13/world/climate-change-covid-19-lessons-equity/index.html
“This enemy does not recognize geopolitical borders. It has the power to wreak havoc on national economies, to cost people their livelihoods and their lives. It seeps through the smallest cracks in our social fabric, targeting the poor and the vulnerable among us. Sound familiar?
The Covid-19 pandemic and climate change have led to catastrophic fallout on a global scale, necessitating cross-border cooperation. Both also cause exponentially more harm to those of lower socioeconomic status.
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"We were caught unprepared by the virus, but we've also been caught unprepared by the natural disasters that have been exacerbated and caused by climate change," said Josh Apte, a professor of environmental science at the University of California-Berkeley's School of Public Health. "And this is because, even in really prosperous societies, we haven't attended to the equity infrastructure that we need in order to protect people."
The pandemic has also preyed on underlying economic and health care disparities. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data shows that Black, Hispanic and Native American people that are infected with Covid-19 are far more likely to be hospitalized than other groups.
The privilege that allows some to work from home and avoid contact with strangers is the same privilege that allows others to work in air-conditioned office buildings, while manual laborers suffer outdoors in dangerous temperatures. These conditions will only get worse and more erratic as climate change accelerates, says Apte, and those lower on the socioeconomic ladder will suffer the brunt of the consequences.
"COVID has been manageable for some people in society and totally unmanageable for others because many societies around the world don't have the safety net to help people when the bottom falls out."
However, by bringing these systemic inequalities to the forefront of the public consciousness, experts say the pandemic could inspire us to see the world as truly interconnected. As a result, we may be able to design equitable programs and offer resources to combat the growing divide between rich and poor.
"All of our planning going forward needs to account for the increased risk for vulnerable populations," said Hill. "Those who have the least means, those who have faced historic discrimination -- they suffer the most."
When it comes to the pandemic response, we have already seen seeds of equity beginning to sprout. The COVID-19 Vaccines Global Access (COVAX) program, an initiative led in part by UNICEF and the World Health Organization, is a coalition of wealthier nations and the European Union Commission whose aim is to increase access to Covid-19 vaccines in developing countries. As of April 12, the multilateral organization has shipped 38 million Covid-19 vaccines to 106 participant nationssuch as Ghana, Moldova, Belize, and Vietnam.
There are also signs that the Biden administration is putting equity and environmental justice at the center of its plans to fight climate change.
Biden promises 'once-in-a-generation' investment during pitch for $2 trillion infrastructure and climate plan
President Biden recently unveiled a sweeping infrastructure plan that would invest hundreds of billions of dollars into clean energy and climate change mitigation research. But the plan also seeks to reform foundational social systems that have suffered from both continual federal disinvestment and the pandemic. It includes investments that the administration says will improve access to affordable housing, clean water, and reduce air pollution, especially in communities of color and rural parts of the country.
According to Hill, we must use this approach to avert the worst consequences of climate change globally.
"We need to help these countries deal with the impact of climate change, and make sure that they are able to turn to clean energy sources rather than dirty energy sources," she said. "It is in our interest to help countries better prepare both for climate risks and to combat the virus, because we will suffer reverberations as a result of other governments being unable to handle the issues in their own countries.”
As can be seen, while pandemics, would from a common-sense perspective, be best dealt with by closing borders, which was done to some extent, although Trump could not restrain his globalism, the elites still see this as needing more global governance. Any excuse will do.