Remember what the World Economic Forum famously stated?
You will ‘own nothing and be happy.’
https://twitter.com/wef/status/808328302213689344?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E808328302213689344%7Ctwgr%5Ea63174c5255615f86c2f4b2301212308e987987d%7Ctwcon%5Es1_&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fcitizenfreepress.com%2Fbreaking%2Fthis-is-an-actual-tweet-from-the-wef%2F
One item they’d love the serfs to not own is a car.
Cars, gas-powered vehicles in particular, opened a gateway of freedom for millions upon millions of people.
Yet, the Davos elitists don’t think the peasants should own a car.
Why?
To save the planet, of course!
In reality, it’s too entrap you in high-tech smart cities.
Another term floating around recently is ’15-minute cities.’
What’s a ’15-Minute City?’
- Where everything you need is within a 15-minute radius on foot or bike?
Watch this WEF video:
https://twitter.com/TinfoilMadHat/status/1610871983616540673
From the WEF:
One of the biggest urban ideas to emerge from the pandemic is the idea of the 15-minute city or 15-minute neighbourhood. Developed by French urbanist Carlos Moreno, 15-minute city refers to a place where all the necessities of daily life – shops, schools, workplaces, doctor’s offices, parks, libraries, restaurants and other amenities – are located in a short 15-minute walk or bike ride from home. In this way, each neighbourhood becomes an ‘isochrone’, an area that can be explored within a given time, giving all residents access to their needs a convenient walk away.
The 15-minute city aims to reorganize physical space around the human experience of time. Workers can live near their offices or co-working spaces, eliminating the commute. Anyone can walk to a small, nearby park without having to hunt for parking spaces. Community building will benefit too: parceling a city into smaller units makes it far more manageable from a social point of view.
It sounds like the global elites wish to entrap the peasants within a 15-minute radius from their homes.
Everything you need within a 15-minute walk or bike ride.
You don’t need a car.
It’s to save the planet.
Swiss National Council member Bastien Girod referred to ‘sustainable districts’ to explain why people don’t need a car.
“So I think what is important for policy is really to change the rules of the game. So that sustainability becomes the easier choice, not just for the people, but also for the companies,” Girod said.
“An important measure in Switzerland was to have support for renewable energy, for energy efficiency but also changing the way districts work,” he added.
“For instance, in Zurich, we have a lot of districts where you actually don’t need a car. Because all the activities, no school, buying something, everything you can do in walking distance.”
WATCH:
DAVOS WEF Open Forum: In Harmony with Nature: Bastien Girod – Member of the Swiss National Council breaks down the need for 15-minute smart neighbourhoods or as he called them sustainable districts so that way people dont need to own a car. pic.twitter.com/rFR4Mo6SVi
— SFT (@SikhForTruth) January 16, 2023
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