by JD Heyes, Natural News:
If you listen closely enough, the globalist power brokers who attend the annual World Economic Forum events tell you what’s in store for the planet, and some panelists dropped a huge hint at the last WEF confab last week in Davos, Switzerland.
Specifically, a group of panel members predicted that the world would face a “catastrophic cyber event” within the next two years.
A clip of Jeremy Jurgens, the WEF’s Managing Director and head of the Center for the Fourth Industrial Revolution, revealed what the globalist deep state has in store for we, the peons, in the near future, claiming to base the remarks on the results of his organization’s “Global Security Outlook Report 2023,” according to the outlet Valiant News.
TRUTH LIVES on at https://sgtreport.tv/
Translation: The globalists can’t get the peons to give up their modern lives fast enough with scare tactics like “global warming” and “climate change” so they will crash the grid and individual economies to drive the masses into slavery by force.
“We’re here today to share the findings of the World Economic Forum’s Global Security Outlook Report 2023,” Jurgens noted, according to the outlet. “The most striking finding that we found is that 93% of cyber leaders and 86% of business leaders believe that the geopolitical instability makes a catastrophic cyber event likely in the next two years.”
The report “examines the cybersecurity trends that will impact our economies and societies in the year to come,” while it describes how businesses should be more prepared to face potential cyber threats. In addition, the report recommends an increase in hiring cyber experts based on “diversity and inclusion” as a “broad solution.”
You know these people are not serious when they instruct companies to focus on “diversity and inclusion” to beef up their cybersecurity rather than education, training, experience, and demonstrated competence — which means they are going to trigger the cyber event.
“Cyber talent recruitment and retention continues to be a key challenge for managing cyber resilience. A broad solution to increase the supply of cyber professionals is to expand and promote inclusion and diversity efforts,” an executive summary of the report says.
The WEF is “predicting” catastrophic global cyber attacks
Pay attention.
— ALX 🇺🇸 (@alx) January 18, 2023
It should be noted that this upcoming event has been planned for some time, as the organization has been warning the world for years about the increasing likelihood of devastating cyber attacks. WEF founder Klaus Schwab informed attendees and viewers two years ago that a “frightening scenario of a comprehensive cyberattack would bring to a complete halt to the power supply, transportation, hospital services, our society as a whole.”
“The COVID-19 crisis would be seen in this respect as a small disturbance in comparison to a major cyberattack,” Schwab added.
The report notes further:
Geopolitical instability, rapidly maturing and emerging technologies, lack of available talent, and increasing shareholder and regulatory expectations represent some of the significant challenges that concern cyber and business leaders. If the findings of last year’s Global Cybersecurity Outlook reflected the lingering impact of the pandemic, and the effects of rapid digitalization, this year’s Global Cybersecurity Outlook reveals concerns about an increasingly fragmented and unpredictable world.
The outlook, however, need not seem bleak. There’s hope for better understanding – and more effective action – in the future. The best leaders avail themselves of wide-ranging information and listen to all of their stakeholders, understand their role and impact, and exercise good judgement to achieve the optimum outcomes. These attributes are no less necessary in cybersecurity than they are in any other domain.