The following is from a separate volume of the July issue of the monthly magazine WiLL.
This book is a must-read not only for the Japanese people but for people worldwide.
Both Greta and organizer Schwab got away with it.
Mako Ganaha, Journalist, J. Morgan, Associate Professor, Reitaku University
Uncovering the true nature of the veiled "Davos Meeting"-An interview with Schwab in person
J. Morgan
Thank you for your hard work covering the Davos meeting (the annual meeting of the World Economic Forum) on the ground.
The video of your direct interview with Klaus Schwab, the German-born Swiss economist who presides over the World Economic Forum, has been viewed more than 4.69 million times worldwide.
Ganaha
It was worth waiting at minus 10 degrees Celsius for 3 hours (laughs).
Morgan.
Steve Bannon, who served as Chief Strategist under the Trump administration, and General Michael Flynn, who was arrested in the Russiagate case, have praised Mr. Ganaha for his courageous action.
What kind of person was Mr. Schwab?
Ganaha.
My first impression was that he was not as scary as I thought, but when I asked for an interview, he refused, saying he was busy.
However, I came all the way to Davos and would not back down.
When I persistently approached him, he stopped and asked, "What media are you from?" he asked.
When I replied, "Independent media (independent journalist)," he replied, "No thanks," and got into his car as if he were running away.
It was highly praised for his appearance, which conveyed to us the essence of Mr. Schwab without answering our questions.
Morgan.
Schwab probably doesn't want to do interviews with anyone other than the media he invites to Davos as a guest.
He never knows what they will write about him.
Ganaha
What is the Davos Forum, anyway? It is a conference where about 2,500 of the world's political and business elite gather once a year in Davos, Switzerland, for five days to discuss problems and improvements in the world.
The conference was established about 50 years ago and is called the "World Wise Men's Conference" on the Internet. It is a gathering of the wealthy and super-elite and is treated as some dubious conference to guide humankind - a conspiracy theory.
On the other hand, it is also known as a business gathering of world-brand companies.
This interview was to find out what this conference is really doing.
Morgan.
This year's conference theme was "Cooperation in a Divided World," right?
Ganaha
At Davos, a global agenda (plan) is set.
On the surface, the agenda is to create international rules to solve global problems such as climate change, food crisis, new coronas, digitalization, and gender inequality and to overcome the crisis through global cooperation.
In recent years, the agenda has included a shift to clean energy to combat climate change and lockdown and vaccination to combat new coronas.
Once the Davos meeting sets the agenda, governments launch policies aligning with it.
Morgan.
Vaccines were started simultaneously worldwide, although their safety has not been guaranteed.
Recently, reports of dangerous and severe adverse reactions have been pouring in.
In the case of climate change, all countries aim for a decarbonized society based on clean energy.
It is strange.
Ganaha
Under Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike's leadership in Japan, installing solar panels on new detached houses will become mandatory from April 2025.
The Davos Forum is the source of these policies that are being implemented simultaneously around the world.
The Davos Forum is a non-profit foundation.
For the sake of argument, there is no legitimacy anywhere for this non-profit foundation to make the world's rules, even if it is a United Nations organization.
Morgan.
Moreover, unelected elites are making the rules.
It is interference in internal affairs itself.
They are exempt from taxes.
Ganaha
The first thing that surprised me when I arrived there was that the entire city had been transformed into a "town for Davos."
Most schools and restaurants were closed and used as business meeting booths for companies from various countries during the conference period.
Even the Italian fashion brand Benetton was used as a booth with its sign removed.
Morgan.
So the entire city is a place for business negotiations?
That is why some companies are willing to pay large sums to participate.
I heard that some companies paid up to 80 million yen to participate.
Ganaha
Walking around the city, I encounter famous politicians and business owners.
A journalist I met there ran into Albert Bulla, CEO of Pfizer Inc.
When I spoke to a pizza shop in Davos, he told me he made a lot of money by renting his store as a business meeting booth.
In addition, they spent about $1.5 million to renovate the floors and walls.
Morgan.
Oh my gosh! I wonder where that kind of money will come from.
Ganaha
I found out during the interview that the World Economic Forum is exempt from taxes by the Swiss government, directly federal, cantonal, and municipal taxes, and the World Economic Forum pension fund is also exempt from inheritance and gift taxes.
For example, guests invited by the World Economic Forum are also provided with lodging and are exempt from taxes on that lodging.
Morgan
Switzerland, known as the "Land of Banks," has close ties to international financial capital and is home to the headquarters of many international organizations.
Since it has such close ties with the Swiss government, it is intense in the dark.
It is a good story for the store owners, but it must be a nuisance for the general public.
And the stores will be closed.
Ganaha
Some roads will be closed so that most residents will go on vacation.
But some residents stay behind to protest.
The entrance to the main conference hall in Davos is on a slope, and you can see the inside of the hall from a house on the top of the hill. On the balcony of that house was a banner that read, "Is this the scenery of corruption?"
The real Greta girl
Ganaha
What interested me was that most of the people protesting there were liberal activists.
Antifa, a far-left radical group, was also there.
The activists want to solve the climate change problem, but they are angry that the elites in Davos are all talk and no action.
The elites who attend the Davos meeting fly to Davos in private jets naturally fueled by fossil fuels.
Of course, the planes are fueled by fossil fuels.
And since the airport is far from the main conference center, they must take a helicopter.
On the other hand, activists hike to Davos at minus 10 degrees to protect the environment (laughs).
Morgan.
No wonder they are angry (laughs).
Ganaha
I was able to interview a VIP driver who will be attending the Davos conference.
He said, "Electric car? I don't drive when carrying a VIP because it's dangerous."
Morgan.
Ganaha-san, you also interviewed climate change activist Greta Thunberg, didn't you?
Ganaha.
I happened to find her at a protest demonstration with activists.
Morgan.
What was she like?
Ganaha.
My first impression is that she is a "frail girl."
Unlike the confident and assertive Greta in the media, she was petrified.
I even thought the Greta we had seen on film was a fabricated image.
Morgan.
I think she can't speak without a "script."
She is a puppet of the activists.
Ganaha
Many activists around her seemed to be handlers (people who manipulated Ms. Greta).
Other media were also pointing their cameras at her, but they thought I was dangerous; for some reason, her handler only told me, "Don't follow them! So they became angry with me.
I told Greta, "Everyone thinks you are being used," she suddenly became furious and said, "People like you."
Being told she is being manipulated seems to rub her the wrong way.
Morgan.
The question is: Globalism is communism in disguise, and liberal activists are communists.
Why the conflict?
Ganaha.
It is the difference between elite leftists and mass activists; ultimately, they are just wrestling.
Their goals are the same.
The Identity of Klaus Schwab
Ganaha.
The statements of individual participants in the Davos meeting can be viewed on the Internet.
But to understand the essence of the conference, you need to know what the forum was created for and what kind of person the founder, Mr. Schwab, is.
Mr. Schwab has two people he admires and respects.
One is Henry Kissinger, a well-known American statesman.
Although he is a Davos regular, he appeared only in the video this year.
Mr. Schwab was a student of Mr. Kissinger's when he was a student at Harvard University.
Mr. Kissinger had a seminar at the university to discuss establishing a united world government through globalism, and Mr. Schwab participated in it.
Morgan.
So there was a miniature version of the Davos meeting at Harvard?
Ganaha
Yes, it was. Mr. Schwab had been instilled with globalism since he was a student.
Another person he admires is Brazilian Archbishop Helder Camara.
He was a Catholic archbishop who advocated a "theology of liberation" in Brazil.
Liberation theology is the idea that Christianity exists to liberate people with low incomes and is an ideology of social reform by bringing the poor into the fold.
Morgan.
It is one of the social movements that took off in Latin America in the 1960s.
It is a socialist revolutionary movement using Christianity, so to speak.
It is also called "Marxism's version of Christianity."
Ganaha
Camara was so radical that he appealed for reform with violence against the people.
Mr. Schwab was so taken with such a Camara that he invited him to speak at the Davos Forum in 1974.
Although there was much opposition because he was an archbishop who advocated violent revolution, he overcame the opposition and allowed him to take the platform.
I interviewed business executives attending Davos about Mr. Schwab, but all of them had no idea who he was or had even read his book in the first place.
Most of them are going for business purposes and do not know the purpose behind it.
Morgan.
Mr. Schwab is not an economist but a man with a very communist ideology.
On the surface, he talks about economics under the mask of an economist. Still, his purpose is to establish a united world government through globalism, which he learned from Kissinger at Harvard University.
In fact, he is pushing the rules set by the Davos Forum throughout the world.
Controlling energy and food
Ganaha
Mr. Kissinger is said to have said the following famous words in 1970.
"He who controls oil controls all nations. He who controls food controls all humankind."
In the case of oil, the climate change ideology is driving the shift to clean energy and renewable energy as alternatives to oil, and the government is trying to control energy interests.
At this year's Davos Forum, they were agitating for a food crisis, and in several sessions, they made repeated appeals to the need to rebuild the food production system.
He also said that to halt climate change; we should reduce meat consumption and promote alternative proteins (insect diets and cultured meat).
Morgan.
Entomophagy is already quite popular in the United States.
In Japan, ZlPAIR, an LCC (low-cost carrier) affiliated with JAL (Japan Airlines), has been offering a menu using powdered crickets for in-flight meals since July 2022.
Ganaha.
I definitely don't want to eat it (laughs).
Some claim Japan has been eating locust food boiled in soy sauce for a long time, but this story is entirely different.
I visited Europe last year, and things were already evil there.
Some farmers in France are putting masks and diapers on their cows because of the high levels of methane gas in their burps and feces, which they believe is a cause of global warming.
In the Netherlands, the government is telling farmers to reduce the number of cows, go out of business, and hand over their land to the government.
Morgan.
It is like communism, isn't it?
Ganaha
Farmers are being driven into unemployment worldwide.
This ridiculous thing is going on all over the world.
Then, if you ask them whether the elite who attend the Davos Forum are eating entomophagy, they are not.
I asked a local, "Are there any entomophagy restaurants around here?" I got a weird look from the locals, who said, "Of course not!"
Morgan
They are eating fine steaks with a glass of wine in their hand.
A Hotbed of Honey Traps
Ganaha
Many people in Japan oppose globalism, but politicians do not listen to them.
The Japanese politicians who participated in this year's Davos meeting were Digital Minister Taro Kono, Economy, Trade and Industry Minister Yasutoshi Nishimura, Economic Revitalization Minister Shigeyuki Goto, and former Environment Minister Shinjiro Koizumi.
Morgan.
Two members from the "Koishi Kawa Coalition" (Shinjiro Koizumi, Shigeru Ishiba, and Taro Kono), considered candidates to be the next prime minister, are also .......
Ganaha
Heizo Takenaka, a board member of the Davos Forum, tweeted the following on January 9.
《Davos meeting starts next week; too bad PM Kishida, the G7 chairman, will not attend. Ministers Nishimura, Kono, Goto, and former Minister Koizumi Shinjiro will attend. What is essential for these future prime ministerial candidates is to have a clear vision and a strong will to improve Japan and contribute to the world in their own words. The leaders of the world will be watching them very closely.》
Japanese leaders are checked by us Japanese, not by world leavers.
Morgan.
Who are the "world leaders" in the first place?
I guess it means the globalists, the so-called deep state, who gather in Davos.
Ganaha
I was waiting in ambush at the exit to ask Mr. Nishimura about the truth of the matter.
Unfortunately, however, perhaps hearing that a suspicious person was at the exit, Mr. Nishimura got into his car at full speed when the door opened (laughs).
A minister supposed to work for the people is discussing Japanese policy through a private organization in the absence of the people.
It is a big problem.
Morgan.
It's like the government's expert panel.
Like the recent defense tax hike, the experts chosen by the government decide on their own on scenarios written by the government without the public's knowledge.
The world version of this is the Davos meeting.
Ganaha
What is even more problematic is the hotel during the stay in Davos.
Usually, when dignitaries go abroad, they are accompanied by secretaries, bureaucrats, and bodyguards, but the participants, including government officials, invited to Davos, are allocated only a few rooms.
The conference organizers will book a hotel in town in advance, and the rest of the staff will book a hotel in a neighboring town an hour or two away from the venue and stay there by themselves.
Morgan.
I think the purpose is to instill a sense of elitism in the minister, saying, "You are special."
Ganaha
Since there is no administrative staff, the public cannot know what is happening in the hotel.
It is no wonder that honey traps and money traps are taking place.
Morgan
The Daily Mail, a British online newspaper, reported that high-class prostitutes are invited to Davos.
Is it a "night out" for the elites?
Those who rule Japan
Ganaha
As Dr. Morgan says, people who attend Davos are under the illusion that they are "elites."
When interviewed, they are always concerned about how they are perceived.
Under the World Economic Forum umbrella, there is an organization called Young Global Leaders (YGL), which consists of people under 40.
This organization is a seminar in which Mr. Schwab selects talented young politicians, economists, scientists, and others from around the world to convey the good points of globalism. When I talked to people assigned to this organization, they were very proud to have been chosen.
They have an elitist consciousness that they must lead the world, and they are working hard to achieve the agenda set by the Davos Forum.
Typical Japanese politicians elected to YGL in the past include Yuriko Koike and Shinjiro Koizumi.
Morgan.
"They are all 'shady politicians,' aren't they?
Ganaha
Schwab said of Canada's cabinet of Justin Trudeau at the 2017 Davos meeting, "I am proud of how the younger generation has undoubtedly infiltrated the cabinet."
Half of Trudeau's cabinet, including Prime Minister Trudeau, comes from YGL and its affiliated organizations.
Incidentally, French President Macron is also from YGL.
Morgan.
So he is brainwashing future prime ministers and presidential candidates with an elitist mindset and globalism from a young age.
Ganaha
Considering that Mr. Koizumi is also a candidate for prime minister in Japan, the candidate for prime minister is not from YGL, but because he is from YGL.
Who is ruling Japan? I feel gloomy.
The problem is global totalitarianism.
Morgan.
I can't help but feel that someone is controlling both Nagata-cho in Japan and Washington DC in the US power.
Ganaha
Many people are questioning the rules set by the Davos Forum, and concerns about globalism have been erupting worldwide.
I think the term "globalism" is problematic.
For many people, globalism means crossing borders to expand business and using technology from all over the world to innovate (technological innovation) around the world.
So when we say "anti-globalism," it is taken as if we aim for isolation.
Today, however, totalitarianism using globalism as a means is being carried out worldwide.
That's why I think the term "global totalitarianism" should be used.
I had a direct encounter with Mr. Heizo Takenaka, a board member of the Davos Conference, about the conflict between globalism and nationalism.
Then he said, "Japan is behind the rest of the world, so we must promote globalization."
In an interview, Makiko Eda, a Japan Representative of the World Economic Forum, told TV Tokyo, "The West leads the world's rule-making because Japan is not actively participating. We must participate more actively in globalism.
She has only globalism in mind, not globalism or nationalism.
Morgan.
The problems of global totalitarianism are rarely addressed in the Japanese media.
There have been so many reports of adverse reactions, even for vaccines, but the major media have decided to remain silent.
Ganaha
I went to the site to report on the issue, but the only Japanese media that approached me were Kaoru Arimoto's "News Asa 8:00! And "WILL."
Anti-globalism strikes back
Morgan.
The Japanese media quickly labels anything as a "conspiracy theory."
That's why we can't write what they want to write correctly.
The space for discourse is infinitely narrow.
On the other hand, Ms. Ganaha appears frequently in the Western media.
I wish more Japanese people like Ms. Ganaha would join groups like Steve Bannon and General Michael Flynn, who stand up against the mainstream "fake news media."
Therefore, this direct interview with Ms. Ganaha was of great significance.
Seeing Mr. Schwab running away from Ms. Ganaha made me so happy that I cried.
Ganaha.
Thank you very much.
Indeed, I intuitively thought, "He is running away from me."
Voices of concern about globalism are spreading worldwide, and even if they are small voices, they are indeed reaching the central figures of globalism.
It was a great reminder that the daily dissemination of information is meaningful.
Morgan
So everyone's efforts have paid off.
The world does not have to follow one agenda.
Let us continue to speak out against global totalitarianism.
(First published in the April 2023 issue of "WiLL")