Elon Musk, the CEO of Twitter, sent a series of late-night tweets about the gathering of hundreds of the world’s top executives as it began on Monday at the World Economic Forum’s annual conference in Davos, Switzerland.
At the Davos gathering this week, more than 2,700 representatives, 52 heads of state—will talk about how to run the global system. Occasionally, distrust and conspiracies have been sparked by the WEF’s role in coordinating the global elite.
In a tweet sent on Monday, Musk responded to “Dilbert” cartoonist Scott Adams, who had linked to a video of WEF founder Klaus Schwab using the term “master the future” at the opening address of the annual conference.
To which Musk responded, “‘Master the Future’ doesn’t sound frightening at all,” while rolling his eyes with an emoji. “How the heck is there a WEF/Davos? Are they attempting to rule over the whole planet?
“Master the Future” doesn’t sound ominous at all … 🙄
How is WEF/Davos even a thing? Are they trying to be the boss of Earth!?
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) January 17, 2023
The CEO of Tesla and SpaceX earlier batted off concerns about the WEF in a conversation with Adams on December 30.
He argued back and forth with Adams, telling him, “My rationale for denying the Davos offer was not because I felt they were involved in nefarious planning, but because it seemed boring af hahaha.
My reason for declining the Davos invitation was not because I thought they were engaged in diabolical scheming, but because it sounded boring af lol
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) December 30, 2022
Musk added an emoji wearing shades to his tweet on Monday night, which said, “We shouldn’t be obsessed with WEF/Davos, but they take themselves sooo seriously that poking fun of them is fantastic.”
Until the early hours of the morning, Musk kept tweeting about the WEF and Davos. Tuesday morning at about four in the morning, he posted a response to the WEF Twitter account, which had previously tweeted a graph that seemed to demonstrate a fall in fertility rates.
Musk has said that the collapse of the world’s population is a greater threat to mankind than the growth of the population.
Population collapse is an existential problem for humanity, not overpopulation!
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) January 17, 2023
“Cooperation in a Fragmented World” is the subject that will be discussed at this year’s Davos gathering. Some of the talks will be titled things like “Disrupting Distrust,” “The Clear and Present Danger of Disinformation,” “Stewarding Responsible Capitalism,” and “100 Days to Outrace the Next Pandemic.”
Source: American Military News
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