Saturday, April 27, 2024
world economic forum

‘Pride’ Boycotts Are Working. Now Let’s Do The Firms Working With the World Economic Forum.

The financial toll of the anti-woke boycotts in America is believed to have reached $28bn, punishing a handful of companies for the promotion of degeneracy. In brief, it’s obvious conservative boycotts work, and we should turn our attentions not just to the peddling of social decay, but also of political destruction.

The success of the corporate-dominated, unaccountable, multi-national, agenda-setting World Economic Forum (WEF) should be cause for concern amongst all demos-minded Americans. And it’s something we can make common cause about, with the dwindling number of anti-corporatist leftists that remain.

Currently, the World Economic Forum is gearing up for its summer conference in China. At the time of writing, a full 231 major American companies are WEF partners. A full list of them can be found at the bottom of this article.

Between June 27th and 29th, the World Economic Forum and its partners will descend on Tianjin, on northern China’s coast. The event is even co-chaired by Xin Baoan, the executive chairman of the Chinese Communist state-owned Grid Corporation of China. In other words: a communist regime stooge.

The moral high ground against China, for those concerned, should already be abundantly clear. A thriving communist autocracy, China’s rise has been at the explicit expense of American jobs and American workers. The CCP is responsible for up to 500 million deaths, with 400 million of those stemming from the enforcement of the country’s “one child policy”.

For those concerned with their civil liberties, and in fact the future of the human species, the World Economic Forum’s repeat insistence on a life of zero ownership rights and no privacy should ring particularly dystopian.

And while the WEF does not detail what exactly its corporate partnerships entail, it states they are a “driving force,” of the organization’s work, adding, “Our Partners engage in Centres to shape the future, accessing networks and experts to ensure strategic decision-making on the most pressing world issues.”

Here is a list of the 231 corporates, based in full or in part in the United States:

Pfizer

This U.S.-based pharma giant has come under fire after evidence showed its COVID-19 vaccine has dangerous side effects, and can even be deadly. A Pfizer executive admitted in Oct. 2022, with a laugh, that the company did not test if its COVID-19 vaccine stopped transmission of the virus before the vaccine was rolled out. The Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine was produced by a Chinese state-owned company in the United States. WEF, like its partner Pfizer, has been a major proponent of COVID-19 vaccines.

Google

Tech giant Google has been accused of interfering in U.S. elections to assist Democrats through its search engine manipulation. The Media Research Center conducted a study before the 2022 election highlighting Google’s apparent pro-Democrat search bias, and research psychologist Dr. Robert Epstein told the New York Post in May that Google uses its search engine to influence elections to advance a leftist worldview. Google is currently rushing to invest in artificial intelligence (AI), and Dr. Geoffrey Hinton, nicknamed the “godfather of AI,” quit Google over concerns that the tech giant is compromising on ethics to speed up its AI development. Like Google, WEF is enthusiastically supportive of AI development, even as experts warn of AI’s risks.

Amazon

Tech/shipping giant Amazon is heavily committed to promoting woke causes. For instance, the company boasted in January 2022, “Amazon earns perfect score for LGBTQ-supportive workplaces.” Amazon was listed as #6 on Forbes’s 2022 “Global 2000” list for the wealthiest, most successful companies.

Microsoft

Tech giant Microsoft, founded by Bill Gates, was #12 on Forbes’s 2022 “Global 2000” list. Among the procensorship company’s multiple questionable initiatives were a since-suspended subscription to the Global Disinformation Index (GDI), a secretive entity blacklisting conservative websites.

Marriott International

Hotel company Marriott International owns no fewer than 30 different hotel brands with over 8,000 locations around the world.

Walmart

Retail giant Walmart boasts that it “operates approximately 10,500 stores and clubs in 20 countries and eCommerce websites.” Walmart also employs “2.1 million associates around the world — nearly 1.6 million in the U.S. alone.”

American Heart Association

The American Heart Association (AHA), besides being partnered with WEF, is very supportive of woke Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion. For instance, the AHA website states, “Our mission is to be a relentless force for a world of longer, healthier lives, regardless of race, ethnicity, gender, religion, age, language, sexual orientation, national origin and physical or cognitive abilities.”

Johnson & Johnson

Pharmaceutical giant Johnson & Johnson has a branch in China, and the J&J China chairman praised China’s authoritarian COVID-19 response. J&J, like Pfizer, came under fire for dangerous side effects of its COVID-19 vaccine.

Meta

Meta is one of the biggest American tech giants, owning multiple popular apps/platforms, including Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp. Meta has come under fire for its heavy censorship, including its censorship of the bombshell Hunter Biden scandals before the 2020 election. Meta has been accused of colluding with the U.S. government to censor free speech. Furthermore, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has donated largely to assist Democrats’ political campaigns and to influence elections with his infamous “Zuckerbucks.”

PepsiCo

Food company PepsiCo, which owns dozens of brands and products around the world, is committed to various leftist initiatives. These include Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) and Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) standards.

Apple

Apple ranked #7 on Forbes’s 2022 “Global 2000” list. In March, Apple CEO Tim Cook praised China’s innovation and longstanding ties to the U.S. tech company, despite the CCP’s authoritarianism and human rights abuses.

NBCUniversal

Leftist media, entertainment, and communications company NBCUniversal, when it is not running insane vendettas against Donald Trump, “own[s] and operate[s] leading entertainment and news brands, including NBC, NBC News, MSNBC, CNBC, NBC Sports, Telemundo, NBC Local Stations, Bravo, USA Network, and Peacock.”

The Coca-Cola Company

Iconic beverage company Coca-Cola, with its now-several dozen brands, has been operating for over 130 years. Coca-Cola advertises its “Sustainability” and “Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion” projects on its website.

Uber Technologies

Transportation company Uber makes its app available in thousands of cities around the world.

Tyson Foods

John Tyson, chairman of Tyson Foods, claims that his companyhas been built on faith, family, and hard work.” So the firm seems a stand-out addition to the WEF list of partners.

CVS Health

CVS claims to be “America’s leading health solutions company.” Like so many other companies now, CVS is also dedicated to Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion.

State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance

State Farm and its affiliates claim to be “the largest providers of auto and home insurance in the United States.”  State Farm recently released its 2022 Impact Report, which specifically focuses on Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) standards.

Verizon Communications

Network provider Verizon touts its efforts toward “net zero carbon emissions” and “Digital inclusion.” It also advertises its support for LGBTQ “Pride.”

Visa

Visa describes itself as a “trusted network and world leader in digital payments.” And, of course, it has “Inclusion + Diversity” initiatives, including Latinx Connect and Visa Pride. The company boasts about its anti-white bias, “At Visa, women earn $1.00 for every $1.00 earned by men for the same work globally, and underrepresented employees earn $1.01 for every $1.00 earned by white employees for the same work in the United States.”

Below is a full list of the 231 US Companies Partnered with the World Economic Forum:

1 – Apple, 2 – Adobe, 3 – Amazon, 4 – American Express Global Business Travel, 5 – American Heart Association, 6 – Abbott Laboratories, 7 – ActiveFence, 8 – Aera Technology, 9 – AES, 10 – Astra, 11 – aPriori Technologies, 12 – AIG, 13 – Appen, 14 – American Tower, 15 – AmeriSourceBergen (pharma), 16 – Altana AI, 17 – Armis, 18 – Augury, 19 – Automatic Data Processing (ADP), 20 – AutoGrid Systems, 21 – Analog Devices, 22 – Astranis, 23 – APCO Worldwide, 24 – Automation Anywhere, 25 – Avanci, 26 – Avellino Labs, 27 – Axiom Space, 28 – Axstria, 29 – Baker Hughes, 30 – Ball, 31 – Baker McKenzie, 32 – BetterUp, 33 – Bain Capital, 34 – Bain & Company, 35 – Bank of America, 36 – Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, 37 – Blackstone Group, 38 – Bloomberg, 39 – Boeing, 40 – Breakthrough Energy, 41 – Boston Consulting Group (BCG), 42 – BlocPower, 43 – Biotechnology Innovation Organization, 44 – BNY Mellon, 45 – Brightseed, 46 – Breyer Capital, 47 – Breyer Capital, 48 – Citi, 49 – Coherent, 50 – Cargill, 51 – Color, 52 – Cisco, 53 – Chevron, 54 – Crusoe, 55 – C3.ai, 56 – C2FO, 56 – Cognizant, 57 – CVS Health, 58 – DataRobot, 59 – Datastax, 60 – Deepen, 61 – Degreed, 62 – Dell Technologies, 63 – Dow, 64 – Depository Trust and Clearing (DTCC), 65 – Dow Jones & Company, 66 – Ecolab, 67 – ExxonMobil, 68 – Earli, 69 – Energy Impact Partners, 70 – Flex, 71 – Fluor, 72 – Fluxus, 73 – Flexlabs, 74 – FTI Consulting, 75 – Fortinet, 76 – G-P, 77 – Gartner, 78 – GEP, 79 – General Atlantic Partners, 80 – Guardant Health, 81 – GoldenTree Asset Management, 82 – Gulfstream Aerospace, 83 – Guild, 84 – Goldman Sachs, 85 – Google, 86 – Honeywell, 87 – Hellman & Friedman, 88 – Hines, 89 – Holman Enterprises, 90 – Hunt Consolidated Energy, 91 – Hess Corporation, 92 – Hologic, 93 – Hackensack Meridian Health, 94 – Hewlett Packard Enterprise, 95 – HowGood, 96 – HP, 97 – IBM, 98 – IDEO, 99 – Illumina, 100 – Invesco, 101 – Indigo Agriculture, 102 – IQVIA, 103 – Instacart, 104 – IVITA Group, 105 – IN4.OS US, 106 – Intel, 107 – Iron Mountain Information Management, 108 – Johnson & Johnson, 109 – JLL, 110 – Joby Aviation, 111 – Johnson Controls, 112 – JupiterOne, 113 – JP Morgan Chase & Co., 114 – K Health, 115 – KnowBe4, 116 – Lazard, 117 – Luma Group, 118 – LightGuide, 119 – LyondellBasell, 120 – LinkedIn, 121 – Lockheed Martin, 122 – Magic Leap, 123 – Marriott International, 124 – MasterCard, 125 – Mayo Clinic, 126 – magniX, 127 – Mammoth Biosciences, 128 – McKinsey & Company, 129 – Meta, 130 – Microsoft, 131 – Mighty Buildings, 132 – Modern Meadow, 133 – Morgan Lewis, 134 – Mayfield, 135 – Medable, 136 – Morgan Stanley, 137 – MSD, 138 – Mozilla, 139 – Medtronic, 140 – Network for Teaching Entrepreneurship (NFTE), 141 – Nasdaq, 142 – NBCUniversal, 143 – New York Times, 144 – Nielsen, 145 – Noom, 146 – North Island, 147 – NYSE, 148 – Newmont, 149 – NV Investments, 150 – Occidental, 151 – Omnicom Group, 152 – One Concern, 153 – Open Society Foundations, 154 – OpenWeb, 155 – Our Next Energy (ONE), 156 – Pacific Invest (PIMCO), 157 – Palantir Technologies, 158 – Pegasystems, 159 – PayPal, 160 – Palo Alto Networks, 161 – PepsiCo, 162 – Pfizer, 163 – PG&E, 164 – Planet Labs, 165 – Pymetrics, 166 – project44, 167 – Procter & Gamble, 168 – Qualcomm, 169 – Quantstamp, 170 – Quexco, 171 – Tyson Foods, 172 – Underwriters Laboratories, 173 – Uniphore, 174 – Resiliance, 175 – retrain.ai, 176 – Ripple, 177 – Robinhood, 178 – Rockwell Automation, 179 – Russell Reynolds Associates, 180 – S&P Global, 181 – SpyCloud, 182 – Sourcemap, 183 – SingleStore, 184 – SkyBridge Capital, 185 – Skillsoft, 186 – Sysco, 187 – Silver Lake, 188 – Sight Machine, 189 – State Street, 190 – State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance, 191 – Stellar Development Foundation, 192 – Splunk, 193 – Spring Health, 194 – SpyCloud, 195 – SandboxAQ, 196 – Scale AI, 197 – ServiceNow, 198 – Sequoia Capital, 199 – TAE Technologies, 200 – Trellix, 201 – TIME, 202 – Tulip Interfaces, 203 – Tala, 204 – Tillman Global Holdings, 205 – Teamshares Inc., 206 – Thermo Fisher Scientific, 207 – Tradeshift, 208 – TBG, 209 – The Coca-Cola Company, 210 – VSP Vision, 211 – Visa, 212 – Vindex, 213 – Versatile, 214 – Vista Equity Partners, 215 – Voyager Space, 216 – Velocity Global, 217 – Verizon Communications, 218 – Xenco Medical, 219 – Xendit, 220 – Xylem, 221 – Uber Technologies, 222 – Ralph Lauren, 223 – Western Digital, 224 – Williams-Sonoma, 225 – Walmart, 226 – Workday, 227 – World Fuel Services, 228 – WorldQuant, 229 – Zoom, 230 ZS, 231 – Gecko Robotics