We simply don't need the vast majority of the population - a shocking interview with Yuval Noah Harari, Senior Advisor to the WEF
"We simply don't need the vast majority of the population" - a shocking interview with Yuval Noah Harari, Senior Advisor to the WEF
Yuval Noah Harari, a senior adviser to the World Economic Forum and close friend of the group's founder Klaus Schwab, is in the news again after making some unusual comments befitting James Bond's arch-villain.
Harari promoted his GREAT RESET post-GREAT RESET dystopia to the world last week in a conversation with The TED Audio Collective podcast.
Chris Anderson, head of the popular Ted Talks media platform, conducted the interview with Harari.
On where humanity is heading in the 21st century, the WEF consultant said
we are heading towards a world where humans are "no longer part of the story of the future" thanks to artificial intelligence (AI) and other technologies.
Harari offered a hypothesis as to why people around the world are frustrated with the current political, social and economic climate and suggested that this may stem from a belief that the future does not need them.
"Part of it may be that people realise - and rightly so - that 'The future doesn't need me. Here are all these smart people in California and New York and Beijing and they're designing this amazing future with artificial intelligence and biotechnology and global connectivity and whatnot and they don't need me".
Maybe if they are nice they will throw me some crumbs, like universal basic income. But psychologically, it's much worse to feel useless than to feel used," Harari explained.
Describing what 21st century technology will mean for humanity, the globalist lecturer and writer told Anderson,
"We simply don't need the vast majority of the population, because the future is about developing ever more sophisticated and sophisticated technologies, such as artificial intelligence, bioengineering, most people are not contributing anything to this, except perhaps their data. And whatever humans do that is useful, these technologies will make them increasingly redundant and allow them to replace humans".
Anderson then tried to imagine what people could do with their newfound free time if most of the work and tasks were done by robots and artificial intelligence, and suggested that people could focus on things they find interesting instead.
In response, Harari agreed that
"There will be lots of new and exciting jobs for humans", but countered that most people will not be able to do these new jobs and will "fall behind".
Perhaps grasping how brutal Harari's comments are, Anderson asked:
"So again, I'm desperately trying to put some kind of more hopeful spin on this... a lot of the jobs that are being displaced are actually boring jobs that don't really touch on the very essence of human existence itself".
The Ted Talk founder tried to brighten up the outlook for our future, claiming that there is "no shortage of things" that people could be doing even if all the jobs were taken away.
"People are very good at making people not feel lonely, and pretty much anyone can do that," he noted.
"You know, community is a mess. Pretty much anybody who lives anywhere could, in principle, do something to make the community a better place. They could paint a fence or do some volunteer service or whatever".
As for the reduced population of the future, Harari explained that in the first wave, people living in third world countries such as Honduras will be "useless".
In essence, when it becomes cheaper for nations like America to produce their own industrial products using unmanned labor controlled by Artificial Intelligence (AI), they will no longer employ cheap laborers from other nations.
The WEF senior adviser said he could imagine "California tech giants" helping redistribute wealth to "Pennsylvania mothers", but could not imagine First World nations financially helping poor citizens in "Honduras, Mexico or Brazil".
Harari also talked about one of his favorite topics, the ability to "hack" people to manipulate our decisions, predict our choices and make decisions for us.
Probably noticing that humanity is being almost completely wiped out in the dystopian world planned by the global elite, Anderson asked:
"Is there any scenario in which we can write ourselves back into this story in a significant enough way as the only thing in the universe that we know of that can actually do the things that are most important in the universe - that is, love, joy, creativity, the kind of sense of peace that you're talking about?"
Harari avoided a direct answer to whether there is a way to "write ourselves back into this history" and warned the people of the world:
"There is now a race to hack humanity in general and you in particular".
"You have to make an effort to stay ahead of the competition from big business, from governments who are trying to hack you. So you have to know yourselves better because now you have these forces that are trying to hack you," he added.
In order for humanity to be able to navigate through "climate change", the threat of nuclear war and "disruptive technologies" such as artificial intelligence, the WEF speaker made an unexpected call for "global cooperation".
What global cooperation means for mankind under a globally-led world government is something we already have ideas about....
Source:
'We simply don't need a large part of the population' - Yuval Harari, WEF and Klaus Schwab's senior advisor, gives shocking interview - ALTERNATIVE NEWS (alternativhirek.com)