If you went out on the streets and asked average Americans what the “World Economic Forum” is, how many of them do you think would be able to tell you what it is? Not very many. But it is one of the most important international economic organizations in the world. It is a non-profit foundation that holds a meeting for world power brokers and key executives from 1,000 of the world’s most powerful companies every year for five days in Davos, Switzerland. You can kind of think of it as a much larger and much more public Bilderberg Group. The meetings this year were held from January 27th to January 31st, and there was such little coverage in the American media that you would think that the meetings were of little importance.
Even though we hear very, very little about the World Economic Forum in the U.S. media, the truth is that key global economic policy decisions are made each year at Davos, and often new global initiatives are launched during the meetings. For example, the Global Health Initiative was launched by Kofi Annan at the World Economic Forum in 2002. This year, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation decided to announce at the World Economic Forum that the foundation will commit $10 billion over the next 10 years to help research, develop, and deliver vaccines in poor and developing countries.
The theme of this year’s meetings was “Rethink, Redesign, Rebuild”, and most of the attendees seemed to recognize that the state of the world economy is not good. In fact, Spiegel is reporting that the message coming out of the World Economic Forum was that 2010 was going to be a “terrible” year for the world economy.
But why is there such little coverage of such an important global conference in the media?
After all, past attendees of the World Economic Forum include Ban Ki-moon, Condoleezza Rice, Gordon Brown, Hamid Karzai, Queen Rania of Jordan, Shimon Peres, Al Gore, Bill Clinton, Bill Gates, Bono, Tony Blair, Angela Merkel, Dmitry Medvedev, Henry Kissinger and Nelson Mandela.
Very big names gathering each year to make very big decisions about our economic future – shouldn’t that be newsworthy?
But the truth is that the American press mostly ignores the World Economic Forum for the same reasons why it mostly ignores the Bilderberg Group.
The reality is that the elitist global organizations that make the real decisions don’t want us to realize how important they really are.
We aren’t supposed to understand that global policies that impact us all are made on a global level by unelected global elitists who care very little about you and I.
If you do not know about the World Economic Forum, you need to find out.
After all, they are making decisions that are going to affect your future.

For some Americans this past Christmas represented the best of times. They drove their imported cars out to the big box stores where they bought cheap plastic imported goods from China to give to their family members as they huddled in the spacious family rooms of their McMansions. But for millions of other Americans this was not a happy Christmas. For those Americans, the holiday season has been filled with frustration and despair as they try to pick up the pieces of their lives after being hit by an economic tsunami. You see, the deep recession of 2008/2009 is not just about numbers and figures – it is about real people with very real problems. Boneheaded policies developed in Washington and in the corporate boardrooms of America have had devastating consequences for millions of people out there. So if you are having a “happy” holiday season, perhaps you could take a few moments to consider what the other side of Christmas is like for the large numbers of Americans who are really hurting out there right now.