Appearing in a United Nations video conference, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau linked the world’s response to the coronavirus pandemic to a “reset” of global systems that ultimately would lead to a world completely in line with the United Nations’ Agenda 2030.
“This pandemic has provided an opportunity for a reset. This is our chance to accelerate our pre-pandemic efforts to reimagine economic systems that actually address global challenges like extreme poverty, inequality and climate change,” Trudeau said.
The prime minister then echoed official United Nation’s talking points on Agenda 2030: “Building back better means getting support to the most vulnerable while maintaining our momentum on reaching the 2030 Agenda for sustainable development and the SDGs [sustainable development goals].”
According to Trudeau, COVID-19 has brutally shown us the results of economic stratification and that only governments — led by the UN of course — can solve such problems for us.
“The last six months have laid bare fundamental gaps and inequities within our societies and between them. As with climate change, those who have the least are impacted the most,” Trudeau claimed. “That’s why, last spring, Canada worked with Prime Minister Andrew Holness [Jamaica] and Secretary General António Guterres to convene a high level meeting to discuss how leaders around the world could work together to close these gaps and build a better, more equitable system that works for everyone.”
So, as early as last spring, when everyone else was busy trying to come to grips with the virus and ensure an adequate supply of toilet paper, Trudeau and the United Nations were already busy figuring out how they could use the coronavirus to achieve their socialist goals.
Trudeau then touted UN working groups, which came up with hundreds of ideas on just how the coronavirus could be used in order to address an issue that has been with us since the foundation of society itself — namely that some people are tremendously wealthy while others among us are extremely poor. The “most promising ideas” (in the minds of the globalists) will be taken up by other globalist entities.
“The most promising ideas will be taken up within existing IMF and World Bank processes, as well as at the G-7 and G-20 leaders summits later in the fall,” Trudeau said.
Although finally ridding the world of the coronavirus is the number one concern, it doesn’t mean that is the end goal of Trudeau and the global community.
“Because we understand that right now we have to fix urgent problems, but in the long run we also have to fix the system, so that it works for everyone.”
In 2015, all 193 U.N. member nations signed on to the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, a wide ranging plan with goals of “eradicating poverty” and to “protect the planet from degradation.” In 2020’s Sustainable Development Report, which tracks the progress of the signatories in meting those goals, Canada only met one of its SDGs — in education.
Still, Canada finished 21st out of the 193 nations in progress toward meeting those goals. If you’re interested, the United States — which provides the most funding to the United Nations by far — finished 31st.
Should Joe Biden ultimately win the presidency, the United States will surely do better in the eyes of the United Nations. Biden even adopted the UN’s slogan “Build Back Better” for his plan to get Americans working again post-virus. Knowing Biden, it may have just been another act of plagiarism — or it could have been a wink and a nod to his globalist masters.
The UN’s Agenda 2030 was foundering until the COVID-19 crisis hit. Few countries were meeting their Sustainable Development Goals with even leftist run Canada lagging in their efforts. What they truly needed was a crisis — something to galvanize the world into the realization that governments need more control over their populations in order to make life better for everyone.
How fortuitous for the United Nations that the coronavirus hit when it did, offering globalists this opportunity for a “reset.” It’s almost as if it was planned this way.