Godlike Productions - Discussion Forum
Users Online Now: 1,954 (Who's On?)Visitors Today: 1,898,657
Pageviews Today: 2,805,887Threads Today: 760Posts Today: 15,952
10:54 PM


Rate this Thread

Absolute BS Crap Reasonable Nice Amazing
 

Keeping up With the Script. 2010 Rockefeller Document Discussed India and it's Filthy River.

 
Hot Dog Harry
Offer Upgrade

User ID: 80299839
United States
05/12/2021 04:13 PM

Report Abusive Post
Report Copyright Violation
Keeping up With the Script. 2010 Rockefeller Document Discussed India and it's Filthy River.
LIFE IN LOCK STEP

-"Remembering that experience is what made today so remarkable. It was now 2025.
Manisha was 27 years old and a manager for the Indian government’s Ganges
Purification Initiative (GPI). Until recently, the Ganges was still one of the most
polluted rivers in the world, its coliform bacteria levels astronomical due to the
frequent disposal of human and animal corpses and of sewage (back in 2010, 89
million liters per day) directly into the river. Dozens of organized attempts to clean
the Ganges over the years had failed. In 2009, the World Bank even loaned India
$1 billion to support the government’s multi-billion dollar cleanup initiative. But
then the pandemic hit, and that funding dried up. But what didn’t dry up was the
government’s commitment to cleaning the Ganges—now not just an issue of public
health but increasingly one of national pride."

This is also from 2010 and from a few pages earlier in the document:

-"China’s government was not the only one that
took extreme measures to protect its citizens
from risk and exposure. During the pandemic,
national leaders around the world flexed their
authority and imposed airtight rules and
restrictions, from the mandatory wearing of face
masks to body-temperature checks at the entries
to communal spaces like train stations and
supermarkets.
Even after the pandemic faded,
this more authoritarian control and oversight
of citizens and their activities stuck and even
intensified. In order to protect themselves from
the spread of increasingly global problems—from
pandemics and transnational terrorism to
environmental crises and rising poverty—leaders
around the world took a firmer grip on power.

At first, the notion of a more controlled world
gained wide acceptance and approval. Citizens
willingly gave up some of their sovereignty—and
their privacy—to more paternalistic states
in exchange for greater safety and stability.

Citizens were more tolerant, and even eager, for
top-down direction and oversight, and national
leaders had more latitude to impose order in the
ways they saw fit. In developed countries, this
heightened oversight took many forms: biometric
IDs for all citizens, for example, and tighter
regulation of key industries whose stability
was deemed vital to national interests. In many
developed countries, enforced cooperation with a
suite of new regulations and agreements slowly
but steadily restored both order and, importantly,
economic growth."

LINK: [link to www.nommeraadio.ee (secure)]
Hot Dog Harry  (OP)

User ID: 80299839
United States
05/12/2021 04:15 PM

Report Abusive Post
Report Copyright Violation
Re: Keeping up With the Script. 2010 Rockefeller Document Discussed India and it's Filthy River.
They make everything about Covid but their goal over a decade ago was to clean up the Ganges river.






GLP