The oligarchs behind the “humanitarian” regime change network now exploiting Jo Cox’s death to push for UK Labour split
Only
by masking their otherwise unpopular policies in the cloak of Jo
Cox’s tragedy, and humanity’s natural empathy for good samaritans
and the downtrodden, has this small group of powerful individuals
been able to launder disastrous wars and military adventurism as “the
right thing to do.”
by
Vanessa Beeley and Whitney Webb
Part
7 - Kathy Calvin and the UN Foundation
The UN
connection extends beyond the role of the UNHCR, with the attendance
of Kathy Calvin at the 2016 Concordia Summit.
Calvin
is the CEO and president of the United Nations Foundation. Calvin,
Mabel Van Oranje and Jeffrey Skoll intersect on the Advisory Council
of the Elders — alongside British entrepreneur and billionaire
Richard Branson and Sally Osberg, who is the president and CEO of the
Skoll Foundation.
Once
more, we see how the star-studded cast of the movement-building and
social-change engineering world overlap and circulate in the ever
expanding and interwoven spheres of influence.
In a
2011 interview with Forbes, Calvin laid out the objectives of the UN
Foundation: “[The UN Foundation is a construct designed to bring
together] some of the brightest entrepreneurs under 40 through the
Global Entrepreneurs Council to take the UN and the UN Foundation –
and our campaigns, partnerships, and programs – to the next level
of innovation and impact. They are the next generation of
entrepreneurs who understand that working with the United Nations is
good for the world and for business. These innovative
thinkers will help us engage with new generations to help the UN
create 21st century solutions to some of the world’s toughest
problems.”
It would
appear that Calvin is suggesting that the influence of the UN be
exploited to expand U.S. private-sector business interests worldwide.
The UN
Foundation came into existence in 1998 with a $1 billion commitment
from former vice chairman of Time Warner and founder of CNN Ted
Turner. His investment in the UN Foundation was described as his
“gift for the future of Humanity.” Turner believed that
the UN Foundation would “catalyze a new movement in
philanthropy.”
The list
of UN Foundation’s partners is another glittering array of the
world’s most powerful foundations and individuals.
The
Skoll Foundation is on that list alongside AOL, Google, Royal Dutch
Shell, Walt Disney, Unilever, and the governments of the U.S, Canada,
Denmark, Finland, Germany, Norway, Sweden, Netherlands, Australia,
UAE, U.K. and the World Bank.
UN
Foundation is the heavyweight of philanthropy, backed by billionaires
from a vast spectrum of market sectors and political backgrounds.
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