"You will have nothing and you will be happy": the World Economic Forum wants to take away our car

The globalist organization maintains among its objectives to eliminate private ownership of vehicles with the excuse of pollution.

The World Economic Forum calls for reducing private vehicle ownership to advance its green agenda. In one of its latest reports, the globalist organization highlights the need to accelerate the transition from fossil fuels to renewable energies. One of the proposals is to limit private vehicle ownership.

The organization, it collects Fox Business, notes that the transition to renewables will require large supplies of critical metals such as cobalt, lithium and nickel. Shortages of these minerals, the report notes, "could increase the costs of clean energy technologies."

The forum proposes several measures to reduce the costs derived from the use of these metals, which are used in products such as cell phones, electric vehicles and wind turbines. In this way, the organization points to the need to "share more" in order to reduce the ownership of idle equipment and thus reduce the use of materials. It points out that in countries such as England, people drive only "4% of the time". In other words, the organization wants us to share the car instead of owning it in order to promote its 'green' proposals.

Advice from the World Economic Forum
(World Economic Forum)

"You will have nothing and be happy."

Taking ownership of our vehicles is a recurring idea among the thinking minds of the World Economic Forum, which has been insisting on this issue for years. In its continuous reports, the organization constantly introduces this idea, always under the pretext of advancing sustainability. In this 6-year-old document, the forum blames vehicles for causing "deadly pollution and more than one million traffic fatalities".

The World Economic Forum does not hide these objectives in its agenda. Eliminating ownership is one of the main objectives of its slogan "Have nothing and be happy", a motto that the organization proudly displays in its 2030 goals.