Those young personalities in their forties who want to change the world, in a radical, revolutionary way, have entered politics. Oh, how beautiful it is!

Well, unfortunately it isn't. It really isn't. This political generation wants to bring us Orwell's 1984 and Aldous Huxley's Brave New World...

Here is one of the latest examples of this: she is Jacinda Ardern , who has been Prime Minister of New Zealand continuously since 2017. This lady, who is a politician in the colors of the Labor Party, but can be considered mostly a liberal, green and mainly globalist politician, participated in the last UN General Assembly and even spoke there. Wish he hadn't.

The leader of New Zealand's very liberal democracy did nothing but urge the introduction of global censorship to regulate speech in the public space. big tech companies as private companies is no longer enough for him No, the young talent, the man of the future, has already called for state censorship on the stage of the UN.

In her speech, Ardern objected to "disinformation" (that is, the expression of opinions different from liberal ones - FT), saying that lies endanger the safety of others. He continued: “We recognized the threats posed by old weapons. We have come together as communities to minimize these threats. We have created international rules, standards and expectations. We never saw this as a threat to our individual liberties – rather, it was a preservation of them. The same must be applied now as we take on these new challenges.”

That's great! Young, energetic thoughts! Long live censorship, the Thought Police!

Ardern went on to defend global censorship against those who question climate change, for example, and emphasized the need to stop "hateful and dangerous rhetoric and ideology", not secretly hinting that the Russian-Ukraine war can and should only be viewed in one way. And period.

He put it this way: “After all, how can you successfully end a war if people believe that the reason for its existence is not only legitimate, but noble? How do we deal with climate change if people don't believe it exists? How do we ensure that the human rights of others are respected when they are exposed to hateful and dangerous rhetoric and ideology?”

Wow, that's a bit much at once. So the bottom line is that everything should be seen as it should be seen. Then this would be the new freedom. Thanks, we understand. This perception is quite alarming, especially since the youthful, good-looking Jacinda Ardern is a hugely popular phenomenon in New Zealand and global liberal circles.

But who is he and where is he bound? Ardern lived in London around 2005-2008, working alongside the globalist Labor Tony Blair in his last years as prime minister. Then - and this is perhaps the most important moment - in 2014, he completed the Young Global Leaders program of the WEF (World Economic Forum) started by Klaus Schwab in 2004, where they train young, talented and seemingly suitable political seedlings for the "correct" view of the future. From there, he had a lightning-fast career, in 2017, before the elections, he took over the leadership of the Labor Party, won the elections and became prime minister.

In 2019, he met Bill Gates and his wife, Melinda, and this happened again after the pandemic that broke out in 2020. Gates has always spoken very highly of Ardern, especially praising her for the way she handles the pandemic and vaccinations in her own country. Specifically, this meant that Ardern introduced brutal lockdowns in her own country, almost following the Chinese example. Gates asked Ardern to help promote global acceptance of a global vaccine.

It seems that the Schwabs and the World Economic Forum can be proud of their student. They achieved their goal with the lady. And we can only be happy that Jacinta Ardern's views have not yet become generally recognized and accepted. But as we look at and listen to, for example, Annalena Baerbock, the foreign minister of Germany, or Kaja Kallas, the prime minister of Estonia (both of whom completed the Young Global Leaders course), who are roughly the same age as her, the danger is not small.

We have to be alert and watch the background. Ardern is a 'useful'... globalist, nothing more - but that's enough.

Author: Tamás Fricz, political scientist

Source: Hungarian Nation

Cover photo: Jacinda Ardern (Photo: MTI/AP/Vincent Thian)