Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates is calling on governments to start feeding the public genetically modified foods in order to fight the so-called “climate crisis.”
Gates recently gave an address at the Africa Climate Summit where he was promoting his GM seeds and chickens.
According to Gates, GM products will benefit African people while also helping to save the planet.
Stephen Anthony McQueen reports: The inaugural Africa Climate Summit was held in Nairobi, Kenya.
Among the summit’s funding partners are seerval familiar globalist organizations, including:
- The Rockefeller Foundation
- The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation,
- The Clinton Health Action Initiative
- The Children’s Investment Fund Foundation (CIFF)
- The ClimateWorks Foundation
Sir. Chris Hohn’s CIFF along with the Rockefeller Brothers Fund are part of a small group of global foundations called ClimateWorks.
Since 2018, the collective has committed to investing billions by 2025 to “tackle the climate crisis.”
Gates Ventures, the personal service company of the Microsoft co-founder, is also among ClimateWorks’s funding partners.
In an update in 2020, Hohn said the original group, ClimateWorks, was well on track to invest at least $6 billion by 2025.
The huge investment was “thanks to significant increases from several funders, as well as additional philanthropic donors committing new resources, and likely more as all philanthropists are actively invited to allocate a portion of their portfolio” to invest in “tackling” the corporate elite’s “climate crisis.”
Also listed as funding partners for the Africa Climate Summit are USAID and UKAID.
A handful of UN agencies are also included, such as the UN’s Green Climate Fund and the International Organisation for Migration.
The governments of Germany, Denmark, France, and the European Union are also funneling taxpayer money into the scheme.
There is a token of African funders such as the African Development Bank and EcoBank.
However, it can be easily construed that it was not an African Summit but rather an Anglo-American-European Summit to which some Africans were invited.
Essentially, the summit represented the West and a small group of private foundations “driving green growth and climate finance solutions” in Africa.
Also, many of the suggestions for “saving the planet” etc… often sound more like running experiments on African populations ahead of global rollouts.
As if to prove this point, The Guardian reported that at the Summit the Nairobi Declaration was adopted as a blueprint “to guide” Africa in future negotiations with the West.
The report suggested that Africa would be tested in global forums such as the G20 meeting, the UN general assembly, the annual meetings of the World Bank Group and the International Monetary Fund, and COP28.
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