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Planerar globalisterna att utnyttja "climate change" för att ytterligare översvämma den vita världen med främlingar? Riktigt jävla otäckt NWO-stycke som jag går igenom på länken nedan:
(FB) "The Great Upheaval": klimatförändring som förevändning för invandring
Ursprungsartikel på The Guardian:
The century of climate migration: why we need to plan for the great upheaval
People driven from their homes by climate disaster need protection. And ageing nations need them
https://www.theguardian.com/news/202...great-upheaval
(FB) "The Great Upheaval": klimatförändring som förevändning för invandring
Ursprungsartikel på The Guardian:
The century of climate migration: why we need to plan for the great upheaval
People driven from their homes by climate disaster need protection. And ageing nations need them
https://www.theguardian.com/news/202...great-upheaval
Artikeln i the Guardian är skriven av Gaia Vince som är judinna.
Hon är uppenbarligen väldigt engagerad i hela denna världsutveckling med allt vad det innebär och särskilt invandring som hon menar har en viktig betydelse för henne rent personligt:
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A unique perspective
The focus of Vince’s career as author, journalist and broadcaster has always been how human systems and Earth’s planetary systems interact, and she has travelled the world researching this “unique time in Earth’s history, in which climate change, globalisation, communications technology and increasing human population are changing our world, and us, as never before”. But her personal history—as an Australian-British woman—has also influenced her thinking, for it is one in which migration has played its part, as it has for so many of us. “My father was a refugee from the Russian invasion of Hungary in 1956, which happened when he was a child. People were being shot in the streets, and so he and his parents—who were Jewish and had previously managed to survive the Holocaust—escaped by hiding in the back of a car on forged passports. Eventually they took the chance to move to Australia. It was the furthest they could get from Europe—which didn’t seem like the safest place—and they built a life in Sydney. So it’s always been normal to me that people don’t grow up and stay in the same village that they were born in.”
https://www.thebookseller.com/author...and-our-future
The focus of Vince’s career as author, journalist and broadcaster has always been how human systems and Earth’s planetary systems interact, and she has travelled the world researching this “unique time in Earth’s history, in which climate change, globalisation, communications technology and increasing human population are changing our world, and us, as never before”. But her personal history—as an Australian-British woman—has also influenced her thinking, for it is one in which migration has played its part, as it has for so many of us. “My father was a refugee from the Russian invasion of Hungary in 1956, which happened when he was a child. People were being shot in the streets, and so he and his parents—who were Jewish and had previously managed to survive the Holocaust—escaped by hiding in the back of a car on forged passports. Eventually they took the chance to move to Australia. It was the furthest they could get from Europe—which didn’t seem like the safest place—and they built a life in Sydney. So it’s always been normal to me that people don’t grow up and stay in the same village that they were born in.”
https://www.thebookseller.com/author...and-our-future
Hennes skrivelser om den geologiska epoken Antropocen och människans avtryck på miljö och ekosystem resulterade i ett pris från Royal Society Prizes for Science Books. Hon har även gjort en tv-serie om hur det går för Costa Rica med den "hållbara utvecklingen":
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Gaia Vince (born 1973 or 1974) is a freelance British environmental journalist, broadcaster and non-fiction author with British and Australian citizenship. She writes for The Guardian, and, in a column called Smart Planet, for BBC Online. She was previously news editor of Nature and online editor of New Scientist.
Her Adventures in the Anthropocene: A Journey to the Heart of the Planet We Made won the 2015 Royal Society Winton Prize for Science Books, making her the first woman to win the prize outright.
The book discusses the Anthropocene, the proposed epoch that begins when human activities started to have a significant global impact on Earth's ecosystems. Her second book, Transcendence: How Humans Evolved Through Fire, Language, Beauty, and Time, was published in 2019.
Vince wrote and presented a three-part Channel 4 television series Escape to Costa Rica, first broadcast in April 2017. Filmed in Costa Rica with her partner Nick Pattinson and their two young children, the series explored the country's environmental initiatives, renewable energy and sustainable development.
Vince has, on occasions, presented editions of the BBC Radio 4 programme Inside Science.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaia_Vince
Her Adventures in the Anthropocene: A Journey to the Heart of the Planet We Made won the 2015 Royal Society Winton Prize for Science Books, making her the first woman to win the prize outright.
The book discusses the Anthropocene, the proposed epoch that begins when human activities started to have a significant global impact on Earth's ecosystems. Her second book, Transcendence: How Humans Evolved Through Fire, Language, Beauty, and Time, was published in 2019.
Vince wrote and presented a three-part Channel 4 television series Escape to Costa Rica, first broadcast in April 2017. Filmed in Costa Rica with her partner Nick Pattinson and their two young children, the series explored the country's environmental initiatives, renewable energy and sustainable development.
Vince has, on occasions, presented editions of the BBC Radio 4 programme Inside Science.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaia_Vince
Ett globalt perspektiv, helt enligt klassiska judiska visioner.