This list starts in 1993 and ends in 2021. It consists of politicians, royalty, business and tech entrepreneurs, media and celebrities. So we can
compare their deeds as politicians to those politicans/nations that aren´t trained to serve the WEF, we can check how censoring and current thing
transporting the WEF controlled business and tech entrepreneurs, their companies, are compared to others, not by the WEF controlled
entrepreneurs/companies. We can have a look at how different the messages of the WEF artists are compared to not by the WEF controlled artists. We can
see why which news channels or newspapers push the agenda and so on.
I guess many people don´t even know who is a WEF tool in their own country, provided they even know WEF, Young Global Leaders, Great Reset, Green New
Deal, Build Back Better. So this list could be an eye opener for some people, here we go:
Politicians
1993: Tony Blair, Prime Minister of the UK (1997–2007)
1993: Angela Merkel, Chancellor of Germany (2005–2021)
1993: Vladimir Putin, President of Russia (2012–)
1993: Viktor Orbán, Prime Minister of Hungary (2010–)
1993: Nicolas Sarkozy, President of France (2007–2012)
1993: José Manuel Barroso, President of the European Commission (2004–2014)
2000: Chrystia Freeland, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance, Canada (2019–)
2002: Ilir Meta, President of Albania (2017–)
2003: Greg Hunt, Minister of Health and Aged Care, Australia (2017–), led Australia’s Covid-18 response
2005: Gavin Newsom, Governor of California (2019–)
2005: Justin Trudeau, Prime Minister of Canada (2015–), used the Emergencies Act against peaceful protesters
2006: Thani bin Ahmed Al Zeyoudi, Minister of State for Foreign Trade, United Arab Emirates (2020–)
2006: Sanna Marin, Prime Minister of Finland (2019–)
2008: Karien van Gennip, Minister of Social Affairs and Employment, Netherlands (2022–); CEO of VGZ health insurance (Nov 2020)
2008: Ed Miliband, Shadow Secretary of State for Climate Change and Net Zero, UK (2021–)
2009: Anies Baswedan, Governor of Jakarta, Indonesia (2017–)
2009: Sebastian Kurtz, Chancellor of Austria (2017–2021), pro-vaccines but opposed to mandatory vaccinations (29 July 2021), had to resign in Oct
2021 due to alleged corruption and replaced by Schallenberg (who was less hesitant)
2010: Alexander De Croo, Prime Minister of Belgium (2017–)
2010: Vincent van Quickenborne, Minister of Justice, Belgium (2020–)
2011: Jagdeo Bharrat, Vice-President of Guyana (2020–)
2013: Ida Auken, Minister of Environment, Denmark (2011–2014), currently Folketing MP and author to the infamous WEF article Welcome To 2030: I Own
Nothing, Have No Privacy And Life Has Never Been Better),
2014: Jacinda Arden, Prime Minister of New Zealand (2017–), led harsh lockdowns
2016: Emmanuel Macron, President of France (2017–), intiated vaccine passports and wanted to “piss off the unvaccinated”
2016: Jens Spahn, Minister of Health, Germany (2021–)
2019: Carlos Alvarado Quesada, President of Costa Rica
2019: Mamuka Bakhtadze, Prime Minister of Georgia (2018–2019)
2019: Kamissa Camara, Minister of Digital Economy and Forecasting, Mali (2019–2020)
2019: Juan Guaidó, President of Venezuela (2019–)
2019: Annika Saarikko, Deputy Prime Minister of Finland (2020–)
2020: Faisal Al-Ibrahim, Minister of Economy and Planning, Saudi Arabia (2021–)
2020: Shauna Aminath, Minister of Environment, Climate Change and Technology, Maldives (2021–)
2020: Hammad Azhar, Minister of Energy, Pakistan (2021–2022)
2020: Annalena Baerbock, Minister of Foreign Affairs, Germany (2021–)
2020: Ugyen Dorji, Minister of Domestic Affairs, Bhutan (2018–)
2020: Karina Gould, Minister of Families, Children and Social Development, Canada (2021–)
2020: Paula Ingabire, Minister of Information Communication Technology and Innovation, Rwanda (2008–)
2021: Vera Daves de Sousa, Minister of Finance, Angola (2019–)
2021; Martín Guzmán, Minister of Economy, Argentina (2019–)
2021: Ronald Lamola, Minister of Justice and Correctional Services, South Africa (2019–)
Royalty
2001: Crown Princess Victoria of Sweden
2003: Crown Prince Frederik of Denmark
2004: Prince Willem-Alexander of the Netherlands
2005: Crown Prince Haakon of Norway
2007: Queen Mathilde of Belgium
2008: Princess Lalla Salma of Morocco
2010: Prince Bandar Bin Khalid Al Faisal of Saudi Arabia
2012: Crown Princess Mary of Denmark
2015: Princess Reema Bint Bandar Al-Saud, Ambassador of Saudi Arabia to the United States
Business and tech entrepreneurs
1995: Paul Allen, co-founder of Microsoft
1993: Richard Branson, founder of Virgin Records and Virgin Air
1993: Jorma Ollila, chairman of Shell Oil
1993: Jacob Wallenberg, chairman of Investor
1995: Michael O’Brien, VP, Goldman Sachs International
1997: David Filo, co-founder of Yahoo
1998: Jeff Bezos, counder of Amazon
1999: Pierre Omidyar, founder of eBay
2001: Jack Ma, founder of Alibaba and Alipay
2002: Larry Page, founder of Google
2005: Niklas Zennström, founder of Skype
2005: Ali Y. Koç, president, Koç Holsings, Turkey
2005: Marc Benioff, CEO of Salesforce
2007: Jimmy Wale, founder of Wikipedia
2008: Elon Musk, founder of Tesla Motors
2009: Chad Hurley, co-founder of Youtube
2010: Evan Williams, co-founder of Twitter
2010: Ricken Patel, founder of Avaaz
2010: Mark Zuckerberg, founder of Facebook/Meta
2014: Leah Busque, founder of TaskRabbit
2014: David Karp, founder of Tumblr
2016: Joe Gebbia, founder of Airbnb
2019: Anjali Sud, CEOof Vimeo
2021: Zhengyu He, head of systems engineering, Ant Financial (spinoff of Alipay and basis for the Social Credit system in China)
Media and celebrities
1993: Bono, singer and co-founder of the ONE campaign
1993: David Roy Thomson, chairman of Thomson Reuters
2002: Carlos Lozada, Managing Editor, Foreign Policy (CFR)
2003: Carina L. Dennis, senior editor, Nature Magazine
2006: Debo Adesina, Editor, The Guardian Newspapers
2008: Anderson Cooper, anchor CNN
2008: Kristine Stewart, CBC and Twitter Canada
2008: Shakira, singer
2008: Leonardo Di Caprio, actor and UN Messenger of Peace on Climate Change
2010: Wyclef Jean, rapper
2013: Chelsea Clinton
2015: Ivanka Trump, Senior Advisor to President Trump
2019: Gary Liu, CEO, South China Morning Post
(...) Partners for Global Leaders of Tomorrow in 2000 were large global companies such as The Coca Cola Company, Ernst & Young, Volkswagen, and BP
Amoco. These could contribute to the agenda by “playing an active role in developing and implementing the concept of the GLT project. The partners
can therefore actively participate in the development of GLT programs; representatives of the partner companies as well as their guests are invited to
GLT meetings .. ”
Since the Global Leaders of Tomorrow was turned into Young Global Leaders 2004, partners such as the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Google, and
JPMorganChase (with alumni from the program) have also participated as sponsors. (...)
World Economic Forums Young Global Leaders
Take the names of the politicians for example, look who of them is currently or when they were president, chancellor, minister or whatever. And check
how this nation and it´s people is doing today, how well they are, how free they still are, how satisfied the citizens still arehow much democracy is
left in these nations, if there is a secure future in these nations, check if these WEF agents work/worked FOR their nation and it´s people or rather
not.