This thread 🧵 covers the Club of Rome. It archives public statements, documents, policy, and covers the influence their reports have on daily life.
Evidence Cards
Card #01: ℹ️ The Club Of Rome
Canonical URL: https://conspirograph.com/topic/the-club-of-rome/card/472
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Topic: The Club Of Rome. Comments: 0.
Card #02: 🗺️ MAP
Canonical URL: https://conspirograph.com/topic/the-club-of-rome/card/470
In 1974, the Club of Rome published a map from a One World Government proposal called, “The Regionalized Adaptive Model for the Global World System.” Their plan is to divide the world up into Ten regional kingdoms that would replace all national boundaries. Once you understand this agenda the narrative for open borders starts making more sense. The destruction of national sovereignty that’s underway through widespread destabilization is not by accident for you can’t have a One World Government with thriving national sovereignties. The following territories and names may change but the layout of Ten Regional Kingdoms will not. Agenda 2030
In 1974, the Club of Rome published a map from a One World Government proposal called, “The Regionalized Adaptive Model for the Global World System.” Their plan is to divide the world up into Ten regional kingdoms that would replace all national boundaries.
Once you understand this agenda the narrative for open borders starts making more sense. The destruction of national sovereignty that’s underway through widespread destabilization is not by accident for you can’t have a One World Government with thriving national sovereignties.
The following territories and names may change but the layout of Ten Regional Kingdoms will not.
Agenda 2030
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Topic: The Club Of Rome. Comments: 0.
Card #03: 📈 Civilized Depopulation
Canonical URL: https://conspirograph.com/topic/the-club-of-rome/card/473
Prominent Club of Rome member, Dennis Meadows, talks civilized depopulation. He asserts that global population and consumption levels are currently unsustainable. "We are so far above the population and the consumption l
Prominent Club of Rome member, Dennis Meadows, talks civilized depopulation.
He asserts that global population and consumption levels are currently unsustainable.
"We are so far above the population and the consumption levels which can be supported by this planet," Meadows states, suggesting that a reduction is inevitable.
He does not express hope to avoid this outcome but instead emphasizes the need for it to occur in a 'civil' manner—defined as peaceful, non-violent, and conflict-resolved through means other than force.
Meadows speculates that the planet could sustainably support between one and two billion people, depending on desired levels of liberty and material consumption. He contrasts this with the possibility of supporting eight or nine billion under a 'SMART dictatorship,' though he dismisses such regimes as inherently flawed.
Meadows concludes by expressing pessimistic hope for a slow, equitable depopulation process that avoids disproportionate burdens on any group.
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Topic: The Club Of Rome. Comments: 0.
Card #04: 📈 Limits To Growth Report
Canonical URL: https://conspirograph.com/topic/the-club-of-rome/card/471
Published in 1972 for the Club of Rome Project. The message of this book details how the earth’s interlocking resources – the global system of nature in which we all live – probably cannot support present rates of econom
Published in 1972 for the Club of Rome Project.
The message of this book details how the earth’s interlocking resources – the global system of nature in which we all live – probably cannot support present rates of economic and population growth much beyond the year 2100, if that long, even with advanced technology. In the summer of 1970, an international team of researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) began a study of the implications of continued worldwide growth. They examined the five basic factors that determine and, in their interactions, ultimately limit growth on this planet-population increase, agricultural production, nonrenewable resource depletion, industrial output, and pollution generation.
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Topic: The Club Of Rome. Comments: 0.