You should realize: The YGL and even the WEF are not nearly as (uniformly) nefarious as alt-media people like to think. Sure, the Davos set is shady as hell, but outside of that, it's like a 4H club for graduate students, especially business schools. The World Economic Council is like this too. Spooky in theory, really dull in practice.
I've been to WEF conferences. Not very interesting. Wear a 3-piece suit and eat a 5-course meal in the mid-morning while listening to some TED talk about currency. Impress an important person with your impeccable manners and ability to carry on trite conversation while waving a glass of champagne around, and get recognized for YGL, which is an up-jumped merit badge.
No doubt some matriculates of these things go on to do bigger and darker things. But just because you at some point got tagged by these enterprises--like an endangered penguin--doesn't mean you're a functioning agent of the NWO.
Put it this way: It's unlikely that Putin's YGL affiliation what made him interesting. But as a potent dude, it wasn't unlikely from him to have picked up that affiliation along the way.
Your story amounts to “because they didn’t recognize me as someone worth recruiting, I’ll gonna pretend I wasn’t interviewing for a position in the globalist cabal”.
Yes, it does. Openly stated, although it's kind of funny you take it as a gotcha.
The point was, most of this thing, and the overwhelming preponderance of the people who've ever had the tag attached to their name in some way, are no more nefarious than volunteers for Kiwanis, or Lion's Club, or somesuch. Sometimes people get their panties in a bunch over the Masons, when in reality, 99.9% of it is old men raising small amounts of money to buy winter boots for kids. Maybe there are Masons in blood-sketched basements making sacrifices to Moloch, but if a thing is what it does most often (which it is), this would be a stupid way to think about the thing that is Masons.
You should realize: The YGL and even the WEF are not nearly as (uniformly) nefarious as alt-media people like to think. Sure, the Davos set is shady as hell, but outside of that, it's like a 4H club for graduate students, especially business schools. The World Economic Council is like this too. Spooky in theory, really dull in practice.
I've been to WEF conferences. Not very interesting. Wear a 3-piece suit and eat a 5-course meal in the mid-morning while listening to some TED talk about currency. Impress an important person with your impeccable manners and ability to carry on trite conversation while waving a glass of champagne around, and get recognized for YGL, which is an up-jumped merit badge.
No doubt some matriculates of these things go on to do bigger and darker things. But just because you at some point got tagged by these enterprises--like an endangered penguin--doesn't mean you're a functioning agent of the NWO.
Put it this way: It's unlikely that Putin's YGL affiliation what made him interesting. But as a potent dude, it wasn't unlikely from him to have picked up that affiliation along the way.
Fucking hilarious.
Your story amounts to “because they didn’t recognize me as someone worth recruiting, I’ll gonna pretend I wasn’t interviewing for a position in the globalist cabal”.
Yes, it does. Openly stated, although it's kind of funny you take it as a gotcha.
The point was, most of this thing, and the overwhelming preponderance of the people who've ever had the tag attached to their name in some way, are no more nefarious than volunteers for Kiwanis, or Lion's Club, or somesuch. Sometimes people get their panties in a bunch over the Masons, when in reality, 99.9% of it is old men raising small amounts of money to buy winter boots for kids. Maybe there are Masons in blood-sketched basements making sacrifices to Moloch, but if a thing is what it does most often (which it is), this would be a stupid way to think about the thing that is Masons.
You should read slower, or better.