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COVID-19: The Great Reset Paperback – July 9, 2020
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- Print length280 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication dateJuly 9, 2020
- Dimensions5.5 x 0.71 x 8.5 inches
- ISBN-102940631123
- ISBN-13978-2940631124
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Customers find the content interesting, educational, and comforting. They also describe the book as well-written, insightful, and worth reading. However, some customers feel the book lacks sufficient involvement of civil society and is not compelling.
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Customers find the book interesting, educational, and factual. They also say it provides reasonable projected outcomes, great insight into the liberal mind, and is substantive. Readers also describe the content as comforting psycho-babble.
"...This book is fascinating and prescient (strangely so) and is a must read if you want to hypothecate regarding your own future...." Read more
"I'm really enjoying this book and it has some insightful information...." Read more
"...Uninformative waste if time.I do not recommend.Wish I could return but the window closed." Read more
"Ya, interesting and educational. The author made some good points and provided examples that supported their evidence...." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the readability of the book. Some find it well-written, sensible, and easy to understand. They also say it's a fairly quick read and insightful. Others however, find it not compelling, hideous, and too time consuming.
"A disconcerting read to say the least. As a literary work it is bad, but that was never the goal...." Read more
"...Their recommendations and theories are in fact quite sensible and I found myself agreeing with their descriptions of our glaring societal..." Read more
"...All in all, a worthwhile though not compelling read, if only to understand the insane mindset of the globalist." Read more
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Underlying the whole premise of this weird book is that the virus did it to us: all the suffering and economic destruction were caused by the virus. This isn't true at all. All the suffering was caused by our response to the virus. Sweden proves this point. South Dakota, Florida, and Texas do as well.
Instead of practicing a policy of least harm wherein the most vulnerable were looked after, what we did instead was harm everyone, including and especially our children, by pretending that this disease was going to kill everyone. The authors insist that an alternative policy of "focused protection" was one of sacrificing a few so that we could save the economy, but they know full well that no one who advocated such a view was in favor of sacrificing anyone: the point, which the authors are too enchanted with their grandiose "reset" vision to see, was/is to do the least harm by focusing on the most vulnerable: those are the ones who had to "stay home, stay safe," and since many of these people were retired anyhow, for many this wasn't a problem. For those without the means to stay safe or who felt too afraid to participate in society (even if they were young and healthy) then the proper role of government would have been to seek out these people and lend them aid. This would have been at far less cost than the regulations, bailouts, etc., that took place instead.
The authors give precious little time to quaint ideas like liberty and freedom, although I supposed they might in the chapters on "Individual Reset." I was mistaken. They talk about individual mental health, creativity, consumption, well-being, but not about how installing a medical police state-- which is exactly what happened throughout the world-- damages the very ideals and aspirations of people all around the world who believe that our greatest good isn't that the state tells us what to do, but that we are always, to the greatest extent possible, masters and deciders of our own fates. The Great Reset folks don't want that. At bottom, their vision is one of a collectivist "we're all in this together" mindset wherein we all pull for a greater good (which greater good the authors conveniently sketch out for us) and it doesn't include individual self-determination except within the restricted bounds that Schwab and Mallerret outline for us. Authentic self-determination would be "selfish," you see.
I can only hope that in the land of the free and the home of the brave, we'll say a polite "no, thank you" to Schwab and friends and tell them to go elsewhere with their utopian scheme. And no, many of us don't believe that CO2 warming is sound science, so I guess we're not "all in this together" on that one, either. Tsk, tsk ... we're the ones who'll have to be monitored and policed for the greater good of all, in a great reset dystopia. Slippery slope that one, or no? Who gets to decide what the "proper" outlook should be, for the greater good of all, and who would have to be monitored and controlled for the good of the collectivist whole?
Klaus and Thierry, my reply to you is,
Stay safe re-set: stay free.
Top reviews from other countries
“You’ll own nothing and you’ll be happy.” That is the utopian vision of the WEF and its founder Klaus Schwab. “Whatever you want you’ll rent and it’ll be delivered by drone.” Meat will be “an occasional treat,” the WEF prognosticated in a 2016 video (which has since been deleted from their website). The WEF chose the year 2030 as the date by which their vision will be imposed on the world. “Welcome to 2030. I own nothing, have no privacy, and life has never been better,” said a 2017 tweet from the WEF.
I had friends tell me that the existence of this book was nothing more than a conspiracy theory and that their impression of me was lower because I was apparently buying into it. I actually picked up my copy of the physical book and took it to them and I said here here's the actual book written by the guy who you said never wrote the book. It was mind-blowing to see the reactions and how they still denied the existence of the book even though I had the physical copy in my hands.
The other people going on about conspiracy theories about what's in the book, they were angry at me that I actually read the book. They were making up stuff about what's in the book and when I read through it it just wasn't in the book at all. I would point out to them how it isn't in the actual book and they were literally making stuff up but none of them would even listen to a single thing I had to say. They assumed that I was simply making everything up and accused me of being a sheep and all these other horrible things because I bought the book to find out what was in it.


















