A chilling message from the WEF: 'Reducing population growth' is a 'BIG BENEFIT'



Dave Rubin is tired of these “anti-human weirdos” at the World Economic Forum.

Especially Bill Gates, who is on record telling Klaus Schwab that in the next 15 years, he hopes to have made dramatic improvements in the field of disease.

Well, what’s wrong with that, you might ask? Isn’t that a good thing?

But Gates’ “humanitarian” speech doesn’t end there. It soon takes a disturbing turn.

He goes on to say that these medical advances could result in a “huge change in mortality rates in developing countries, which then has the effect of reducing population growth–[a] big benefit that then makes everything, like education and nutrition, a lot easier.”

“Do you see how twisted these people are?” Rubin asks.

Outraged that anyone would argue for population reduction, Rubin thinks that “if you want to have more kids and expand your family and your community … go for it.”

But hang on …

What earned Bill Gates his notoriety in the first place?

It wasn’t medicine. And it certainly wasn’t disease research.

It was actually, as Rubin recalls, the development of Windows – a software system that allowed people to paint digitally and play Minesweeper.

“[Windows] was a virus magnet,” Rubin recollects. “The whole reason people moved over to Apple over time was because Microsoft, which is [Gates’] company … got infected with viruses.”

Rubin finds it ironic that now Gates “is trying to infect us with other viruses.”

Watch the full clip here.


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