Did Larry Fink and BlackRock push companies to “go green” only to realise that it just doesn’t work? The hypocrites from the front row in Davos are once again giving it their “best shot”.
21 January 202 Report24
BlackRock CEO Larry Fink, the self-proclaimed architect of the green “transition” for decades, has finally spoken the truth: Wind and solar power are not a viable basis for electricity. At the World Economic Forum, Fink explained that data centres (but people can?) cannot rely on “unreliable” renewable sources. In plain English, this means that experimenting with solar and wind only exposes the population to unnecessary risks. An open admission that exposes the hypocrisy of recent years.
For years, Fink’s own policy had put pressure on companies to switch their energy supply to solar and wind power – a move that destabilised the electricity grids and caused electricity bills to skyrocket. Now he stands there and says that none of this is working after all.
BlackRock, the giant that pushed for the “transition”, is thus revealing a clear double game. On the one hand, it preaches sustainability, while on the other it admits that a genuine, reliable power supply is not possible. Data centres, the heart of digital infrastructure, are the first to be threatened by this instability – and the people are the silent witnesses to a plan that has long been designed not for security, but for profit.
Anyone who has spent years pushing for the restructuring of the electricity supply cannot seriously claim to have had the welfare of the population in mind. The WEF is once again showing its true colours: a forum where the global elite sound out the consequences of their experiments – and make the people pay for it in the end.
Larry Fink is actually clearly telling the globalist elites that this “transition” is nothing more than an expensive mistake. But will the governments in Europe now pull the emergency brake and return to a reliable power supply?





