I don’t think the concern is merely about Schwab as an individual, but about the WEF representing billionaires and huge corporations. While you point out actions of “the state”, what I understand from many commentators is that they question who the state was acting on behalf of. It struck them that the state was not acting for the welfare of its people, but for the benefit of those corporations and billionaires.
I don’t think the concern is merely about Schwab as an individual, but about the WEF representing billionaires and huge corporations. While you point out actions of “the state”, what I understand from many commentators is that they question who the state was acting on behalf of. It struck them that the state was not acting for the welfare of its people, but for the benefit of those corporations and billionaires.