(b. May 8, 1950) A Mexican economist and diplomat named in Dr. David Martin’s expose of the “Names and Faces of the People Who Are Killing Humanity” from the Red Pill Expo 2021. From 1 June 2006 to 31 May 2021, he was the secretary-general of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).[2] He is a member of Board of Trustees of the World Economic Forum, central in the implementation of the COVID-agenda, including “building back better”. As he left the OECD, he stated “the environment, climate change and the protection of nature must be the defining tasks of rich and major developing countries now and in the years to come” and “urging countries to consider attaching environmental conditions to bailouts where appropriate.“[3] In 2007, Gurría was the first recipient of the Globalist of the Year Award of the Canadian International Council to honor his effort as a global citizen to promote trans-nationalism, inclusiveness and a global consciousness.
Since leaving the OECD, he is part of the “prefiguration group” of the Forum on Information & Democracy a planned international censorship treaty that will “require the promotion of “reliable information” and enshrine “the link between freedom of opinion and factual truths,” as defined by governments and corporate fact checkers.
Gurría is a proponent of WEF leader Klaus Schwab’s stakeholder capitalism and a corporate takeover of the state with public-private partnerships[15]: “To address the global challenges that have been amplified by the COVID-19 pandemic, the public and private sectors will have to collaborate much more closely….Business for Inclusive Growth (B4IG), a strategic partnership between the OECD and 35 major global companies, is one major initiative seeking to change how business is done….Together with the OECD’s Centre on Well-being, Inclusion, Sustainability, and Equal Opportunity (WISE), the coalition is exploring how non-financial performance indicators – such as stakeholder well-being and environmental footprints – can be incorporated into business models…Public-private partnerships are essential for a strong, inclusive recovery and tackling the intersecting challenges that we face. Today’s global problems demand fresh thinking about the roles of businesses, governments, and civil society, and about how they can best work together.“[16]
Besides his native Spanish, Gurría speaks French, English, Portuguese, Italian and German.[4]