Canada – Mark Carney – About As Corporate As They Come

If you want someone running this country that is in deep with the people who are actually running the world (WEF, Bilderberg, Banks etc) then this is your man. He is about as corporate as they come. Just check out his bio here.

Notice how nobody in the mainstream media is even mentioning his ties to the global corporate elites.  Not one word.

Climate Finance Reformer….what is that?   Sounds like more taxes to me. Taking my money and giving it to his corporate friends.

I wonder when was the last time had any kind of interaction with an ordinary Canadian citizen?

Canadians need to be careful here.  I am not sure he has Canadians’ best interest at heart.

From his Linkedin page:

Mark Carney

Climate finance reformer, investor, public servant, author

Ottawa, Ontario, Canada  Contact Info

About

I’m the UN Special Envoy for Climate Action and Finance, and Chair and Head of Transition Investing at Brookfield Asset Management. At Brookfield, I lead the firm’s environmental, social, and governance investing strategy, with a particular focus on accelerating the transition to a net-zero economy.

For over a decade, I was a central banker—first at the Bank of Canada and most recently at the Bank of England. I also served as Chair of the Financial Stability Board where I helped lead reforms to address the fault lines that caused the global financial crisis. Prior to my public service, I worked at Goldman Sachs in their London, New York, Tokyo, and Toronto offices. Before that I studied economics as an undergrad at Harvard and completed my doctorate at Oxford. I was born in Fort Smith, Northwest Territories—a very cold place—and grew up in Edmonton, Alberta—a slightly warmer place—and I’m now in Ottawa with my family.

My experiences in the public and private sector have given me a perspective on the three crises of this century—of credit, Covid, and climate—which I believe are driven by a common crisis of values. The narrowing of our values towards market fundamentalism has contributed to the growing exclusivity of capitalism and the rise of populism. In order to build an economy that works for all, we need to recast the relationship between values and value through values-based leadership, purpose-driven companies, impact investing and national strategies which balance resilience, fairness, sustainability with dynamism. Our political processes need to build consensus on our goals and objectives—to set our values—and then marshal the power of markets to help discover and drive solutions. I developed these themes in the BBC Reith lectures and expand on them in my book, Value(s).

Experience

Education