Video Briefing

Offshore Citizen: What People Don’t Get About ”The Great Reset”

Apr 17, 2022Video Briefing19:04Watch on YouTube

Understanding complex topics requires going directly to the source rather than relying on secondhand interpretations, using the “Great Reset” as an example of common misinterpretation.

• Go to original texts, laws, or documents whenever possible—for example, read the Banking Act, Basel III, or the actual Great Reset book. • Avoid forming conclusions based on fear-mongering, sound bites, or social media summaries; these often distort the intent or context. • Many trends, like the shift from ownership to access, reflect efficiency and convenience (e.g., music streaming replacing CDs, video streaming replacing DVDs, self-driving cars reducing vehicle ownership needs, software-as-a-service replacing owned software). • Claims that central authorities will “reset debt” or currency or confiscate assets are highly unlikely; power holders often have vested interests in stability, and societal transitions are gradual. • Decentralized infrastructure, bottom-up solutions, and market-driven innovation often evolve faster than top-down interventions, making direct observation essential to understanding outcomes.

Takeaway: To interpret claims or narratives accurately, examine primary sources, observe trends directly, and evaluate incentives rather than relying solely on others’ commentary or sensationalized interpretations.