Understanding the Great Reset and Tokenization Efforts
Whitney Webb argues that the Great Reset didn’t conclude with Donald Trump’s election. According to her, the powerful elite are pushing forward with plans for centralized control and redistribution in ways that may even involve tokenizing natural resources.
Webb connects figures like BlackRock CEO Larry Fink and the World Economic Forum to this ongoing process of tokenization. This term might be unfamiliar to many; essentially, tokenization means assigning unique identifiers to objects, which then get analyzed by specialized systems.
There seems to be a level of confusion within the tech community—whether intentional or accidental—and a stark disconnect for the rest of us as we witness the decline of what we might call the true economy. It raises questions about how selling or giving rights to something as essential as water will help families manage their expenses, nourish themselves, or find any sense of peace.
The new approach strives to govern everything, not just aspects of our lives.
Fink and the WEF aren’t exactly our advocates when it comes to digitizing resources like water. So, what’s the endgame? Fink recently told CNBC that we are in the initial phase of comprehensive asset tokenization, spanning everything from real estate to financial instruments.
The plan to digitize assets includes water, trees, air, and various types of wildlife, effectively integrating them into a monetized sharing economy through digital tokens. This could potentially facilitate foreign investments and perpetuate a tweaked version of the shaky financial arrangements that seem to satisfy a portion of the American population.
All types of AI can adapt to the tokenization framework, allowing real-time record-keeping of countless transactions and trades. To achieve this, computing technology needs to operate as fluidly as water. In the context of Bitcoin and similar cryptocurrencies, this means that the encryption and storage of data must keep pace with the fast-moving digital landscape.
Over the years, we’ve seen lesser-known cryptocurrency companies, like Hashbar, create hashes that fit neatly into this global marketplace, often under AI control. While these products differ from Bitcoin in terms of ledger management, they still aim to represent specific digital assets in surprising ways.
Now, it can be hard to grasp such a complex and abstract concept, so let’s break it down with an example. Imagine you have 10,000 board feet of Douglas fir on your property in Washington state. As the process of tokenization advances, you could potentially digitize some of those planks and sell them off. Scary to think about, right? It hints at a future where our connection to natural resources could vanish.
This leads to unsettling questions about whether we could be talking about selling public lands. The conversation is tricky, yes, but the principle of categorizing elements of the natural world as financial assets is gaining traction. It raises concerns about how far tokenization might extend into every imaginable resource, potentially erasing our tangible relationships with them.
Webb also mentions the concept of “natural asset enterprises,” which are being introduced to the public as vehicles for investing in conservation and biodiversity. Given the technological trends and bipartisan support for keeping the economy constrained, one can easily envision how shifts in legal frameworks might impact the ownership of these assets.
And I can’t ignore energy in this discussion. At the heart of all this is solar energy. Who owns it? Well, BlackRock seems to think they do, or at least that’s how their interests align with the WEF’s agenda.
Of course, no one can truly own the sun—that’s a divine claim. But it does highlight the interconnectedness of natural resources and our survival. The sun fuels everything, from grass to livestock, and ultimately to our own sustenance.
The intricacies of energy management involve various dimensions—AI-driven data centers, political frameworks supporting energy infrastructure, and the digital codification of these energy resources into controlled ledgers.
It begins to make you wonder just how essential a personal digital ID could become in this overarching system. After all, if customer service representatives tasked with our energy issues are disconnected from our actual needs, where does that leave us?





