JPMorgan Chase, BlackRock Drop Out Of Massive UN Climate Alliance In Stunning Move

10 months ago
311

This is huge news. Buuuut, they're like robots reassessing an alternative route. They're "scaling back involvement in a massive UN climate alliance". What are your thoughts. Do we really believe these giant controlling financial institutions are going to give up this easily? Or is it a ploy for us to put our guard down?

Thank you to Chris Sky in Canada for getting this news out there on his X account because that's how I found out about this news. Someone shared his X video on TikTok. Then I went to his X account to see when he shared it. Then read the article he attached which is dated yesterday February 15, 2024. Then I shared his X video on my social media to get the word out. This is why the WEF says all of us useless meat eaters sharing information is their "biggest threat facing humanity". It's more like they are the biggest threat facing humanity. They want us dead or make us cyborgs. I added his name and my comment to the video.

Fox Business
JPMorgan Chase, BlackRock drop out of massive UN climate alliance in stunning move
February 15, 2024

JPMorgan Chase and institutional investors BlackRock and State Street Global Advisors (SSGA) on Thursday announced that they are quitting or, in the case of BlackRock, substantially scaling back involvement in a massive United Nations climate alliance formed to combat global warming through corporate sustainability agreements.

In a statement, the New York-based JPMorgan Chase explained that it would exit the so-called Climate Action 100+ investor group because of the expansion of its in-house sustainability team and the establishment of its climate risk framework in recent years. BlackRock and State Street, which both manage trillions of dollars in assets, said the alliance's climate initiatives had gone too far, expressing concern about potential legal issues as well.

The stunning announcements come as the largest financial institutions in the U.S. and worldwide face an onslaught of pressure from consumer advocates and Republican states over their environmental, social and governance (ESG) priorities.

Loading comments...