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Vivek Ramaswamy


@Samuel Whittemore posted this in another thread. I havent vetted it. For all of you looking for a savior that doesn’t require mass disobedience by the people against all governmental authority, he doesn’t exist. They are all in on it and you ain’t.
 
I can't either. Being affluent and from Cincinnati that can go 50/50 either way.
If he's pro-2A, and I have no reason to believe at this point he wouldn't be, then he would pass a defining criteria of mine for a candidate.

(Edit) However, BLEE may be right, these "intellectuals like "common sense" gun control" way too often.

I'm okay with him being first generation "Murican. Because how many "real 'Murican's" have lead us vastly astray as of late. Answer: 99.0% < x < 100% of them!!!

However, Billy Bob, Ricky Joe, and Suzie Homemaker will say...ew...he's not 'Murican.
 
Last edited:
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Wow. I figured that there would be a long list of the things that the republicants have accomplished in righting the ship.
They voted to spend weapons and money to protect Ukraine's border without oversight. So there's that.

 
if this guy is for real and teamed with desantis,does anyone think they would get the nomination? anyone here knows that they would have NO chance to win. the fix was in in 20 and has been tuned up since as 22 shows. if they did win (HA,HA),they would be sent to dallas to make speeches. or alternatively they would be found in bed with a live 6 yo girl or a dead 6 yo boy.
best for me would be have the guy come to FL and maybe see about being governor. not up to date on the real leanings of our current lt gov.
 
This is flabbergasting. I truly cannot believe there is some question as to where this guy’s allegiances lie. He’s a 37 year old presidential candidate who is getting buzz on MSM! A second generation American from a commie state who was named a future leader by the WEF. Do we need a refresher?

I can tell you exactly what he’ll be for, by what he rails against.

May his traitorous intentions be exposed and the LORD confuse his handlers.
 
interesting. really know nothing about him except what is on here. that can be problematic. need to start my own dig. rhinos are very common and do know how to talk the talk and walk the lying back stab.
 
Look under “global health”. He isn’t listed on the wef website but you can find his name in announcements. Either way he is a big pharma, pro chinese hack. Don’t be stupid and think anyone that runs for high office isn’t an evil piece of shit. It’s far too easy to fool many off you. It happens every two years like clock work.
 

@Samuel Whittemore posted this in another thread. I havent vetted it. For all of you looking for a savior that doesn’t require mass disobedience by the people against all governmental authority, he doesn’t exist. They are all in on it and you ain’t.

You're either drunk, stupid, or both.



I'm not going to bother going through the WEF YLF website looking for him. Show us.

He was indeed listed as a WEF GYL for 2021 under the Global Health field.

The World Economic Forum (WEF) has unveiled the ‘promising’ 112 Young Global Leaders committed to improving the world.​

The driven group of researchers, innovative entrepreneurs, activists and promising political leaders, all under 40, are WEF’s Young Global Leaders Class of 2021. The class of 2021 is gender equal and represent 56 countries. They join a group of Nobel Prize recipients, Pulitzer winners, heads of state and chief executive officers committed to improving the state of the world.

The Forum of Young Global Leaders (YGL) was founded in 2005 by Klaus Schwab, Founder and Executive Chairman of the World Economic Forum, to create a world where leaders take responsibility for a sustainable future, while meeting increasingly complex and interrelated challenges. Today, there are 1,400 members and alumni from more than 120 countries. Notable members include prime ministers Jacinda Ardern and Sanna Marin, President Carlos Alvarado Quesada of Costa Rica, actor Yao Chen, lawyer Amal Clooney and filmmaker Wanuri Kahiu.

YGLs are active in today’s most exciting and dynamic fields and focus on impact. In the past year they have worked on more than 30 Covid-19-related initiatives, including expanding the use of free public digital health services, launching data challenges to build an ecosystem that can help tackle the pandemic, creating mobile intensive care shelters, opening mental health support platforms and working on vaccine development.

LEADERS SHAPING A SUSTAINABLE FUTURE​

Members will take part in a five-year programme, which offers executive education courses, expeditions and opportunities to collaborate and test ideas among a trusted network of peers.

“The YGL Class of 2021 is comprised of thoughtful and courageous leaders who will shape a more sustainable and inclusive post-pandemic era,” stated Mariah Levin, Head of the Forum of Young Global Leaders.

“We are delighted to welcome the class of 2021 at a time when cultivating responsible leadership is needed more than ever to steer us through the multiple challenges the world is facing,” added Nicole Schwab, Board Member of the Forum of Young Global Leaders.

Nicole-Schwab.jpeg
Nicole Schwab, Board Member of the Forum of Young Global Leaders.

2021’S YOUNG GLOBAL LEADERS​

This year’s class of YGL include:

Academia and Research

  • Abasi Ene-Obong, Chief Executive Officer and Founder, 54gene, United States of America
  • Dalal Saeb Iriqat, Vice-President for International Relations, Arab American University-Palestine, Palestinian Territories
  • Devi Sridhar, University Lecturer in Global Health Politics, University of Oxford, United Kingdom
  • Ibram X Kendi, Director of the Center for Antiracist Research, Boston University, United States of America
  • Izkia Siches, President, Medical College of Chile, Chile
  • Lu Chaoyang, Professor, University of Science and Technology of China, People’s Republic of China
  • Peter Biar Ajak, Visiting Fellow and Adjunct Faculty, Africa Center for Strategic Studies, United States of America
  • Tom Crowther, Professor of Global Ecosystem Ecology, ETH Zurich, Switzerland
  • Wu Chen, Deputy Director, Department of International Collaboration, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, People’s Republic of China

Arts, Media and Sports

  • Adriana Cargill, Independent Journalist, United States of America
  • Christoph Bornschein, Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer, TLGG (Torben, Lucie und die gelbe Gefahr), Germany
  • Faouzi Khlifi (known as El Seed), Artist and Founder, El Seed Studio, Tunisia
  • Hu Ge, Actor, Hu Ge Studio, People’s Republic of China
  • Jessica Mauboy, Artist, Parade Management, Australia
  • Li Ni, Vice-Chairman and Chief Operating Officer, Bilibili Inc., People’s Republic of China
  • Lukas Nelson, Singer, Songwriter, Philanthropist, United States of America
  • Mashrafe Bin Mortaza, Captain, Bangladesh Cricket Team, Bangladesh
  • Nathalia Arcuri, Founder/President, Me Poupe, Brazil
  • Rohan Ramakrishnan, Founder and Chief Executive Officer, The ASEAN Post, Malaysia
  • Wang Guan, Chief Correspondent, CGTN, People’s Republic of China

Banking and Investment

  • Brian Kaufmann, Portfolio Manager; Head, Private Investments; Management Committee Member, Viking Global Investors, United States of America
  • Catherine Lenson, Chief Human Resources Officer, SoftBank Investment Advisors (UK), United Kingdom
  • Cristina Fonseca, Chief Executive Officer, Cleverly, Portugal
  • Daniel Ahn, Managing Director, Chief US Economist, Head of Markets 360 and North America, BNP Paribas, United States of America
  • Gregoire Pictet, Chief Executive Officer, Pictet North America, Banque Pictet and Cie, Switzerland
  • He Zhengyu, Principal Scientist, Ant Group, People’s Republic of China
  • Lee Seung Gun, Chief Executive Officer and Founder, Viva Republica (Toss), Republic of Korea
  • Luis Felipe Cervantes Legorreta, Principal and Head of Mexico Office, General Atlantic, United States of America
  • Mohammad Salem Omaid, Chief Executive Officer, Azizi Bank, Afghanistan

Business

  • Andrey A. Guryev, Chief Executive Officer, PJSC PhosAgro, Russian Federation
  • Anne-Laure De Chammard, Group Chief Strategy Officer, ENGIE Group, France
  • Claudia Vergueiro Massei, Chief Executive Officer, Siemens Oman, Oman
  • Dana Juffali, Business Development Director, Khaled Juffali Energy and Utilities, Saudi Arabia
  • Erica Alessandri, Member of the Board, Technogym, Italy
  • Gareth Wong, Chief Executive Officer, Mitbana, Singapore
  • Haley Lowry, Global Sustainability Director, Dow, United States of America
  • Kishin Rk, Chief Executive Officer, RB Capital, Singapore
  • Laure Forgeron, Managing Director – Head of Facultative Underwriting EMEA, Swiss Reinsurance Company, Switzerland
  • Liam Sobey, Vice President of Merchandising, Sobeys, Canada
  • Matthew Chamberlain, Chief Executive, London Metal Exchange, United Kingdom
  • Mohamed Al Hashemi, Country Head, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, Majid Al Futtaim Group, Majid Al Futtaim Retail, United Arab Emirates
  • Nari Kahle, Head, Transformation and Operational Excellence, Volkswagen, Germany
  • Nirvana Chaudhary, Managing Director, Chaudhary Group, Nepal
  • Ricardo Weder, Founder and Chief Executive Officer, JUSTO, Mexico
  • Roongchat Boonyarat, Director, Chief Executive and Operating Officer, Malee Group, Thailand
  • Rose Damen, Managing Director, Damen Yachting; Non-Executive Member of the Board, Damen Holding, Netherlands
  • Shreevar Kheruka, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer, Borosil, India
  • Sophie Kim Seul Ah, Founder, Market Kurly, Republic of Korea
  • Srikanth Bolla, Chief Executive Officer, Bollant Industries, India
  • Sylvia Wiesner, Vice-President Foods DACH, Unilever, Germany
  • Tanit Chearavanont, Director, Siam Makro, Charoen Pokphand Group, Thailand

Civil Society and Social Entrepreneurship

  • Amit Paley, Chief Executive Officer and Executive Director, The Trevor Project, United States of America
  • Anulika Ajufo, Principal, Soros Economic Development Fund, United Kingdom
  • Deepika Padukone, Founder, The Live Love Laugh Foundation, India
  • Hindou Oumarou Ibrahim, President, Association for Indigenous Women and Peoples of Chad (AFPAT), Chad
  • Jessica Jackson, Chief Advocacy Officer, Reform Alliance, United States of America
  • Jocelyn Formsma, Executive Director, National Association of Friendship Centres, Canada
  • Roberto Patiño, Chief Executive Officer, Convive, Venezuela
  • Sangu Delle, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Africa Health Holdings, Ghana
  • Sinéad Burke, Chief Executive Officer, Tilting the Lens, Ireland
  • Zolzaya Batkhuyag, Founder and Head of Board, Women for Change, Mongolia
  • Wawira Njiru, Founder, Food for Education, Kenya

Global Health and Healthcare

  • Arvan Chan, Regional Vice-President, International and Corporate Operations, Centene Corporation, United States of America
  • Burcu Ozturk, Chief Financial Officer, MLP Saglik Hizmetleri, Turkey
  • Conrod Kelly, Executive Director, Global Social Determinants and Population Health, Merck and Co., United States of America
  • David Alexander Walcott, Founder and Managing Partner, Novamed, Jamaica
  • Qian Zhuang, Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Zhiwo Explore Education and Technology, People’s Republic of China
  • Shiho Azuma, Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Lily MedTech, Japan
  • Terrence Kommal, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman, Medical Expert Consulting Group, South Africa
  • Vasudha Vats, Global Commercial Lead/Senior Director, Pfizer, United States of America
  • Vivek Ramaswamy, Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Roivant Sciences, United States of America

Professional Services

  • Ameya Prabhu, Managing Partner, UAP Advisors, India
  • Alexis Crow, Global Head, Geopolitical Investing, PwC, United States of America
  • Emily Serazin, Managing Director and Partner, Boston Consulting Group, United States of America
  • Esraa Al-Buti, Partner, EY, Saudi Arabia
  • Laura Gersch, Member of the Board of Management, Corporate Pensions, Allianz Lebensversicherungs, Germany
  • Lucy Cooper, Managing Director/Head of Innovation, Europe, Accenture, United Kingdom
  • Luiza Mattos, Partner; Head of Healthcare South America, Bain and Company, Brazil
  • Megan Greenfield, Partner, McKinsey and Company, United States of America
  • Sanae Lahlou, Director of the African Business Unit, Mazars Maroc, Morocco

Public Figures

  • Adriana Ortiz, President, National Handcraft Institute (IPA), Paraguay
  • Alanoud Bint Hamad Al-Thani, Managing Director, Qatar Financial Centre Authority, Qatar
  • Alberto de Belaunde, Congressman, Congress of Peru
  • Amélie de Montchalin, Secretary of State, European Affairs, Ministry for Europe and Foreign Affairs of France
  • Andrew Bragg, Senator for New South Wales, Parliament of the Commonwealth of Australia
  • Fawaz Farooqui, Senior Advisor to the Minister of Culture of Saudi Arabia
  • Gadeer Kamal-Mreeh, Member of the Knesset, Israel
  • Garlin Gilchrist II, Lieutenant Governor, State of Michigan, United States of America
  • Lea Wermelin, Minister for Environment, Denmark
  • Maleeka Bokhari, Parliamentary Secretary for Law and Justice, Ministry of Law and Justice of Pakistan
  • Martin Guzman, Minister of Economy, Argentina
  • Ronald Lamola, Minister of Justice and Correctional Services, South Africa
  • Tendayi Achiume, Special Rapporteur on Contemporary Forms of Racism, Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), United States of America
  • Vera Daves de Sousa, Minister of Finance, Angola
  • Virginijus Sinkevicius, Commissioner for Environment, Oceans and Fisheries, European Commission, Belgium

Technology

  • Achmad Zaky, Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Bukalapak, Indonesia
  • Aditi Avasthi, Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Indiavidual Learning, India
  • Alexander de Carvalho, Co-Founder and Chief Innovation Officer, Public Group International, United Kingdom
  • Anneliese Schulz, Regional President, Asia-Pacific and Japan, Software AG, Singapore
  • Clarisse Iribagiza, President, DMM.HeHe, Rwanda
  • Elham Al Qasim, Chief Executive Officer, Digital14, United Arab Emirates
  • Francesca Chia, Chief Executive Officer, GoGet, Malaysia
  • Gazal Kalra, Co-Founder, Rivigo, India
  • Hitesh Wadhwa, Vice-President – Strategic Initiatives, Tech Mahindra, India
  • Hriday Ravindranath, Chief Technology and Information Officer, Global Services, BT Group, India
  • Kira Radinsky, Co-Founder, Diagnostic Robotics, Israel
  • Obi Ozor, Founder/Chief Executive Officer, Kobo360, Nigeria
  • Paul Rivera, Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Kalibrr Technology Ventures, Philippines
  • Pierre-Dimitri Gore-Coty, Vice-President, International Rides, Uber, Netherlands
  • Suren Aloyan, Founder, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Dasaran, Armenia
  • Xue Peng, Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Beijing Tongcheng Biying Technology, People’s Republic of China
  • Yifan Li, Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder, Hesai Tech, People’s Republic of China
 
He was indeed listed as a WEF GYL for 2021 under the Global Health field.

The World Economic Forum (WEF) has unveiled the ‘promising’ 112 Young Global Leaders committed to improving the world.​

The driven group of researchers, innovative entrepreneurs, activists and promising political leaders, all under 40, are WEF’s Young Global Leaders Class of 2021. The class of 2021 is gender equal and represent 56 countries. They join a group of Nobel Prize recipients, Pulitzer winners, heads of state and chief executive officers committed to improving the state of the world.

The Forum of Young Global Leaders (YGL) was founded in 2005 by Klaus Schwab, Founder and Executive Chairman of the World Economic Forum, to create a world where leaders take responsibility for a sustainable future, while meeting increasingly complex and interrelated challenges. Today, there are 1,400 members and alumni from more than 120 countries. Notable members include prime ministers Jacinda Ardern and Sanna Marin, President Carlos Alvarado Quesada of Costa Rica, actor Yao Chen, lawyer Amal Clooney and filmmaker Wanuri Kahiu.

YGLs are active in today’s most exciting and dynamic fields and focus on impact. In the past year they have worked on more than 30 Covid-19-related initiatives, including expanding the use of free public digital health services, launching data challenges to build an ecosystem that can help tackle the pandemic, creating mobile intensive care shelters, opening mental health support platforms and working on vaccine development.

LEADERS SHAPING A SUSTAINABLE FUTURE​

Members will take part in a five-year programme, which offers executive education courses, expeditions and opportunities to collaborate and test ideas among a trusted network of peers.

“The YGL Class of 2021 is comprised of thoughtful and courageous leaders who will shape a more sustainable and inclusive post-pandemic era,” stated Mariah Levin, Head of the Forum of Young Global Leaders.

“We are delighted to welcome the class of 2021 at a time when cultivating responsible leadership is needed more than ever to steer us through the multiple challenges the world is facing,” added Nicole Schwab, Board Member of the Forum of Young Global Leaders.

Nicole-Schwab.jpeg
Nicole Schwab, Board Member of the Forum of Young Global Leaders.

2021’S YOUNG GLOBAL LEADERS​

This year’s class of YGL include:

Academia and Research

  • Abasi Ene-Obong, Chief Executive Officer and Founder, 54gene, United States of America
  • Dalal Saeb Iriqat, Vice-President for International Relations, Arab American University-Palestine, Palestinian Territories
  • Devi Sridhar, University Lecturer in Global Health Politics, University of Oxford, United Kingdom
  • Ibram X Kendi, Director of the Center for Antiracist Research, Boston University, United States of America
  • Izkia Siches, President, Medical College of Chile, Chile
  • Lu Chaoyang, Professor, University of Science and Technology of China, People’s Republic of China
  • Peter Biar Ajak, Visiting Fellow and Adjunct Faculty, Africa Center for Strategic Studies, United States of America
  • Tom Crowther, Professor of Global Ecosystem Ecology, ETH Zurich, Switzerland
  • Wu Chen, Deputy Director, Department of International Collaboration, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, People’s Republic of China

Arts, Media and Sports

  • Adriana Cargill, Independent Journalist, United States of America
  • Christoph Bornschein, Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer, TLGG (Torben, Lucie und die gelbe Gefahr), Germany
  • Faouzi Khlifi (known as El Seed), Artist and Founder, El Seed Studio, Tunisia
  • Hu Ge, Actor, Hu Ge Studio, People’s Republic of China
  • Jessica Mauboy, Artist, Parade Management, Australia
  • Li Ni, Vice-Chairman and Chief Operating Officer, Bilibili Inc., People’s Republic of China
  • Lukas Nelson, Singer, Songwriter, Philanthropist, United States of America
  • Mashrafe Bin Mortaza, Captain, Bangladesh Cricket Team, Bangladesh
  • Nathalia Arcuri, Founder/President, Me Poupe, Brazil
  • Rohan Ramakrishnan, Founder and Chief Executive Officer, The ASEAN Post, Malaysia
  • Wang Guan, Chief Correspondent, CGTN, People’s Republic of China

Banking and Investment

  • Brian Kaufmann, Portfolio Manager; Head, Private Investments; Management Committee Member, Viking Global Investors, United States of America
  • Catherine Lenson, Chief Human Resources Officer, SoftBank Investment Advisors (UK), United Kingdom
  • Cristina Fonseca, Chief Executive Officer, Cleverly, Portugal
  • Daniel Ahn, Managing Director, Chief US Economist, Head of Markets 360 and North America, BNP Paribas, United States of America
  • Gregoire Pictet, Chief Executive Officer, Pictet North America, Banque Pictet and Cie, Switzerland
  • He Zhengyu, Principal Scientist, Ant Group, People’s Republic of China
  • Lee Seung Gun, Chief Executive Officer and Founder, Viva Republica (Toss), Republic of Korea
  • Luis Felipe Cervantes Legorreta, Principal and Head of Mexico Office, General Atlantic, United States of America
  • Mohammad Salem Omaid, Chief Executive Officer, Azizi Bank, Afghanistan

Business

  • Andrey A. Guryev, Chief Executive Officer, PJSC PhosAgro, Russian Federation
  • Anne-Laure De Chammard, Group Chief Strategy Officer, ENGIE Group, France
  • Claudia Vergueiro Massei, Chief Executive Officer, Siemens Oman, Oman
  • Dana Juffali, Business Development Director, Khaled Juffali Energy and Utilities, Saudi Arabia
  • Erica Alessandri, Member of the Board, Technogym, Italy
  • Gareth Wong, Chief Executive Officer, Mitbana, Singapore
  • Haley Lowry, Global Sustainability Director, Dow, United States of America
  • Kishin Rk, Chief Executive Officer, RB Capital, Singapore
  • Laure Forgeron, Managing Director – Head of Facultative Underwriting EMEA, Swiss Reinsurance Company, Switzerland
  • Liam Sobey, Vice President of Merchandising, Sobeys, Canada
  • Matthew Chamberlain, Chief Executive, London Metal Exchange, United Kingdom
  • Mohamed Al Hashemi, Country Head, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, Majid Al Futtaim Group, Majid Al Futtaim Retail, United Arab Emirates
  • Nari Kahle, Head, Transformation and Operational Excellence, Volkswagen, Germany
  • Nirvana Chaudhary, Managing Director, Chaudhary Group, Nepal
  • Ricardo Weder, Founder and Chief Executive Officer, JUSTO, Mexico
  • Roongchat Boonyarat, Director, Chief Executive and Operating Officer, Malee Group, Thailand
  • Rose Damen, Managing Director, Damen Yachting; Non-Executive Member of the Board, Damen Holding, Netherlands
  • Shreevar Kheruka, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer, Borosil, India
  • Sophie Kim Seul Ah, Founder, Market Kurly, Republic of Korea
  • Srikanth Bolla, Chief Executive Officer, Bollant Industries, India
  • Sylvia Wiesner, Vice-President Foods DACH, Unilever, Germany
  • Tanit Chearavanont, Director, Siam Makro, Charoen Pokphand Group, Thailand

Civil Society and Social Entrepreneurship

  • Amit Paley, Chief Executive Officer and Executive Director, The Trevor Project, United States of America
  • Anulika Ajufo, Principal, Soros Economic Development Fund, United Kingdom
  • Deepika Padukone, Founder, The Live Love Laugh Foundation, India
  • Hindou Oumarou Ibrahim, President, Association for Indigenous Women and Peoples of Chad (AFPAT), Chad
  • Jessica Jackson, Chief Advocacy Officer, Reform Alliance, United States of America
  • Jocelyn Formsma, Executive Director, National Association of Friendship Centres, Canada
  • Roberto Patiño, Chief Executive Officer, Convive, Venezuela
  • Sangu Delle, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Africa Health Holdings, Ghana
  • Sinéad Burke, Chief Executive Officer, Tilting the Lens, Ireland
  • Zolzaya Batkhuyag, Founder and Head of Board, Women for Change, Mongolia
  • Wawira Njiru, Founder, Food for Education, Kenya

Global Health and Healthcare

  • Arvan Chan, Regional Vice-President, International and Corporate Operations, Centene Corporation, United States of America
  • Burcu Ozturk, Chief Financial Officer, MLP Saglik Hizmetleri, Turkey
  • Conrod Kelly, Executive Director, Global Social Determinants and Population Health, Merck and Co., United States of America
  • David Alexander Walcott, Founder and Managing Partner, Novamed, Jamaica
  • Qian Zhuang, Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Zhiwo Explore Education and Technology, People’s Republic of China
  • Shiho Azuma, Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Lily MedTech, Japan
  • Terrence Kommal, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman, Medical Expert Consulting Group, South Africa
  • Vasudha Vats, Global Commercial Lead/Senior Director, Pfizer, United States of America
  • Vivek Ramaswamy, Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Roivant Sciences, United States of America

Professional Services

  • Ameya Prabhu, Managing Partner, UAP Advisors, India
  • Alexis Crow, Global Head, Geopolitical Investing, PwC, United States of America
  • Emily Serazin, Managing Director and Partner, Boston Consulting Group, United States of America
  • Esraa Al-Buti, Partner, EY, Saudi Arabia
  • Laura Gersch, Member of the Board of Management, Corporate Pensions, Allianz Lebensversicherungs, Germany
  • Lucy Cooper, Managing Director/Head of Innovation, Europe, Accenture, United Kingdom
  • Luiza Mattos, Partner; Head of Healthcare South America, Bain and Company, Brazil
  • Megan Greenfield, Partner, McKinsey and Company, United States of America
  • Sanae Lahlou, Director of the African Business Unit, Mazars Maroc, Morocco

Public Figures

  • Adriana Ortiz, President, National Handcraft Institute (IPA), Paraguay
  • Alanoud Bint Hamad Al-Thani, Managing Director, Qatar Financial Centre Authority, Qatar
  • Alberto de Belaunde, Congressman, Congress of Peru
  • Amélie de Montchalin, Secretary of State, European Affairs, Ministry for Europe and Foreign Affairs of France
  • Andrew Bragg, Senator for New South Wales, Parliament of the Commonwealth of Australia
  • Fawaz Farooqui, Senior Advisor to the Minister of Culture of Saudi Arabia
  • Gadeer Kamal-Mreeh, Member of the Knesset, Israel
  • Garlin Gilchrist II, Lieutenant Governor, State of Michigan, United States of America
  • Lea Wermelin, Minister for Environment, Denmark
  • Maleeka Bokhari, Parliamentary Secretary for Law and Justice, Ministry of Law and Justice of Pakistan
  • Martin Guzman, Minister of Economy, Argentina
  • Ronald Lamola, Minister of Justice and Correctional Services, South Africa
  • Tendayi Achiume, Special Rapporteur on Contemporary Forms of Racism, Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), United States of America
  • Vera Daves de Sousa, Minister of Finance, Angola
  • Virginijus Sinkevicius, Commissioner for Environment, Oceans and Fisheries, European Commission, Belgium

Technology

  • Achmad Zaky, Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Bukalapak, Indonesia
  • Aditi Avasthi, Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Indiavidual Learning, India
  • Alexander de Carvalho, Co-Founder and Chief Innovation Officer, Public Group International, United Kingdom
  • Anneliese Schulz, Regional President, Asia-Pacific and Japan, Software AG, Singapore
  • Clarisse Iribagiza, President, DMM.HeHe, Rwanda
  • Elham Al Qasim, Chief Executive Officer, Digital14, United Arab Emirates
  • Francesca Chia, Chief Executive Officer, GoGet, Malaysia
  • Gazal Kalra, Co-Founder, Rivigo, India
  • Hitesh Wadhwa, Vice-President – Strategic Initiatives, Tech Mahindra, India
  • Hriday Ravindranath, Chief Technology and Information Officer, Global Services, BT Group, India
  • Kira Radinsky, Co-Founder, Diagnostic Robotics, Israel
  • Obi Ozor, Founder/Chief Executive Officer, Kobo360, Nigeria
  • Paul Rivera, Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Kalibrr Technology Ventures, Philippines
  • Pierre-Dimitri Gore-Coty, Vice-President, International Rides, Uber, Netherlands
  • Suren Aloyan, Founder, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Dasaran, Armenia
  • Xue Peng, Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Beijing Tongcheng Biying Technology, People’s Republic of China
  • Yifan Li, Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder, Hesai Tech, People’s Republic of China

Fuck him then

WEF YGL = instant death
 
You're either drunk, stupid, or both.



I'm not going to bother going through the WEF YLF website looking for him. Show us.
His parents are immigrants from India, so…

And I didn’t even mention the fact that he’s a longtime Soros fellow.

 
  • Wow
Reactions: UKDslayer
Race has nothing to do with my statement. The simple reality is that an extremely high number of immigrants from those states are involved in espionage against the US for their state. Do you seriously not know this stuff or are you trying to just berate me?

You’re slanderously accusing me of racism, because you started this gong-thread? Classy.

As a final point- I’m a directional driller in the oilfield, I support soon to be 10 people with my job. Doing just fine thanks for your concern. 😏
 
Race has nothing to do with my statement. The simple reality is that an extremely high number of immigrants from those states are involved in espionage against the US for their state. Do you seriously not know this stuff or are you trying to just berate me?
LOL uh huh


You’re slanderously accusing me of racism, because you started this gong-thread? Classy.
Truth is an absolute defense
 

Surprise! Vivek was never a registered Republican, he didn't vote for Trump either times, but he did donated $2700 to ActBlue in 2016 and was a WEF Global Young Leader in 2021.
Surprise! Vivek was never a registered Republican, he didn't vote for Trump either times, but he did donated $2700 to ActBlue in 2016 and was a WEF Global Young Leader in 2021.

Voting records, initially posted by an account called Ohio Legislative Watch on X, show Ramaswamy did not vote in the Ohio state primaries in 2022 and 2023.


“Well this is awkward. GOP presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy, who lives in Columbus, is not a registered Republican in Ohio and has skipped half of the elections since registering to vote in Franklin County,” the account wrote, adding, “His wife is also unaffiliated and skipped the same elections.”


“His parents live in Hamilton County and do not appear to be registered to vote at all, at least not at the address where they claim an owner-occupied property tax reduction,” the post concluded.


vivek-ramaswamy-party.jpg
Source: Franklin County, Ohio
These records have been independently reviewed by NBC News:

Ramaswamy, 38, is listed as an “unaffiliated” voter in Franklin County, Ohio, where he’s been registered to vote since November 2021, after he moved to Columbus.

The biotech multimillionaire has described himself as being a “libertarian freestyler” in college.
He’s said he voted for a Libertarian in the 2004 presidential election, but did not vote in 2008, 2012 or 2016, according to Reuters, and has contributed to both Republican and Democratic candidates. He brushed past a question about his sparse voting history during Wednesday’s GOP presidential debate.
Ramaswamy said he went on to become a “hardcore” Trump supporter and voted for him in 2020.

Ramaswamy, who declared his presidential candidacy this past February, has previously defended his failure to vote in his younger days, telling Sean Hannity he hadn’t then because he was “a jaded person in my twenties.”
Adding to the controversy, Federal Election Commission (FEC) data reveals that Ramaswamy was a donor to the Democratic Party in the 2016 Democratic Primary.

FEC records show that on March 29, 2016, Vivek Ramaswamy made a $2,700 ActBlue donation to the Friends of Dena campaign group, which is associated with Democratic Party congressional candidate Dena Minning Grayson.


vivek-donation-600x600.jpg



Ties to Soros

Last month, Ramaswamy defended himself in a Twitter video for accepting a $90,000 award from the Paul & Daisy Soros Fellowship for New Americans.

This fellowship was named after George Soros’s older brother, Paul Soros, a Hungarian-born American businessman and philanthropist, often called “the invisible Soros.”

Vivek said in a video posted on X, “In 2010, I won a scholarship when I was 24 or 25 years old and headed to law school that was partly funded not by George Soros but by Paul Soros, George’s brother. [Paul] made his money independently and who, by the way, is now dead, funded hundreds of people – hundreds of kids. I was one of them, to go to graduate school at the age of 24 or 25, back when I didn’t have a lot of money to do it.”

However, Vivek Ramaswamy was already a millionaire by the time he accepted the Soros scholarship he previously said he needed in order to pay for law school, FOX News reported.

When Ramaswamy accepted the award in 2011, he was a first-year law student at Yale and had been working for several years as an investment analyst at the hedge fund QVT Financial, according to FOX News.

However, recent revelations regarding Ramaswamy’s financial records paint a different picture. In the same year he accepted the award, Ramaswamy reported $2,252,209 in total income, according to his tax returns. He also reported a total of $1,173,690 in income in the three years prior.

Ramaswamy’s Wikipedia page was updated to remove information about his association with Paul Soros, raising questions about the transparency of Ramaswamy’s candidacy according to critics.

According to Mediate, Ramaswamy seems to have paid Wikipedia editor “Jhofferman,” to remove content from his page that Ramaswamy believed would undermine his candidacy in the Republican primary. A few days later, Ramaswamy declared his intention to run in 2024.

“According to the article’s version history, the editor removed lines about Ramaswamy’s receipt of a Paul & Daisy Soros Fellowship for New Americans in 2011,” the outlet reported.



Ties to WEF

Ramaswamy has also faced scrutiny over his inclusion in the WEF’s 2021 ‘Young Global Leader’ list published on March 10, 2021. Despite rejecting the award and repeatedly asking for his name to be removed, the WEF refused.

“The World Economic Forum named me on a list of so-called young global leaders. They did it despite the fact that I turned down their award. They kept my name on that list despite the fact that I repeatedly asked them to take it off because I did not share their values. I’m an opponent of it,” Ramaswamy said.

After two years on the list, Ramaswamy was removed by the WEF after he filed a lawsuit against the company earlier this year, saying, “This is an organization that does a lot of wrong and I’ve opposed it publicly and believe it should be held accountable.”


Mask Mandate

On the topic of face masks, Ramaswamy acknowledged that he made a statement encouraging people to buy masks out of personal responsibility early on in the pandemic, in opposition to government advice. However, he clarified that as the scientific understanding of masks evolved, so did his stance.

“I’ll admit it, my anti-government instincts got the better of me. Because I don’t know if you all remember this, but back in March, April 2020, when I put that tweet out, which said that we should buy masks based on individual personal responsibility or whatever it was that I said, that was in response to the government, including Fauci and the head of the CDC, laughing at people for buying masks and telling people across this country that they shouldn’t buy masks. I have inherently libertarian instincts,” he said.

Involvement in the Ohio COVID-19 Response Team

Ramaswamy’s alleged work with Ohio’s COVID-19 response team was also removed from his Wikipedia page at his request, a move that has raised eyebrows.

According to Mediate, “Also removed from the page on February 9, 2023 was Ramaswamy’s role on the state of Ohio’s Covid-19 Response Team. The editor recorded that Ramaswamy’s Covid-era work was removed from the article by the candidate’s own explicit request, while his Soros fellowship was deemed “extraneous material” by the editor.”

Ties to NIH

Vivek Ramaswamy’s company, Datavant, partnered with the National Institutes of Health to create a database of patients’ personal medical information.

“Regenstrief Institute, Indiana Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute (CTSI) and Datavant are supporting the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in a national effort to securely gather data to help scientists understand and develop treatments for COVID-19,” according to the news release.

“Regenstrief, Datavant and Indiana CTSI created solutions that will enable the linking of data from different sources without the identifiers, improving the quality and completeness of the information while still protecting patient identities. This process will make data more useful to researchers as they work to understand the virus and develop solutions to address it.”

“Datavant provides the privacy-preserving record linkage (PPRL) technology which underpins de-identified data contributions to the NIH COVID-19 Data Warehouse, including the N3C, ensuring patient records are shared safely, securely, and privately in compliance with de-identification standards. De-identified data linkages within and with the N3C will address the challenges of assembling comprehensive patient records in large-scale clinical research due to care fragmentation and data fragmentation.”

Ties to NIH

Vivek Ramaswamy’s company, Datavant, partnered with the National Institutes of Health to create a database of patients’ personal medical information.

“Regenstrief Institute, Indiana Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute (CTSI) and Datavant are supporting the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in a national effort to securely gather data to help scientists understand and develop treatments for COVID-19,” according to the news release.

“Regenstrief, Datavant and Indiana CTSI created solutions that will enable the linking of data from different sources without the identifiers, improving the quality and completeness of the information while still protecting patient identities. This process will make data more useful to researchers as they work to understand the virus and develop solutions to address it.”

“Datavant provides the privacy-preserving record linkage (PPRL) technology which underpins de-identified data contributions to the NIH COVID-19 Data Warehouse, including the N3C, ensuring patient records are shared safely, securely, and privately in compliance with de-identification standards. De-identified data linkages within and with the N3C will address the challenges of assembling comprehensive patient records in large-scale clinical research due to care fragmentation and data fragmentation.”


San-Francisco-based Datavant is a unit of Roivant Sciences, which Vivek Ramaswamy owns.

vivek-516x600.png


2020 Election Fraud

In an episode that promises to be remembered, Candace Owens hosted a heated debate between conservative influencer DC Draino and businessman Vivek Ramaswamy on her well-known podcast, Candace Owens Podcast.

The podcast provided a platform for the two to face off directly.

DC Draino grilled Ramaswamy by calling out his alleged flip-flopping on critical topics, including:

  • Initially believing the 2020 election wasn’t stolen through ballot fraud
  • Supporting former Vice President Mike Pence on January 6th
  • Expressing interest in re-entering the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP)
  • Advocating for “no cap” on educated immigrants
  • Encouraging everyone to get vaccinated
“And just like magic, Vivek changed many of his positions and now claims: -there was 2020 ballot fraud -only wants bilateral trade deals -regrets getting the vax,” Draino wrote on Twitter.

“But he stuck to his guns on “no cap” immigration for high-skilled immigrants Nobody has been asking Vivek the tough questions even though he’s a Big Pharma exec that appeared out of nowhere, so I did,” Draino added.

DC Draino expressed his concerns about Ramaswamy’s past statements, including quotes from his book that seemed to criticize President Trump regarding the January 6 incident and called him a loser.

Draino directly questioned Ramaswamy’s stance on the 2020 election’s fairness, and whether the election was rigged.

Draino said, “I started to dig a little deeper on Twitter, and I came across some passages from your book. And I don’t know which book it is. It’s one of the two. But it talks about January 6, and it says, “It was a dark day for democracy. The loser of the last election refused to concede the race, claimed the election was stolen, raised hundreds of millions of dollars from loyal supporters, and is considering running for executive office again. I’m referring, of course, to Donald Trump.””

The quoted passage is from Ramaswamy’s book Nation of Victims, published in 2022, in which he lambastes Trump for refusing to concede the election’s outcome, dubbing him a “loser” and and detailed Trump’s futile efforts to overturn the results.

Draino continued, “Do you think that the 2020 election was fair? Do you think that Joe Biden got the most votes in American history? Or do you think 2020 was rigged?”

Ramaswamy provided a comprehensive response. He explained the nature of the quoted passage from his book, which he claimed had been taken out of context. According to Ramaswamy, he was actually referring to Stacey Abrams.

“Those exact words I’m referring to, of course, Stacey Abrams, that was literally the opening paragraph of that chapter. And it turned out that those words were literally borrowed from a description of somebody else criticizing Donald Trump that I then cut and pasted,” Ramaswamy said.

Re-entering the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP)

“Here is the Twitter Space with Elon where Vivek says he wants to re-enter TPP He backtracked those statements on the Candace Owens show but I called out his flip-flop,” DC Draino wrote.

Ties to NIH

Vivek Ramaswamy’s company, Datavant, partnered with the National Institutes of Health to create a database of patients’ personal medical information.

“Regenstrief Institute, Indiana Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute (CTSI) and Datavant are supporting the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in a national effort to securely gather data to help scientists understand and develop treatments for COVID-19,” according to the news release.

“Regenstrief, Datavant and Indiana CTSI created solutions that will enable the linking of data from different sources without the identifiers, improving the quality and completeness of the information while still protecting patient identities. This process will make data more useful to researchers as they work to understand the virus and develop solutions to address it.”


“Datavant provides the privacy-preserving record linkage (PPRL) technology which underpins de-identified data contributions to the NIH COVID-19 Data Warehouse, including the N3C, ensuring patient records are shared safely, securely, and privately in compliance with de-identification standards. De-identified data linkages within and with the N3C will address the challenges of assembling comprehensive patient records in large-scale clinical research due to care fragmentation and data fragmentation.”

That’s a half-truth. The other half is that he IS Big Pharma, has partnered with other Big Pharma firms like Pfizer, and one of his company’s joint ventures sued Moderna claiming responsibility for one of the mandated & infamous experimental mRNA vaccines 💉 link:… https://t.co/4iNDNyLhAn pic.twitter.com/r85GUFG0EM
— Hirsh Vardhan Singh (@HirshSingh) August 24, 2023


San-Francisco-based Datavant is a unit of Roivant Sciences, which Vivek Ramaswamy owns.

vivek-516x600.png


2020 Election Fraud

In an episode that promises to be remembered, Candace Owens hosted a heated debate between conservative influencer DC Draino and businessman Vivek Ramaswamy on her well-known podcast, Candace Owens Podcast.


The podcast provided a platform for the two to face off directly.

DC Draino grilled Ramaswamy by calling out his alleged flip-flopping on critical topics, including:


  • Initially believing the 2020 election wasn’t stolen through ballot fraud
  • Supporting former Vice President Mike Pence on January 6th
  • Expressing interest in re-entering the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP)
  • Advocating for “no cap” on educated immigrants
  • Encouraging everyone to get vaccinated
“And just like magic, Vivek changed many of his positions and now claims: -there was 2020 ballot fraud -only wants bilateral trade deals -regrets getting the vax,” Draino wrote on Twitter.

“But he stuck to his guns on “no cap” immigration for high-skilled immigrants Nobody has been asking Vivek the tough questions even though he’s a Big Pharma exec that appeared out of nowhere, so I did,” Draino added.

DC Draino expressed his concerns about Ramaswamy’s past statements, including quotes from his book that seemed to criticize President Trump regarding the January 6 incident and called him a loser.

Draino directly questioned Ramaswamy’s stance on the 2020 election’s fairness, and whether the election was rigged.

Draino said, “I started to dig a little deeper on Twitter, and I came across some passages from your book. And I don’t know which book it is. It’s one of the two. But it talks about January 6, and it says, “It was a dark day for democracy. The loser of the last election refused to concede the race, claimed the election was stolen, raised hundreds of millions of dollars from loyal supporters, and is considering running for executive office again. I’m referring, of course, to Donald Trump.””

The quoted passage is from Ramaswamy’s book Nation of Victims, published in 2022, in which he lambastes Trump for refusing to concede the election’s outcome, dubbing him a “loser” and and detailed Trump’s futile efforts to overturn the results.

Draino continued, “Do you think that the 2020 election was fair? Do you think that Joe Biden got the most votes in American history? Or do you think 2020 was rigged?”

Ramaswamy provided a comprehensive response. He explained the nature of the quoted passage from his book, which he claimed had been taken out of context. According to Ramaswamy, he was actually referring to Stacey Abrams.

“Those exact words I’m referring to, of course, Stacey Abrams, that was literally the opening paragraph of that chapter. And it turned out that those words were literally borrowed from a description of somebody else criticizing Donald Trump that I then cut and pasted,” Ramaswamy said.

Re-entering the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP)

“Here is the Twitter Space with Elon where Vivek says he wants to re-enter TPP He backtracked those statements on the Candace Owens show but I called out his flip-flop,” DC Draino wrote.

Here is the Twitter Space with Elon where Vivek says he wants to re-enter TPP
He backtracked those statements on the Candace Owens show but I called out his flip-flop https://t.co/mzlxWgFGtW
— DC_Draino (@DC_Draino) August 11, 2023
 
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Surprise! Vivek was never a registered Republican, he didn't vote for Trump either times, but he did donated $2700 to ActBlue in 2016 and was a WEF Global Young Leader in 2021.
I have been very skeptical of him, inspite of not knowing much about his background. Having said that, anyone who would donate anything to actblue exhibits a complete lack of objectivity, common sense, morals or intelligence.

Hard pass from me.

edit; rumor has it that ~ $90K of his college expenses were paid by someone in the Soros clan.
 
I have been very skeptical of him, inspite of not knowing much about his background. Having said that, anyone who would donate anything to actblue exhibits a complete lack of objectivity, common sense, morals or intelligence.

Hard pass from me.

edit; rumor has it that ~ $90K of his college expenses were paid by someone in the Soros clan.

Sorry - took a while for me to cut and paste everything. He took the money from Soros AFTER he was a multimillionaire. His position on mask mandates, role in Ohio Covid roll-out, HIS OWN CORPORATIONS include one to collect everyones health data in a huge databank, including COVID 19, specifically created in partnership for the NIH, and he was busy with antibodies too...
 
Last edited:

Surprise! Vivek was never a registered Republican, he didn't vote for Trump either times, but he did donated $2700 to ActBlue in 2016 and was a WEF Global Young Leader in 2021.
Surprise! Vivek was never a registered Republican, he didn't vote for Trump either times, but he did donated $2700 to ActBlue in 2016 and was a WEF Global Young Leader in 2021.

Voting records, initially posted by an account called Ohio Legislative Watch on X, show Ramaswamy did not vote in the Ohio state primaries in 2022 and 2023.


“Well this is awkward. GOP presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy, who lives in Columbus, is not a registered Republican in Ohio and has skipped half of the elections since registering to vote in Franklin County,” the account wrote, adding, “His wife is also unaffiliated and skipped the same elections.”


“His parents live in Hamilton County and do not appear to be registered to vote at all, at least not at the address where they claim an owner-occupied property tax reduction,” the post concluded.


vivek-ramaswamy-party.jpg
Source: Franklin County, Ohio
These records have been independently reviewed by NBC News:


Adding to the controversy, Federal Election Commission (FEC) data reveals that Ramaswamy was a donor to the Democratic Party in the 2016 Democratic Primary.

FEC records show that on March 29, 2016, Vivek Ramaswamy made a $2,700 ActBlue donation to the Friends of Dena campaign group, which is associated with Democratic Party congressional candidate Dena Minning Grayson.


vivek-donation-600x600.jpg



Ties to Soros

Last month, Ramaswamy defended himself in a Twitter video for accepting a $90,000 award from the Paul & Daisy Soros Fellowship for New Americans.

This fellowship was named after George Soros’s older brother, Paul Soros, a Hungarian-born American businessman and philanthropist, often called “the invisible Soros.”

Vivek said in a video posted on X, “In 2010, I won a scholarship when I was 24 or 25 years old and headed to law school that was partly funded not by George Soros but by Paul Soros, George’s brother. [Paul] made his money independently and who, by the way, is now dead, funded hundreds of people – hundreds of kids. I was one of them, to go to graduate school at the age of 24 or 25, back when I didn’t have a lot of money to do it.”

However, Vivek Ramaswamy was already a millionaire by the time he accepted the Soros scholarship he previously said he needed in order to pay for law school, FOX News reported.

When Ramaswamy accepted the award in 2011, he was a first-year law student at Yale and had been working for several years as an investment analyst at the hedge fund QVT Financial, according to FOX News.

However, recent revelations regarding Ramaswamy’s financial records paint a different picture. In the same year he accepted the award, Ramaswamy reported $2,252,209 in total income, according to his tax returns. He also reported a total of $1,173,690 in income in the three years prior.

Ramaswamy’s Wikipedia page was updated to remove information about his association with Paul Soros, raising questions about the transparency of Ramaswamy’s candidacy according to critics.

According to Mediate, Ramaswamy seems to have paid Wikipedia editor “Jhofferman,” to remove content from his page that Ramaswamy believed would undermine his candidacy in the Republican primary. A few days later, Ramaswamy declared his intention to run in 2024.

“According to the article’s version history, the editor removed lines about Ramaswamy’s receipt of a Paul & Daisy Soros Fellowship for New Americans in 2011,” the outlet reported.



Ties to WEF

Ramaswamy has also faced scrutiny over his inclusion in the WEF’s 2021 ‘Young Global Leader’ list published on March 10, 2021. Despite rejecting the award and repeatedly asking for his name to be removed, the WEF refused.

“The World Economic Forum named me on a list of so-called young global leaders. They did it despite the fact that I turned down their award. They kept my name on that list despite the fact that I repeatedly asked them to take it off because I did not share their values. I’m an opponent of it,” Ramaswamy said.

After two years on the list, Ramaswamy was removed by the WEF after he filed a lawsuit against the company earlier this year, saying, “This is an organization that does a lot of wrong and I’ve opposed it publicly and believe it should be held accountable.”


Mask Mandate

On the topic of face masks, Ramaswamy acknowledged that he made a statement encouraging people to buy masks out of personal responsibility early on in the pandemic, in opposition to government advice. However, he clarified that as the scientific understanding of masks evolved, so did his stance.

“I’ll admit it, my anti-government instincts got the better of me. Because I don’t know if you all remember this, but back in March, April 2020, when I put that tweet out, which said that we should buy masks based on individual personal responsibility or whatever it was that I said, that was in response to the government, including Fauci and the head of the CDC, laughing at people for buying masks and telling people across this country that they shouldn’t buy masks. I have inherently libertarian instincts,” he said.

Involvement in the Ohio COVID-19 Response Team

Ramaswamy’s alleged work with Ohio’s COVID-19 response team was also removed from his Wikipedia page at his request, a move that has raised eyebrows.

According to Mediate, “Also removed from the page on February 9, 2023 was Ramaswamy’s role on the state of Ohio’s Covid-19 Response Team. The editor recorded that Ramaswamy’s Covid-era work was removed from the article by the candidate’s own explicit request, while his Soros fellowship was deemed “extraneous material” by the editor.”

Ties to NIH

Vivek Ramaswamy’s company, Datavant, partnered with the National Institutes of Health to create a database of patients’ personal medical information.

“Regenstrief Institute, Indiana Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute (CTSI) and Datavant are supporting the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in a national effort to securely gather data to help scientists understand and develop treatments for COVID-19,” according to the news release.

“Regenstrief, Datavant and Indiana CTSI created solutions that will enable the linking of data from different sources without the identifiers, improving the quality and completeness of the information while still protecting patient identities. This process will make data more useful to researchers as they work to understand the virus and develop solutions to address it.”

“Datavant provides the privacy-preserving record linkage (PPRL) technology which underpins de-identified data contributions to the NIH COVID-19 Data Warehouse, including the N3C, ensuring patient records are shared safely, securely, and privately in compliance with de-identification standards. De-identified data linkages within and with the N3C will address the challenges of assembling comprehensive patient records in large-scale clinical research due to care fragmentation and data fragmentation.”

Ties to NIH

Vivek Ramaswamy’s company, Datavant, partnered with the National Institutes of Health to create a database of patients’ personal medical information.

“Regenstrief Institute, Indiana Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute (CTSI) and Datavant are supporting the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in a national effort to securely gather data to help scientists understand and develop treatments for COVID-19,” according to the news release.

“Regenstrief, Datavant and Indiana CTSI created solutions that will enable the linking of data from different sources without the identifiers, improving the quality and completeness of the information while still protecting patient identities. This process will make data more useful to researchers as they work to understand the virus and develop solutions to address it.”

“Datavant provides the privacy-preserving record linkage (PPRL) technology which underpins de-identified data contributions to the NIH COVID-19 Data Warehouse, including the N3C, ensuring patient records are shared safely, securely, and privately in compliance with de-identification standards. De-identified data linkages within and with the N3C will address the challenges of assembling comprehensive patient records in large-scale clinical research due to care fragmentation and data fragmentation.”


San-Francisco-based Datavant is a unit of Roivant Sciences, which Vivek Ramaswamy owns.

vivek-516x600.png


2020 Election Fraud

In an episode that promises to be remembered, Candace Owens hosted a heated debate between conservative influencer DC Draino and businessman Vivek Ramaswamy on her well-known podcast, Candace Owens Podcast.

The podcast provided a platform for the two to face off directly.

DC Draino grilled Ramaswamy by calling out his alleged flip-flopping on critical topics, including:

  • Initially believing the 2020 election wasn’t stolen through ballot fraud
  • Supporting former Vice President Mike Pence on January 6th
  • Expressing interest in re-entering the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP)
  • Advocating for “no cap” on educated immigrants
  • Encouraging everyone to get vaccinated
“And just like magic, Vivek changed many of his positions and now claims: -there was 2020 ballot fraud -only wants bilateral trade deals -regrets getting the vax,” Draino wrote on Twitter.

“But he stuck to his guns on “no cap” immigration for high-skilled immigrants Nobody has been asking Vivek the tough questions even though he’s a Big Pharma exec that appeared out of nowhere, so I did,” Draino added.

DC Draino expressed his concerns about Ramaswamy’s past statements, including quotes from his book that seemed to criticize President Trump regarding the January 6 incident and called him a loser.

Draino directly questioned Ramaswamy’s stance on the 2020 election’s fairness, and whether the election was rigged.

Draino said, “I started to dig a little deeper on Twitter, and I came across some passages from your book. And I don’t know which book it is. It’s one of the two. But it talks about January 6, and it says, “It was a dark day for democracy. The loser of the last election refused to concede the race, claimed the election was stolen, raised hundreds of millions of dollars from loyal supporters, and is considering running for executive office again. I’m referring, of course, to Donald Trump.””

The quoted passage is from Ramaswamy’s book Nation of Victims, published in 2022, in which he lambastes Trump for refusing to concede the election’s outcome, dubbing him a “loser” and and detailed Trump’s futile efforts to overturn the results.

Draino continued, “Do you think that the 2020 election was fair? Do you think that Joe Biden got the most votes in American history? Or do you think 2020 was rigged?”

Ramaswamy provided a comprehensive response. He explained the nature of the quoted passage from his book, which he claimed had been taken out of context. According to Ramaswamy, he was actually referring to Stacey Abrams.

“Those exact words I’m referring to, of course, Stacey Abrams, that was literally the opening paragraph of that chapter. And it turned out that those words were literally borrowed from a description of somebody else criticizing Donald Trump that I then cut and pasted,” Ramaswamy said.

Re-entering the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP)

“Here is the Twitter Space with Elon where Vivek says he wants to re-enter TPP He backtracked those statements on the Candace Owens show but I called out his flip-flop,” DC Draino wrote.

Ties to NIH

Vivek Ramaswamy’s company, Datavant, partnered with the National Institutes of Health to create a database of patients’ personal medical information.

“Regenstrief Institute, Indiana Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute (CTSI) and Datavant are supporting the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in a national effort to securely gather data to help scientists understand and develop treatments for COVID-19,” according to the news release.

“Regenstrief, Datavant and Indiana CTSI created solutions that will enable the linking of data from different sources without the identifiers, improving the quality and completeness of the information while still protecting patient identities. This process will make data more useful to researchers as they work to understand the virus and develop solutions to address it.”


“Datavant provides the privacy-preserving record linkage (PPRL) technology which underpins de-identified data contributions to the NIH COVID-19 Data Warehouse, including the N3C, ensuring patient records are shared safely, securely, and privately in compliance with de-identification standards. De-identified data linkages within and with the N3C will address the challenges of assembling comprehensive patient records in large-scale clinical research due to care fragmentation and data fragmentation.”




San-Francisco-based Datavant is a unit of Roivant Sciences, which Vivek Ramaswamy owns.

vivek-516x600.png


2020 Election Fraud

In an episode that promises to be remembered, Candace Owens hosted a heated debate between conservative influencer DC Draino and businessman Vivek Ramaswamy on her well-known podcast, Candace Owens Podcast.


The podcast provided a platform for the two to face off directly.

DC Draino grilled Ramaswamy by calling out his alleged flip-flopping on critical topics, including:


  • Initially believing the 2020 election wasn’t stolen through ballot fraud
  • Supporting former Vice President Mike Pence on January 6th
  • Expressing interest in re-entering the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP)
  • Advocating for “no cap” on educated immigrants
  • Encouraging everyone to get vaccinated
“And just like magic, Vivek changed many of his positions and now claims: -there was 2020 ballot fraud -only wants bilateral trade deals -regrets getting the vax,” Draino wrote on Twitter.

“But he stuck to his guns on “no cap” immigration for high-skilled immigrants Nobody has been asking Vivek the tough questions even though he’s a Big Pharma exec that appeared out of nowhere, so I did,” Draino added.

DC Draino expressed his concerns about Ramaswamy’s past statements, including quotes from his book that seemed to criticize President Trump regarding the January 6 incident and called him a loser.

Draino directly questioned Ramaswamy’s stance on the 2020 election’s fairness, and whether the election was rigged.

Draino said, “I started to dig a little deeper on Twitter, and I came across some passages from your book. And I don’t know which book it is. It’s one of the two. But it talks about January 6, and it says, “It was a dark day for democracy. The loser of the last election refused to concede the race, claimed the election was stolen, raised hundreds of millions of dollars from loyal supporters, and is considering running for executive office again. I’m referring, of course, to Donald Trump.””

The quoted passage is from Ramaswamy’s book Nation of Victims, published in 2022, in which he lambastes Trump for refusing to concede the election’s outcome, dubbing him a “loser” and and detailed Trump’s futile efforts to overturn the results.

Draino continued, “Do you think that the 2020 election was fair? Do you think that Joe Biden got the most votes in American history? Or do you think 2020 was rigged?”

Ramaswamy provided a comprehensive response. He explained the nature of the quoted passage from his book, which he claimed had been taken out of context. According to Ramaswamy, he was actually referring to Stacey Abrams.

“Those exact words I’m referring to, of course, Stacey Abrams, that was literally the opening paragraph of that chapter. And it turned out that those words were literally borrowed from a description of somebody else criticizing Donald Trump that I then cut and pasted,” Ramaswamy said.

Re-entering the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP)

“Here is the Twitter Space with Elon where Vivek says he wants to re-enter TPP He backtracked those statements on the Candace Owens show but I called out his flip-flop,” DC Draino wrote.

This guy is Mister Flip-flop.And gee around J6 he said supported Pence and Trump was a loser.
 
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Sorry - took a while for me to cut and paste everything. He took the money from Soros AFTER he was a multimillionaire. His position on mask mandates, role in Ohio Covid roll-out, HIS OWN CORPOATIONS include one to collect everyones health data, including COVID 19, across the world, and he was busy with antibodies too...
No worries. Like I said, I have never taken a deep dive into his bio, so I don't know.

But, with what you just mentioned, all the more reason to stay away/not support him.

And.......he could be on his death bed and take Soros money. He'd be no less dirty in my book than if he took it after college.
 
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Ramaswamy? Wasn’t that the name of Carson’s fortune telling character? Republicans latched onto the Hussein in Obama’s name like it was important for 8 years. Regardless of how many boxes he checks, and how qualified he may be; the fact is that his name is too ‘foreign’ and that’s all it will take to doom his campaign.
Yeah there's too many inbred fucks in the hollers and trailer parks for this guy to have a chance

Never mind that he's from Cincinnati

Well you can look at it like that , or look at it from the opposite direction. Would you trust a guy more who keeps his born non-western family name . Or trust more a guy that changes his family born name to choose false perception, to mold himself for into a more marketable political product to sell ?

But, both views don't matter ...LOL because the truth is their both Party subsidized, professional politicians. Neither one would have gotten to where he stands, if he was not Party, and working for Party .
.
 
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You guys fucking kill me sometimes . There are several “camps” here. The “fuck ‘em all, they’re all in in it” camp seems to really not care. They’re so disgusted with it all that if Jesus was running people would bitch about him depreciating the cost of wine and point out he hangs out with THOTs.

I think what astonishes me more than most are the purity police. Expecting a candidate, CEO, whatever, to have maintained a 100% pure ideal to YOUR ideals is ludicrous on its face. How many here have not evolved politically over the year? If you haven’t changed some views since your early 20s I’d be shocked. I’m not saying core principles, but the nuances to your ideas evolving over time either stronger or a little more soft?

If this guy is a plant, he’s a gifted liar. I have listened to a few long form podcasts and he’s sounds pretty good. The 75% reduction in government workers through mass layoffs being right up on the tippy top of good. Of course, the rest would rebel and the government might grind to a halt, but let’s be honest, it would force change and maybe even modernize the way civil servants serve the people. Yeah, pie in the sky I know but who else is talking about this? They are the deep state.

He may not be the one. But nobody has been, and nobody will be perfect. Over the years we have demonized Kennedy, Reagan and Trump. Some deservedly, but we have the benefit of hindsight to their choices. How bad would shit have been without these men?

Not sure why I posted this up, short of I choose to be optimistic that we can right this ship and not follow the Obama doctrine of tearing it down to the foundation and rebuilding different. Fuck that, you really think the same people who “serve” is now could do better than the founding fathers? You think thise of us who are expecting the Boog will do it? Shit, most of us can’t even spell.

Off to shoot a 3x1000 and run 300 rounds through a new DS Prodigy. Why? Because I can, in the freest country God has graced the earth with since the last mass extinction of humanity ;)

Hope you all have a good day, and remember to appreciate what we have. Show someone you disagree with a little grace today.
 
Holy shit... Ya'll are actually buying it.

He's a liar.

His ragges to Riches story is bull shit. His Father was an engineer and an attorney for GE.

He is the deepest state of them all. Don't buy his smiley glad hands... Its an act.

Look up his business dealings with Phizer, China, and others.

He is a Yale Harvard grad who is in the same Frat as George Bush and Bill Clinton.


Do some fucking research not just listen to what he says on tv... He is the Deep State Bait. Fickle and moldeable, will tell you what you want to hear just to be #1.

Don't do it, You will regret it.
 
Holy shit... Ya'll are actually buying it.

He's a liar.

His ragges to Riches story is bull shit. His Father was an engineer and an attorney for GE.

He is the deepest state of them all. Don't buy his smiley glad hands... Its an act.

Look up his business dealings with Phizer, China, and others.

He is a Yale Harvard grad who is in the same Frat as George Bush and Bill Clinton.


Do some fucking research not just listen to what he says on tv... He is the Deep State Bait. Fickle and moldeable, will tell you what you want to hear just to be #1.

Don't do it, You will regret it.
I think he is Obama Pro max, He is definitely not what America need right now. Vivek standing up to XI, Putin and Rocket boy? Don't make me laugh.
 
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I think he is Obama Pro max, He is definitely not what America need right now. Vivek standing up to XI, Putin and Rocket boy? Don't make me laugh.
Beat me to it. This guy is the republican Barack Obama. All of the sudden he shows up out of nowhere and he's got all the talking points to get in everybody's feels.

Puppet on a string.
 
Hed allow going back to the days of gorge bush allowing the corporations to outsource to india
All he needs to complete the look is a Big Mike.
a big bhabi with a tiny dick. Only fools cant see through this clown 🤡. There is alot of fools. Most of em shoot 308
 
This interview was actually pretty darn good, I was kinda surprised.



This is one that I watched. Understanding that no politician is going to meet the purity tests, he is the only one I know of actively talking about dismantling the deep start and has a plan. Maybe it’s all bullshit, but nobody else is even broaching the subject. Trump came out early and dropped it in his agenda, but his ass is going to be mired in legal shot for so long he’s likely to not be in the ticket in some states. Georgia being one and we can’t win without it.

We may not win no mater who is in charge, but the ideals and many of the people of this country are worth doing everything we can to preserve before we start killing one another for the amusements of the aristocracy.
 
Never trust a “former” dem or anyone who backed the libs. Reagan was a former FDR loving dem, Trump was a lifelong dem until he saw a personal advantage to go the other way. Both had/have zero support for the 2A and didn’t hesitate to institute gun bans.

Fuck them.
 
Holy shit... Ya'll are actually buying it.

He's a liar.

His ragges to Riches story is bull shit. His Father was an engineer and an attorney for GE.

He is the deepest state of them all. Don't buy his smiley glad hands... Its an act.

Look up his business dealings with Phizer, China, and others.

He is a Yale Harvard grad who is in the same Frat as George Bush and Bill Clinton.


Do some fucking research not just listen to what he says on tv... He is the Deep State Bait. Fickle and moldeable, will tell you what you want to hear just to be #1.

Don't do it, You will regret it.

IMHO what is going on is "they" are testing the waters for a choice besides trump. They had those clowns on stage all saying what you want to hear. Sure they got testy when pushed, they all want to be Pres, and a lackey to the WEF. A real step up for all of them.

I think "they" figure, if we give them this guy and not trump, it will calm down the waters a bit. See your guy won, do you think the "deep state" really supports X. No we hate this guy, see look we are going after him now with this petty BS or that petty BS. That will become nothing.

Yes he says all the right things now. Most of them do. And I don't think the majority of people buy it. They can't figure out what ole, Donald "grab them by the pussy" Trump is still doing so well. It is simple, people believe him. I think there is a very low filter on the man. A D A for the one guy. People in politics don't talk this way, but people do. It also can not be faked.

All of them on that stage are "bought and paid for", including the guy that said it.
 
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I have a feeling that this guy is like Tulsi last time around a tool to clean the challenger field a bit but not a real candidate . His rolle is to debate and take the heat and then fall away , kinda like pace makers in Running or Cycling.

But don't worry Dominion Voting has things all sorted out.
 
So who measures up as the perfect candidate, when you look at the wholesale failures and transgressions from both Parties against the American People over then last 7 president‘s. If the Republican Party fails to take immediate action on Biden, you may as well just slap a Newsom/Obama bumper sticker on the car for camouflage. That annoying Mike Pence stated “ Trump will not get the nomination“, and I reasonably believe a plan exists to keep him, Trump from it. You all do a great job ripping a candidate down, so who you going to support?
 
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To answer the original question, I like what I am able to read about him so far, particularly about the verminous ideology of the subhumans on the left.

I can’t seem to find what his position is on the Second Amendment though, anyone have a valid source on that?

One would think the New York Slimes would have done more hit pieces on him by now. Strange.
He did a YouTube with Colion Nior re: 2A. Actually pretty enlightening.