Jay'sAnalysis – Global Elites at DAVOS: Chaos, Crisis, War & The Rise of Socialism?
Host: Jay Dyer
Date: January 23, 2026
Episode Theme:
A critical exploration of the global elite’s strategies at the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, focusing on rising geopolitical tensions, the reconfiguration of international power structures, and the emerging synthesis of socialism and monopoly capitalism. Jay Dyer examines corporate socialism, the planned deindustrialization of the West, the global crypto push, and the myth of competing globalisms, weaving in commentary on recent news, philosophical takes, and critique of both political and religious mainstream narratives.
Episode Overview
Jay Dyer delves deep into the latest WEF (Davos) summit and what it signals for the trajectory of global governance, economic crisis, technological change, and ideological shifts. The episode critiques the “new world order” emerging from partnerships between Western elites, China, and transnational corporations under a Fabian socialist banner. Dyer unpacks how these strategies are purposefully designed—contrary to populist narratives of grassroots socialism—to centralize control, deindustrialize Western powers, and roll out new economic standards such as cryptocurrency. He weaves in live audience commentary, analyzes statements from financial heavyweights, and offers practical and philosophical insight into the true nature of modern socialism and international power plays.
Key Discussion Points & Insights
1. Davos, Global Elites & Strategic Deindustrialization
Timestamp: 16:28 – 22:00
- Jay frames the Davos WEF as a key arena where international elites (corporate, government, banking) coordinate.
- The real trajectory isn’t toward grassroots socialism, but corporate-engineered socialism:
“Canada is moving to just be full on openly Marxist, socialist, or ‘third way’... China is now the Western socialist partner for the NWO.” — Jay Dyer [17:41]
- Outsourcing of Western (especially American) industrial power to China was a long-term, deliberate policy crafted by elites to create interdependence and weaken national sovereignty.
- Relationships like Walmart-China and transfer of technology illustrate synergistic elite interests, not siloed, competing factions.
2. Davosing the Cold War and The Illusion of Multipolarity
Timestamp: 22:00 – 27:00
- Elite plans transcend simplistic East vs. West narratives. Entities like Davos and the WEF act as steering committees for a global, monopolar vision:
“Entities like Davos...are already established to kind of prepare the way for us to transition into some form of third wave international communism, socialism.” — Jay Dyer [18:37]
- The Western “resurgence” (i.e., Trump’s America First rhetoric) is juxtaposed to the BRICS nations, but both converge on variants of internationalist models.
3. Fabian Socialism & The Corporate-State Synthesis
Timestamp: 27:09 – 36:19
- Dyer asserts that what’s called “socialism” in the modern context is essentially corporate socialism—alliances between multinationals and governments to manage labor, industry, and welfare.
- The “10 planks of the Communist Manifesto” have found expression, not through blue-collar uprisings, but through corporate technocracy.
- On the EU and its origins:
“The entire EU structure is literally built out of...the promotion of Fabian socialism throughout the EU. Not free market capitalism…It’s built out of the OSS.” — Jay Dyer [33:55]
4. Trump, Usury, and Housing Policy
Timestamp: 36:19 – 40:13
- Jay analyzes recent Donald Trump statements on the predatory nature of credit card debt and attempts to halt institutional purchase of family homes.
- He questions the efficacy of such policies so late in the process:
“It’s a right move, but it’s just 20 years too late. All this stuff is way too late.” — Jay Dyer [39:05]
- Critiques that even correct policy cannot fix structural problems unless monetary and demographic issues are also addressed.
5. Religion, Vatican II, and Pop Apologetics
Timestamp: 41:49 – 48:38
- Jay critiques mainstream Catholic apologists for denial or downplaying of globalist projects, even as elites openly promote partnerships for a “new world order.”
- Points out the contradiction between advocacy of “global solidarity” in modern Church documents and traditional opposition to socialist internationalism.
6. Crypto as the New Economic Battleground
Timestamp: 56:39 – 73:37
- WEF 2026 highlights: crypto and blockchain adoption, especially Bitcoin, are at the forefront.
- Banks and traditional finance lobby against pro-crypto legislation (“Clarity Act”), fearing the loss of legacy power structures:
“The banks don’t want this because this will get rid of a lot of the things that banks do. So they’re trying to struggle to hang on to the legacy institution structure.” — Jay Dyer [71:39]
- Jay strongly advocates for Bitcoin maximalism, critiquing Ethereum and Ripple for being too centralized.
Notable Quote – Brian Armstrong, Coinbase CEO:
“We’re seeing the birth of a new monetary system that I would call the Bitcoin standard instead of the gold standard.” — Brian Armstrong [57:26]
7. Audience Q&A and Callouts in Debate Culture
Timestamp: 73:37 – 81:59
- Jay addresses philosophical illiteracy in internet debate and public apologetics.
- Advises learning foundational philosophy for anyone wishing to participate meaningfully in these discussions.
- Reiterates his commitment to a consistent message, regardless of interlocutor.
8. The 10 Planks of the Communist Manifesto in Modern Terms
Timestamp: 81:59 – 89:08
- Jay translates Marx’s ten planks into their 21st-century equivalents: corporate ownership, heavy taxation, inheritance limits, centralized credit (Federal Reserve), mass surveillance, state education, and urbanization.
- Connects Klaus Schwab’s “You’ll own nothing and be happy” slogan to 19th-century socialist blueprints now repackaged as “stakeholder capitalism” and ESG orthodoxy.
Notable Quotes & Memorable Moments
-
On the Real Engine of Globalism:
“The real socialism is corporate socialism on any other nation.” — Jay Dyer [32:29]
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On Canada’s Position:
“Canada lives because of the United States. Remember that the next time you make your statements.” — Donald Trump [39:52]
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On Bitcoin and Legacy Banking:
“I’m very bullish and yeah, I’ll go on record and say I think we’ll see an all time high.” — Jay Dyer [57:08]
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On the Modern Communist Manifesto:
“It’s the corporate state that will own… What did Klaus say? ‘You’ll own nothing and you’ll be happy.’ The circular economy. That’s your boy Coral [Marx].” — Jay Dyer [81:59]
Important Timestamps & Segments
- 16:28 – Start of Dyer’s geopolitical news stream; shift to analysis of globalization and WEF.
- 17:41 – Jay on the “third way” socialism and China as a Western partner.
- 29:52 – Howard Lutnick’s remarks at Davos: “Globalization has failed the West and the United States.”
- 33:55 – Jay’s analysis of the EU and Fabian socialists.
- 36:19–39:05 – Trump on usury, corporate housing consolidation; Jay’s critique of delayed policy.
- 41:49–48:38 – On Vatican II, pop Catholic figures, and apologetics denialism.
- 56:39 – Crypto’s prominence at Davos, Armstrong’s “Bitcoin standard” vision.
- 71:39 – Banks resisting pro-crypto legislation.
- 81:59 – Jay matches Communist Manifesto planks to current policies.
Takeaways
- Davos and the WEF are less about open conspiracy, more about orchestrated elite alignment—converging both capitalist and socialist tools for total system control.
- Contemporary socialism is not worker-driven but corporate- and state-engineered, forming the backbone of “stakeholder capitalism” and ESG governance.
- Bitcoin and blockchain are seen, by both Dyer and some industry leaders, as the looming paradigm for money, challenging the legacy banking system and threatening the state-corporate symbiosis.
- Many contemporary cultural, religious, and economic debates lack philosophical and historical grounding.
- The “new world order” is being rapidly normalized and institutionalized through international partnerships—often with public denial or distraction by mainstream gatekeepers.
Further Resources Mentioned
- Jay's course on philosophy (Autonomy Agora Marketplace)
- “Thank God for Bitcoin” by Jordan Bush (bitcoin primer)
- Historic references: Sutton, Quigley, Tragedy & Hope, The X Club by Ruth Barton
Original, punchy, and biting in tone, Jay Dyer delivers a comprehensive, provocative dissection of how globalist strategies—under the veneer of progress and crisis management—are reconfiguring the world’s economic, cultural, and technological foundations.
